Article Title:Multilevel selection and political evolution in the Valley of Oaxaca, 500-100 BC
Abstract:
Although Monte Alban I in the Valley of Oaxaca (500-100 B.C.) is widely recognized as a period of major political change, researchers have found it difficult to establish whether the key institutions of the Zapotec state emerged during this or the succeeding Monte Alban II period (100 B.C.-A.D. 200). Also unresolved has been the issue of when the three major subregions of the Oaxaca Valley (Etla, Tlacolula, Ocotlan/Zimatlan) all became integrated into a single polity under the rule of Monte Alban, the state capital. This paper presents recent theoretical and empirical contributions that have not yet been brought to bear on the problem of Monte Alban I. Concepts drawn from multilevel selection theory and evolutionary trend theory are utilized in an analysis of Oaxaca Valley regional settlement pattern data. The analysis provides a multilevel context fur a discussion of recent survey and excavations at San Martin Tilcajete, the results of which are clarifying the sequence of institutional development in Oaxaca. Taken together, the regional analysis and the discoveries at Tilcajete indicate that: (1) the Zapotec state emerged during Late Monte Alban I (300-100 B.C.) in a context of intensifying competition-including violent conflict - among rival polities within the Oaxaca Valley; and (2) even though the early Zapotec state began a campaign of territorial expansion during Late Monte Alban I, political unification of all three major subregions of the Valley was not achieved until Monte Alban II. (C) 2001 Academic Press.
Keywords: Oaxaca; Zapotec; state; political evolution
DOI: 10.1006/jaar.2000.0371
Source:JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
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