(Prose) Land as Relationship in Prehistory by Susan Hawthorne, Ph.D.

Near Arzachena, Sardinia where there are megalithic
remains from the Neolithic era.
Photo credit: Renate Klein, 2015.

Prehistory gives us many examples of people’s attachment to land. Deciphered written sources do not exist, but many clues are to be had in the passing down of mythic stories, in the survival of artefacts and buildings from these periods. To give full expression to this would require another book. The work of archaeologist Marija Gimbutas and of pre-historian Harald Haarmann show the many ways in which the remnants of pre-historic cultures (that is, cultures who existed before writing) were deeply connected to the land, to their home in the land. Lynne Kelly’s (2015) work on systems of mnemonics transmitted orally and Judy Foster’s (2012) examinations of prehistoric artworks give these ideas a global scope. The work of Gimbutas is based in Europe from the Balkans to Lithuania, while Haarmann’s focus is the Danube Valley. Traces of these appear in ancient societies in Mesopotamia; in the Indus Valley of India; in Egypt and other parts of Africa; in stories and artefacts from Minoan Crete and from the Etruscans; in Ireland and across the Celtic lands including Scotland and Brittany. What these societies show us is that fortifications did not exist or were very rare.[1] The likely reason for this is that warfare was rare. Until approximately 6000 years BP (Before Present), patriarchy too, was rare. I do not refer to these societies as matriarchal, because the assumption is that matriarchies are violent reversals of patriarchy. There is plenty of evidence to the contrary. Rather I refer to them as gynocentric. The rhythms of the seasons, the rhythms of the body work in conjunction with one another. I am sure there was conflict in gynocentric societies, but as there is no evidence of mass slaughter and deterritorialisation, we can infer from this lack, that the conflicts that arose were dealt with in other ways.

I have been reading the literature in this field for around 40 years, so this is not a quickly drawn inference. Each year, there is new research, new findings that suggest that patriarchy is neither inevitable nor universal. Indeed, the words of contemporary Indigenous peoples resonate with the materials being discovered around the world. The dates of human migration around the world continue to be pushed back. But migration tens of thousands of years ago was not what we know of as colonisation. It was instead movements of people from one place to another because of changes in local conditions such as climate or availability of food or environmental disasters such as earthquakes.

Movement was slow and as peoples moved across the earth, they took with them knowledge of plants and animals, of the formations of stars, of the cycles of the moon and followed the ways in which these events changed or remained the same. The migration to Australia was a significant one because it involved an intentional trip of at least four to five days across deep waters. Upon arrival, many of the elements in the environment would have been quite different. The most recent date that is firmly established is 65,000 years, but it is likely to be earlier and Indigenous peoples often refer to 120,000 years BP.

The other migration that is remarkable in its success is that of Polynesian sailors whose navigational skills were well ahead of those of later European ‘explorers’ (Andrews 2004). In both these cases, the migrating people were moving into areas that had not been previously inhabited by humans.


[1] The anthology Goddesses in Myth, History and Culture edited by Mary Ann Beavis and Helen Hye-Sook Hwang (2018) is international in scope and includes essays that cover Korea and Old Europe, the Middle East, North and West Africa, Scandinavia and as well as Indigenous, Asian and Abrahamic religions.

[Author’s Note] This is an extract from Susan Hawthorne’s recently published book, Vortex: The Crisis of Patriarchy (2020) available from Spinifex Press and retailers in North America, UK and Europe. https://www.spinifexpress.com.au/shop/p/9781925950168

https://filia.org.uk/podcasts/2020/12/28/susan-hawthorne-vortex-the-crisis-of-patriarchy

References

Andrews, Munya. 2004. The Seven Sisters of the Pleiades: Stories from around the World. Melbourne: Spinifex Press.

Beavis, Mary Anne and Helen Hye-Sook Hwang (eds.). 2018. Goddesses in Myth, History and Culture. Lytle Creek, CA: Mago Books.

Foster, Judy with Marlene Derlet. 2013. Invisible Women of Prehistory: Three Million Years of Peace, Six Thousand Years of War. Melbourne: Spinifex Press.

Gimbutas, Marija. 1989. The Language of the Goddess. New York: Harper & Row.

Gimbutas, Marija. 1991. The Civilization of the Goddess: The World of Old Europe. San Francisco: Harper San Francisco.

Haarmann, Harald. 2015. Myth as Source of Knowledge in Early Western Thought: The Quest for Historiography, Science and Philosophy in Greek Antiquity. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.

Haarmann, Harald. 2014. Roots of Ancient Greek Civilization: The Influence of Old Europe. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company.

Kelly, Lynne. 2015.  Knowledge and Power in Prehistoric Societies: Orality, Memory and Transmission of Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.



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