This new book, my second major work on modern Matriarchal Studies, has been published in German language in 2019, and now it is published in English. In order to write this book, I relied on the detailed knowledge I could gain from my studies on still existing matriarchal societies, which have been published in my earlier book: Matriarchal Societies. Studies on Indigenous Cultures across the Globe (New York: Peter Lang, 2012/2013).
I wanted to get deeper insights in history of cultures than has been given until now by archaeologists. The new book is seriously based on their old and newest findings, this is the basis to avoid speculation. But I am critical in regard to the interpretations of conventional archaeology which are very often patriarchally biased. My studies on still existing matriarchal societies helped me to recognize this and see many of their findings in a different light. Therefore, some clear criticism of ideology was necessary, too.
I included very interesting new evidence on the topic of egalitarian societies in early history, which have been women-centered, or matriarchal, which is not well known today. Apart from this, I visited nearly all the archaeological places in West Asia and West Europe which are included in this book. My travelling during three decades gave me the opportunity to see most of them by myself.
Some notes on the book
Historiography tends to focus on war; it is concerned about domination, about emperors, kings and other potentates, and their expansion of power. As such, it is male history, that is, the history of the victors. Women do not form part of this history, aside from a few exceptions, which do not alter the patriarchal nature of the narrative. They and their achievements have been treated as marginal or non-existent by conventional archaeology, just as if women’s practical inventions and the social and cultural patterns they created had never existed.
The aim of this book is to help redress this bias by using an integrating approach to rewrite and rebalance human cultural history. This provides a new perception, seeing cultural history not only from “above” but also from “below”, the only way to achieve complete understanding.
Above all, it is not simply about the early history of women, but rather the history of a very different form of society, matriarchal society, with its social, economic and political institutions, and its different world view. This form of society was shaped by women, and supported by maternal values, such as respect for diversity combined with general equality, making it fundamentally egalitarian. This kind of society is found out in early history by thorough research based on archaeological findings.
The emergence of patriarchal patterns is also explained, not through theoretical speculation, but again based on archaeological findings. The origins and development of patriarchy differ widely in the various cultural zones of the world, so there is no simple, universal explanatory pattern. This book looks at the emergence of patriarchal patterns in the major cultural areas of West Asia and Europe, and also the conditions for their subsequent expansion.
Table of Content
Introduction: The Development of modern Matriarchal Studies and its
Relevance for History
Chapter 1: The new Ideologie of „eternal war“. Critical Thoughts to early
History
Chapter 2: Palaeolithic in West Asia, the Mediterranean, and Europe.
The Development of Mother-centered Societies
Chapter 3: Neolithic in West Asia. The Invention of Agriculture and the
Development of Matriarchal Societies
Chapter 4: Neolithic in the Mediterranean and Europe. The Unfolding of
Mariarchal Societies
Chapter 5: Bronze Age in the Eurasian Steppe.
The Origins of Early Patriarchal Societies and the Amazon Question
Chapter 6: Bronze Age and Iron Age in West Asia. The Rise of State and Empire
Chapter 7: Bronze Age and Iron Age in South Europe.
Late Matriarchal Societies and Increasing Patriarchalization
Chapter 8: Bronze Age and Iron Age in Europe north of the Alps.
Matriarchal Elements in a Patriarchal Surrounding