Abstract

Early villages are often assumed to be economically and politically autonomous and equivalent to an archaeological socio-spatial unit that represents a maximum scale of cohesive residential communities. But the boundaries of some communities extended far beyond such sites of early population aggregation. In the coastal plain of the American Southeast, early village communities of the Middle and Late Woodland period (ca. 100 to 1000 CE) were located at civic-ceremonial centers that hosted periodic large-scale events, including feasting and mound building. These places regularly integrated mobile populations and permanent residents, arguably creating translocal communities that were both spatially expansive and densely integrated. We employ social network analysis as a way of identifying the spatial extent, composition, and structure of these translocal communities. We compare relational connections via a database of shared makers’ marks on Swift Creek Complicated Stamped pottery with categorical identities revealed in temporally constrained pottery type frequencies. We find that most early villages in this region were far from autonomous and instead were characterized by frequent relational connections and shared categorical identities spanning hundreds of kilometers, with civic-ceremonial centers serving as central nodes of interaction within and between spatially dispersed communities.

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