Significance of Cultural, Social, Political and Economic Symbols and Practices

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Artifact is an object remaining from a particular period.

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An artifact, or artefact is something made or given shape by humans, such as a

tool or a work of art, especially an object of archaeological interest. In archaeology, however, the word has become a term of particular nuance and is defined as: an object recovered by archaeological endeavor, which may be a cultural artifact having cultural interest.

Tool Traditions

Oldowan tools are part of the Lower Paleolithic stage of technological development. They were made by Homo habilis, and also by early Homo erectus. There were two main types of Oldowan tools: core tools and flake tools

  1. Core tools- were made by using a rock as a hammer to knock flakes off another stone, resulting in a chopping tool that could be held easily in the hand. The tool could also be used for hammering or digging.UCSP 4b
  2. Flake tools-were the flakes of rock that were removed in the process of making the core tools. Flake tools were used as knives. They were used, for example, to butcher animals, as evidenced by cut marks on animal bones found in association with the tools.

Acheulian Tools

Homo erectus developed a more complex tool from what they inherited from Homo habilis. Using the same process of percussion flaking, Homo erectus created hand axes that were bifacial, shaped in both sides and with straighter and sharper edges. These stones were used in multiple activities such as light chopping of woods, digging up roots and bulbs, butchering animals, cracking nuts and small bones. Homo erectus made other tools such as choppers, cleavers, and hammers as well as flakes used as knives and scrapers.

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Mousterian Tools

Was developed by Homo neaderthalensis (Neanderthals) in Europe and West Asia. The tools from this industry combined Acheulian industry technique, which involved the use of premade core tool and extraction of a flake tool that has sharpened edges. This type of tool is very efficient as all the sides of the flake tool are sharpened and are more handy.

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Upper Paleolithic Tools

By about 75 thousand years ago, some early modern humans began making tools that were significantly different from the earlier Mousterian tools. They have been categorized in several different tool traditions in the Upper Paleolithic stage of technological development. These new tools have been found in sites in Europe and elsewhere in the Old World and more recently in the New World. They range from blades of various shapes and sizes to barbed harpoon heads.

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Types of Society

Although humans have established many types of societies throughout history, sociologists and anthropologists (experts who study early and tribal cultures) usually refer to six basic types of societies, each defined by its level of technology.

Hunting and Gathering Societies

The members of hunting and gathering societies primarily survive by hunting animals, fishing, and gathering plants. Most of them were nomadic, moving constantly in search of food and water.

Pastoral Societies

Members of pastoral societies, which first emerged 12,000 years ago, pasture animals for food and transportation.

Domesticating animals allows for a more manageable food supply than do hunting and gathering. Hence, pastoral societies are able to produce a surplus of goods, which makes storing food for future use a possibility. Pastoral societies allow certain of its members (those who are not domesticating animals) to engage in non-survival activities. Traders, healers, spiritual leaders, craftspeople, and people with other specialty professions appear.

Horticultural Societies

Horticultural societies rely on cultivating fruits, vegetables, and plants. These societies first appeared in different parts of the planet about the same time as pastoral societies. Like hunting and gathering societies, horticultural societies had to be mobile. Depletion of the land's resources or dwindling water supplies, for example, forced the people to leave.

Agricultural Societies

Agricultural societies use technological advances to cultivate crops (especially grains like wheat, rice, corn, and barley) over a large area. Sociologists use the phrase Agricultural Revolution to refer to the technological changes that occurred as long as 8,500 years ago that led to cultivating crops and raising farm animals.

Feudal Societies

The 9th to 15th centuries, feudalism was a form of society based on ownership of land. Unlike today's farmers, vassals under feudalism were bound to cultivating their lord's land. In exchange for military protection, the lords exploited the peasants into providing food, crops, crafts, homage, and other services to the owner of the land.

Industrial Societies

Industrial societies are based on using machines (particularly fuel‐driven ones) to produce goods. Sociologists refer to the period during the 18th century when the production of goods in mechanized factories began as the Industrial Revolution.

As productivity increased, means of transportation improved to better facilitate the transfer of products from place to place. Great wealth was attained by the few who owned factories, and the “masses” found jobs working in the factories.

Post-industrial Societies

Sociologists note that with the advent of the computer microchip, the world is witnessing a technological revolution. This revolution is creating a postindustrial society based on information, knowledge, and the selling of services. That is, rather than being driven by the factory production of goods, society is being shaped by the human mind, aided by computer technology. Although factories will always exist, the key to wealth and power seems to lie in the ability to generate, store, manipulate, and sell information.

Processes of Cultural and Sociopolitical Evolution

The Neolithic Revolution

This period is characterized by a major shift in economic subsistence of early humans from foraging to agriculture. This dramatic shift affected the other aspects of their lifestyle, as foraging made them nomads and agriculture encouraged permanent settlement.

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Early Civilization and the Rise of the State

The earliest civilizations rose by the end of the Neolitic period as the complexities brought about by the shift in food production demanded a more rigid social structure that would manage the opposing perspective of various sectors. As a conflict between groups developed and intensified, the need to create a more cohesive society became definite.

Early civilizations were characterized by the presence of city-states, a system of writing and a ceremonial center where public debates and decision were made. However, it must be noted that not all societies during this period could be considered as civilizations as not all possessed a political system that could be equated to a state. A state is apolitical entity that has four requisite elements: territory, sovereignty, people and government.

Democratization of Early Civilization

The traditional view on the history of democracy highlights its development among the city states of ancient Greece, around 507 BCE. It is believed that an Athenian statesman named Cleisthenes proposed demokratia as a political ideology that aimed at dispersing power from the monopoly of the elites to the masses. This allows for the closing n of social gaps between diverging social groups.

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