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Título
A Kinship-informed Comparative and Worldwide Survey of the Multiple Residential Group
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Household archaeology
Archaeology of kinship
Clasificación UNESCO
5505.01 Arqueología
5504.05 Prehistoria
Fecha de publicación
2025
Editor
Sidestone Press
Citación
Blanco-González, A. (2025): "A Kinship-informed Comparative and Worldwide Survey of the Multiple Residential Group." En Blanco-González, A. & Alarcón-García, E. (eds.): A Social Archaeology of Kinship in Iberia and Beyond. Recent Multistranded Approaches from aDNA to Household Archaeology. Sidestone, Leiden, pp. 181-207.
Resumen
[EN] This contribution addresses a basic and ubiquitous collective social agent in antiquity between
the conjugal family –which was rarely a social unit in itself– and the settlement or local
community. The paper delves into such an intermediate and kin-driven social grouping, often
materialised as a neighbourhood or multi-house aggregate. The text proposes an approach
from the standpoint of household archaeology, centring on kinship, with the aim of challenging
unquestioned claims and to endorse the target formulas of conviviality with supportive and
highly detailed historical information from diverse sources. Such residential group cannot be
interpreted as an “extended family” or a “cultural trait”, nor always be reduced to a complete
household or corporate unilineal group. The chapter first discusses its underpinnings and
interpretative limits and then surveys the literature of two major household archaeological
schools in a comparative fashion to focus on a necessarily restrictive selection of well-known
and representative case studies. Out of the suite of combinations of residence and descent
options, the text concentrates on those multi-functional and self-sufficient composite residential
groups involving either subaltern small conjugal dwellings or elite oversized ancillary subunits:
mostly virilocal and patrilineal, and some bilocal and bilateral cases, often confused. This sample
ranges from decentralised pre-/protohistoric Near Eastern and Mediterranean organisations to
Mesoamerican and South American historical state-based polities. Such an exercise highlights
key underlying commonalities of this collective social actor in varied settings across time and
space, readdresses misguided points in current archaeological literature and suggests prospects
for multi-stranded research integrating the domestic and funerary realms.
URI
ISBN
9789464264043
DOI
10.59641/m3p9j0k1l2
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