Patrick Vinton Kirch

Список книг автора Patrick Vinton Kirch



    On the Road of the Winds

    Patrick Vinton Kirch

    The Pacific Ocean covers one-third of the earth&rsquo;s surface and encompasses many thousands of islands that are home to numerous human societies and cultures. Among these indigenous Oceanic cultures are the intrepid Polynesian double-hulled canoe navigators, the atoll dwellers of Micronesia, the statue carvers of remote Easter Island, and the famed traders of Melanesia. Decades of archaeological excavations&mdash;combined with allied research in historical linguistics, biological anthropology, and comparative ethnography&mdash;have revealed much new information about the long-term history of these societies and cultures.&#160;<I>On the Road of the Winds</I>&#160;synthesizes the grand sweep of human history in the Pacific Islands, beginning with the movement of early people out from Asia more than 40,000 years ago and tracing the development of myriad indigenous cultures up to the time of European contact in the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. This updated edition, enhanced with many new illustrations and an extensive bibliography, synthesizes the latest archaeological, linguistic, and biological discoveries that reveal the vastness of ancient history in the Pacific Islands.

    How Chiefs Became Kings

    Patrick Vinton Kirch

    In <i>How Chiefs Became Kings</i>, Patrick Vinton Kirch addresses a central problem in anthropological archaeology: the emergence of «archaic states» whose distinctive feature was divine kingship. Kirch takes as his focus the Hawaiian archipelago, commonly regarded as the archetype of a complex chiefdom. Integrating anthropology, linguistics, archaeology, traditional history, and theory, and drawing on significant contributions from his own four decades of research, Kirch argues that Hawaiian polities had become states before the time of Captain Cook’s voyage (1778-1779). The status of most archaic states is inferred from the archaeological record. But Kirch shows that because Hawai`i’s kingdoms were established relatively recently, they could be observed and recorded by Cook and other European voyagers. Substantive and provocative, this book makes a major contribution to the literature of precontact Hawai`i and illuminates Hawai`i’s importance in the global theory and literature about divine kingship, archaic states, and sociopolitical evolution.