William H. McNeill
Born
in Vancouver, Canada
October 31, 1917
Died
July 08, 2016
Website
Genre
|
Plagues and Peoples
—
published
1976
—
49 editions
|
|
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The Pursuit of Power
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published
1982
—
33 editions
|
|
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The Rise of the West: A History of the Human Community
by
—
published
1963
—
60 editions
|
|
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A World History
—
published
1971
—
23 editions
|
|
|
Keeping Together in Time
—
published
1995
—
10 editions
|
|
|
History of Western Civilization: A Handbook
—
published
1967
—
17 editions
|
|
|
Europe's Steppe Frontier, 1500-1800: A Study of the Eastward Movement in Europe
—
published
1964
—
14 editions
|
|
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Venice: The Hinge of Europe, 1081-1797
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published
1974
—
14 editions
|
|
|
The Metamorphosis of Greece since World War II
—
published
1978
—
6 editions
|
|
|
The Islamic World
by
—
published
1973
—
5 editions
|
|
“...whenever a new, especially successful form of an infection emerges, it will spread rapidly around the globe.”
― Plagues and Peoples
― Plagues and Peoples
“In agricultural communities, male leadership in the hunt ceased to be of much importance. As the discipline of the hunting band decayed, the political institutions of the earliest village settlements perhaps approximated the anarchism which has remained ever since the ideal of peaceful peasantries all round the earth. Probably religious functionaries, mediators between helpless mankind and the uncertain fertility of the earth, provided an important form of social leadership. The strong hunter and man of prowess, his occupation gone or relegated to the margins of social life, lost the umambiguous primacy which had once been his; while the comparatively tight personal subordination to a leader necessary to the success of a hunting party could be relaxed in proportion as grain fields became the center around which life revolved.
Among predominantly pastoral peoples, however, religious-political institutions took a quite different turn. To protect the flocks from animal predators required the same courage and social discipline which hunters had always needed. Among pastoralists, likewise, the principal economic activity- focused, as among the earliest hunters, on a parasitic relation to animals- continued to be the special preserve of menfolk. Hence a system of patrilineal families, united into kinship groups under the authority of a chieftain responsible for daily decisions as to where to seek pasture, best fitted the conditions of pastoral life. In addition, pastoralists were likely to accord importance to the practices and discipline of war. After all, violent seizure of someone else’s animals or pasture grounds was the easiest and speediest way to wealth and might be the only means of survival in a year of scant vegetation.
Such warlikeness was entirely alien to communities tilling the soil. Archeological remains from early Neolithic villages suggest remarkably peaceful societies. As long as cultivable land was plentiful, and as long as the labor of a single household could not produce a significant surplus, there can have been little incentive to war. Traditions of violence and hunting-party organization presumably withered in such societies, to be revived only when pastoral conquest superimposed upon peaceable villagers the elements of warlike organization from which civilized political institutions without exception descend.”
―
Among predominantly pastoral peoples, however, religious-political institutions took a quite different turn. To protect the flocks from animal predators required the same courage and social discipline which hunters had always needed. Among pastoralists, likewise, the principal economic activity- focused, as among the earliest hunters, on a parasitic relation to animals- continued to be the special preserve of menfolk. Hence a system of patrilineal families, united into kinship groups under the authority of a chieftain responsible for daily decisions as to where to seek pasture, best fitted the conditions of pastoral life. In addition, pastoralists were likely to accord importance to the practices and discipline of war. After all, violent seizure of someone else’s animals or pasture grounds was the easiest and speediest way to wealth and might be the only means of survival in a year of scant vegetation.
Such warlikeness was entirely alien to communities tilling the soil. Archeological remains from early Neolithic villages suggest remarkably peaceful societies. As long as cultivable land was plentiful, and as long as the labor of a single household could not produce a significant surplus, there can have been little incentive to war. Traditions of violence and hunting-party organization presumably withered in such societies, to be revived only when pastoral conquest superimposed upon peaceable villagers the elements of warlike organization from which civilized political institutions without exception descend.”
―
“We have to do the best we can with the language and concepts we inherit, and not worry about obtaining a truth that will satisfy everyone, everywhere, and for all time to come.”
― Plagues and Peoples
― Plagues and Peoples
Topics Mentioning This Author
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| The History Book ...: SUPPLEMENTAL - FURTHER READINGS | 61 | 110 | Feb 24, 2011 10:07AM | |
Reading with Style:
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952 | 277 | May 31, 2012 08:59PM | |
| The History Book ...: MEDICINE | 140 | 495 | Jan 26, 2019 02:44PM | |
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| The Reading For P...: TRenee's Readathons | 127 | 185 | Nov 01, 2022 12:29PM | |
| The History Book ...: DISEASES | 80 | 455 | Aug 27, 2023 05:17AM |


































