ETHNOARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES
ON HEREDITARY BRONZE CASTERS
IN SWAMIMALAI, SOUTH INDIA
Traditional Bronze Casters in Tamil Nadu
This a project represents a long-term study of the social context of traditional metal casters in the village of Swamimalai, located ca. 275 km southwest of Chennai (Madras), in India’s southern state of Tamil Nadu. Tamil Nadu was home to the Chola Empire. The Cholas came to power in the late 9th century A.D., and until the late 13th century A.D., they ruled most of South India, Sri Lanka, the Maldive Islands, and even parts of the Indonesian island of Java from their homeland near Thanjavur (Tanjore) around 30 km from the Swamimalai study area. Specifically, I am interested in the social organization of traditional metal production and the patterns of consumption of the bronze statuary produced by the workshops in Swamimalai. As such, this project is an ethnoarchaeological study of contemporary craft production. Ethnoarchaeology refers to the study of contemporary cultures with the aim of understanding the behavioral relationships that underlie the production of material culture. Using the observational methods of cultural anthropologists, archaeologists conduct ethnoarchaeological research with the aim of producing models (based on observations of contemporary societies) that are applicable to the archaeological record. This study is an outgrowth of my long-term interest in the role of metallurgy in the social evolution of societies in the Near East. As such this ethnoarchaeological research of traditional bronze casters has important processual implications for my research of historic, Iron Age (ca. 1200 – 500 B.C.), metal production in southern Jordan.
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