The Meaning of enslaved and the Question of Race (Academic)

Slavery is one of the oldest institutions of human society dating to the earliest civilizations of ancient Mesopotamia and is also one of the least understood institutions in human history. Lydia Marshall, author of The Archaeology of Slavery: A Comparative Approach to Captivity and Coercion notes that the term “slavery” is applied to a variety of distinct social forms, from chattel slavery of the antebellum United States to the more indigenous systems practiced in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. This widespread application of the term slavery indicates historians, sociologists, archeologists and other academics struggle to delineate the meaning of enslavement. There is no universal consensus of what constitutes slavery as there is no single criterion or attribute is likely to be shared by all slave systems.
Defining slavery is made more difficult by the shifting interpretations of liberty and freedoms between periods and regions which reduce their significance to slavery as the absence of liberty and liberty as the absence of slavery. This simplified analysis limits understanding of what characterizes the differences between slavery, servitude, and captivity as well as how we define freedom and liberty in societies. Contemporary scholarship centers around the Atlantic-slave trade of African cargo concentrated on economics, religion and civil rights confining analysis to a single manifestation and marginalizing slavery to one time and region conceptualized and politicized as the brutal oppression of Africans.
Long before the arrival of Europeans slavers, there were well-established trading links between coastal peoples and African societies in the interior. James Walvin in Atlas of Slavery acknowledges that slavery was commonplace in a host of ancient and traditional societies from ancient Egypt to the urban fabric of ancient Greece. Both Greek and Roman societies chose their slaves from among outsiders (‘barbarians’) though, unlike slavery later in the Americas, it was not defined in racial terms. In those societies, slaves were recruited from outside: by warfare, by raids and kidnapping and by trade and barter in humanity. To have a clearer understanding of slavery, freedom or lack of freedom scholars must consider the complete history of human bondage, it’s definitions and meanings within the larger social implications of individual slave states.
Joseph Miller in his work The Problem of Slavery as History: A Global Approach best illustrates this when he states, “The Problem of Slavery is a sweeping survey of the idea of slavery in Western culture over two millennia, from Greek antiquity to its abolition in the nineteenth century.” Query the term “slavery” in any library or media platform, and the results will include works related to abolitionism, antebellum south, and the African Plight. Very few results will return with a focus on Greco-Roman slavery, Slavery in Africa, or the Indian ocean World slave systems.
A survey of the intellectual, political and cultural elements of slavery outside the ethos of American slaving serves to reinvigorate studies into the fundamental, political and social climates that cultivated slavery. The purpose of this research is first to demonstrate that human bondage is multifaceted beyond racial assumptions. Second to bring to light historical contexts that illuminate slave systems as complex cultural and social phenomenon. The importance of the study is to evolve scholarship outside racial implications to open discourse on the question of what defines slavery, causes and consequences and the process by which slavery defined societies.
Routledge History of Slavery records the first major slave societies as developing in ancient Greece and Rome. Within the Greek language, there are several words referenced to the state of being enslaved, all with different distinctions that could be applied to both free and unfree. These terms were used to distinguish between purchased slave, captive slave, inherited slave, gender, function, and place of origin. The most common terms used to describe labor of non-free citizens including debt-bondsman were doulos and douleia. In Homer, the terms doulos and doulosyne (slave), along with other terms denoting slaves appear to signify the social status of individuals. Slaves then were not determined by race but instead were defined as persons who performed work under compulsion and were dependent on others. Greeks perceived slavery not only as relations of ownership but also, and chiefly, regarding social relations and philia. The term Philia both sheds light and confuses the state of servitude as Philia denotes reciprocity between slave and Master. Philia involves the grant of favor and the obligation to show gratitude and return the favor. Thus, through deed debt, moral enslavement is created that revolves around a relationship that is fundamentally different than indebted servitude or forced labor.
In the study of Greco Roman slavery, Moses Finley has contributed significantly to modern knowledge of the Greco-Roman institution of slavery. In his work, The Ancient Economy Finley concentrates on the social and political organization of antiquity and their influence on economic behaviors, status, and laws. With a detailed study of writings such as the recording of his reign by Emperor Augustus and Homers fictional Odysseus Finley draws attention to the duality of wealth as an absolute requisite for the good life, and overall, all that there was to it. For the Greeks, wealth was defined by both moral character and property. Status was achieved through contributions to public life and depended almost in its entirety on wealth. Personal independence and leisure, obtainable only through wealth defined freedom. Finley references the Rhetoric of Aristotle, “The condition of the free man, is that he not live under the constraint of another.” Finley interprets this to mean from the context that Aristotle’s notion of living under restraint was not restricted to slaves but was extended to wage labor and to others who were economically dependent. In this sense, a free man is not free and may be indebted to service, yet they differ from slaves in that they are not property. This interpretation differs from modern conceptions of freedom that do not consider economics as determining degrees of freedom but rather that wealth is the precursor to the enslavement of others.
Finley notes the ambiguity of the Greco-Roman institutions of slavery citing the Helots of Sparta who worked in many forms of servitude and were referred to as “Slaves” by the Greeks. Finley explains that the Helots were not a freeman, nor were they deemed property and therefore could not be sold or freed as chattel might, except by the state. Additionally, the Helots, unlike chattel retained their families, their possessions, religions, and, in general, all the normal human institutions except their freedom. More interestingly the Helots were enlisted into the Spartan army as proper, heavy-armed soldiers, not merely as orderlies and clerks. The status of the Helots with the ability to provide a benefit to the public outside of labor as an equal in warfare further complicates their social position. The cultural freedoms of the Helots and their military use separates them from the accepted roles of slaves creating a division of what constitutes enslaved.
Finley then addresses the institution of the peculium, property (in whatever form) assigned for use, management, and, within limits, disposal to someone who in law lacked the right of property, either a slave or someone in patria potestas. Under this system which constituted a substantial part of the urban commercial, financial and industrial activity both slaves and freedmen worked independently not only for their owners but also for themselves. In this way freedmen could increase both their wealth and status and slaves could purchase freedom with the profits. Once free the former slaves could continue the business as a freedman possessing property with all rights of transference to heirs. Slavery or servitude of both Greek and foreign individuals was defined by economics and incorporated into a status society of order independent from modern ideas of capitalism and race. Finley successfully illustrates with an in-depth social examination of ancient economics that Greco-Roman slaves consisted of freemen, dependent labor, debt-bondage, and chattel.
In Conquerers and Slaves British Historian and sociologist Keith Hopkins, claims that “Only a handful of human societies can properly be called ‘slave societies’, if by slave society we mean a society in which slaves play an important part in production and form a high proportion (say over 20 %) of the population.” Hopkins identifies five slave societies, classical Athens and Roman from antiquity, the West Indian Islands, Brazil and the southern states of America. Most of Hopkins work centers around Roman culture stating that Roman imperial expansionism resulted in the growth of slavery in Rome following a cycle of seven factors: “continuous war, the influx of booty, its investment in land, the formation of large estates, the impoverishment of peasants, their emigration to towns and the provinces, the growth of urban markets.” Hopkins further stresses that slavery in Rome was also a product of Roman politics which depended on status and power. Ownership of slaves displayed wealth, amplified the discrepancy between the living-styles of rich and poor, and preserved the traditional independence of the citizens. The presence of a substantial number of slaves in a Roman society defined free citizens, even if they were poor, as superior.
Finley and Hopkins have primarily viewed slavery as an economic institution resulting from wealth ideology, Roman politics, and social order. Most interesting that both Finley and Hopkins concentrate on economics but succeed most in revealing the social institution of slavery in a society defined by status and wealth. Ancient Greek and Roman culture were polarized with the notion that man was either wealthy or poor and free or slave similar as one would say Male or Female in modern times. These notions were absolute but not definite, meaning that a slave could become free just as a freeman could become slave either through acts of conquest or debt. From the scholarship of these two authors among others, it becomes clear that expansionism, wealth, status and politics, not ethnicity, controlled much of the slave philosophies in the Greco-Roman world. These same foundations are found in other cultures with strict social hierarchies influenced by both wealth and control such as was exhibited in the African slave trade.
Slavery dominated the African political economy and was fundamental in control of people and land from ancient times. In most ancient civilizations, the practice of slavery began as a natural extension of the social hierarchy or because of conflict. At first, most slaves were outsiders, those taken from other peoples, but over time slavery became an acceptable status even among one’s own people. Slaves were often obtained in warfare, military raids and kidnapping while others became religious and judicial prisoners of servitude. For centuries, humans were part of the cargo in trade conducted between Africa and Eurasia, along with ivory, gold, and other commodities of legitimate trade. A common perversion of the African slave trade is the representation of Europeans invading and violently trapping Africans in a culture of violence and human trade. Despite Africa’s long history of slave trade modern historians argue that Africans were not experienced traders and were forced or coerced into the involuntary sale of labor by European merchants.
John Thornton author of Africa and Africans in the making of the Atlantic world, 1400-1800 argues that the slave trade should not be seen as an autonomous “impact” brought in from outside but was instead rooted in deep-seated legal and institutional structures of African societies, and functioned quite differently from the way it functioned in European societies. Thornton asserts slavery was in many ways the functional equivalent of the landlord-tenant relationship in Europe as slaves in Africa were the only form of private, revenue-producing property recognized in African law in comparison to European legal systems, in which land was the primary form of private, revenue-producing property. Alongside J.D. Fage and David Eltis Thornton contests historians such as Walter Rodney and Paul Lovejoy that profess that external forced slave trade caused social disruption, adversely altered judicial systems, or increased inequality on unwilling African participants. Instead, Thornton and colleagues stress that slavery was widespread and indigenous in African society, Europeans simply tapped this existing market. Thornton establishes concrete evidence that Africans were not coerced, forced or economically manipulated to traffic in human slaves.
Thornton offers an alternative explanation that economic and political warfare motivated the practice of military enslavement and the spread of slavery. The institution of slavery in Africa following this line of interpretation becomes very clouded in terminology again. In acts of warfare, the capture of enemies for political and economic growth does not constitute slavery as understood in European terms. It also does not represent an ethnic bias but rather a social organization of weeding out or controlling individuals that posed a threat to social organization and desired expansions. As noted earlier, slavery is a term used so loosely in European languages and Christian societies that only by careful examination of cultures, languages, laws and social organizations can slavery as a term be correctly identified and applied.
Consider for example the Chikunda of South Africa in Portuguese-run estates called Prazos along the Zambezi River. The Chikunda were slaves both captive and voluntary used by Portuguese settlers to collect taxes from peasants, patrol the borders, and police the estates. Over time these slaves developed a collective identity that shared behaviors and beliefs, a patrilineal system of kinship and inheritance that celebrated their prowess as warriors and hunters distinguishing them from the indigenous peasant population. This formation of cultural identity is very complex as it was comprised of slaves from distant regions divided by language and ancestry. Issacman and Peterson in “Making the Chikunda: Military Slavery and Ethnicity in Southern Africa, 1750-1900,” document the diversity of slaves, with a detailed list of 659 male slaves freed in the Tete area in 1856 from 21 different ethnic groups. Among the Chikunda were also voluntary slaves who sold themselves into military slavery as an economical means of survival. One eighteenth-century chronicler observed, “The greatest part came to be captives from the times of famine, pestilence, and locusts and because of their urgent necessity, they had no alternative but to come and offer themselves as captives.” Unlike most slave systems the Chikunda were frequently gifted highly valued imported goods, including cloth, beads, and guns and granted land, wives, and the right to hunt on the estates. Chikunda were not confined to the estates but were housed on regimental villages called butaka, each with a clearly defined political hierarchy, with a slave chief, mukazambo, exercising authority over his soldiers’ lives. Along with their independent social structuring the Chikunda owned slaves of their own captured in warfare and military campaigns. The Chikunda differ greatly from traditional conceptions of slave societies in that the members consist of both voluntary and involuntary slaves highly diversified yet organized into communities with shared identities and power above the indigenous groups. The Chikunda were endowed with both economic and political privileges that mirror very closely the status of freemen in Grec,o-Roman society.
Slavery in the Indian Ocean world spawned from economies based on irrigated agriculture that required massive labor. Mesopotamia, Egypt and the Indus Valley and later China wealthy from agriculture engaged in military expansion. Gwyn Campbell in “Enslavement in the Indian Ocean World” notes the expansion resulted in two broad systems of enslavement maintained to the end of the nineteenth century. The first system believed to be the origin of slavery in Mesopotamia in the, third millennia B.C. enslaved only women and children and executed most adult males to reduce the cost of enslaving and to prevent rebellion. Unlike the Atlantic slave-trade which consisted mostly of males, many slaves traded in the Indian Ocean World were female valued particularly for their sexual attractiveness and reproductive capacity. With the exceptions of eunuchs (‘males made female’), who were universally highly prized, and boys in China; there, patriarchal ideology restricted the supply of boy slaves whose price was often four to five times that of a girl slave. In the second system, adult male captives from advanced and settled agricultural regions were commonly maintained alongside captive women and children in a state of community bondage. However, most slaves in the Indian Ocean world were enslaved legally, for defaulting debtors and their relatives. Enslavement for indebtedness in this system is distinguished from debt bondage as involuntary in comparison to later samples of debt bondage that is voluntary. A common and not often considered practice in slavery was also voluntary slavery in which individuals were willingly sold to ensure survival following natural disasters that brought death and disease. In addition to war slaves, indebted slaves and voluntary slave the Indian Ocean trades also exported Indonesians, people of Turk and Slavic origin, Indians and others along the Makran coast of Iran, Western India, Indonesia and China making the industry of slavery ethnically diverse.
The Indian Ocean institution of slavery was just as diverse in meaning as it was in ethnicities of the slaves. In nineteenth-century Somalia terms such as Jareer, Bantu, Mjikenda, Adoon, Habash, Bidde, Sankadhuudhe, Boon, Meddo, and Oogi were all applied to different states of slavehood. Each of these terms, like the Greco-Roman language considered earlier, had different meanings, depending on context and the meanings could change over time. The terms nubi or sishu (slave) appears repeatedly in Chinese sources over the last 2000 years but has been largely ignored by sinologists prior to the Han and Tang eras as lacking importance in the Chinese economy. Most scholarship in slave trafficking in China begins with the Han dynasty and the Nubi or Nu-pi defined as property which could be bought and sold, legally distinct from free men. In China, most slaves originated as indentured servants, who could regain their freedom if able to repay to their master the sum stipulated in their contract. In addition to the indebted servant Angela Schottenhammer in her research article “Slaves and Forms of Slavery in Late Imperial China” distinguishes three other basic sources of enslavement. The first, males seized by the victorious Manchu invaders and forced to serve in the Manchu army in the period 1645 to 1647. The second peasants, craftsman, small merchants and artisans forced to sell themselves or family members as slaves. And the third major category comprised of kidnap victims, chiefly women, young girls, and children, officially registered as slaves (nuji), and sold as concubines, wives or prostitutes. In these earliest forms of slavery warfare, politics, social order, and economics was a greater influence on servitude than the race itself. The definition of slavery, therefore, changes according to how one was enslaved, became indebted or voluntarily agreed to contract into a servitude debt, and the meaning of slavery lies instead on conditions and treatment as determinants between enslaved and free. Research so far has indicated that slavery loosely defined was intrinsically an institution socially and politically complex influenced by both economics and expansionism. The European expansion into the Americas as well dependent on labor forces, labor that originated at home but quickly evolved into the forced migration of Africans to the new colonies.
Harry S. Truman once said “America was not built on fear. America was built on courage, on imagination and an unbeatable determination to do the job at hand.” Truman’s words are powerful and motivational however they credit more to national identity than to the true nature of “doing the job at hand” in colonial America. Building America depended on an immense labor force that was not created entirely of free people but was comprised of human capital that included convicts, indentured servants, native captives and forcefully migrated slaves.
Indentured servitude was a common institution in the 17th and I8th century British colonies and constituted a major portion of the colonial labor force. Abbot Emerson Smith, a leading historian of indentured servitude in the colonial period estimated that between one-half and two-thirds of all white immigrants to the British colonies between the Puritan migration of the 1630s and the Revolution came under indentured servitude. In addition to European transports, labor needs were augmented by the enslavements of native Americans during the major New England Indian wars, including the Pequot War of 1637, King Philip’s War of 1675–76, and the northeastern Wabanaki conflicts of 1676–1749. Historian Brett Rushforth has calculated that from the late fifteenth through the mid-nineteenth century, two to four million Native American slaves were traded by colonizers in the Americas. Both European indentured servants and captive natives endured many hardships like that of trans-Atlantic slaves, yet their plight is lost in the shadows of abolitionism and civil rights. Historians have committed volumes of literature to the case of the trans-Atlantic slave trade but have presented only a limited view of the Imperial influence and social history of indentured servitude in the growth of the American colonies.
Most research and scholarship to date has been concentrated on economic history primarily focused on labor and market complexities. Among the most notable contributors to the modern understanding of the institution of indentured servitude is historian Abbot Emerson Smith. His works include The Indentured Servant and Land Speculation in Seventeenth-Century Maryland, “The Transportation of Convicts to the American Colonies in the Seventeenth Century,” and Colonists in Bondage: White Servitude and Convict Labor in America, 1607-1776. Scholarship of Smith provides in-depth knowledge of the conditions of Britain society that led to bondage, trader profitability within the industry trade in servants, and public policy toward the trade and its abuses. While Smith explores economic elements, he adds to social interpretation by exploring three groups of emigration to the Americas he describes as the redemptioners, the indentured or indebted servants and those of the state consisting of political and military prisoners, vagabonds, and convicts. Of the last he states that while “America was a haven for the godly, a refuge for the oppressed, a challenge to the adventurous . . . it was also the last resort of scoundrel.” Smith expresses a certain disdain for the convicts as a detriment to the social growth of American society and runs a bit short on the experiences of the redemptioners. However, Smith illuminates the experiences of those migrated in servitude with detailed documentation of their experiences, legal status, treatment and life after servitude.
On this same line of research David Galenson an Associate Professor of Economics, University of Chicago and Research Associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research draws parallels between indentured servitude and older systems of British bound labor. In doing this, he moves against traditional servitude views to the interpretation of voluntary choice in a developing competitive market. Galenson argues that servitude is fundamentally different than slavery existing as a labor market free of coercive elements and comprised of all social classes. In this work, Galenson proposes that the rising cost of white servitude wages and improved economics in Britain directly influenced the introduction of slavery to the West Indies and America. Galensons reinterpretation of servitude contributes immensely to understanding market volatility and human capitalism but falls short in social exploration to living and work conditions in servitude contracts or the labor hardships that followed in the developing nation.
The labor forces of the American colonies went through a series of identifiable periods based on systematic changes in the relative costs of white and black labor over time. As small agricultural evolved into large agricultural staples the demand for labor rose and therefore tended to raise the level of immigration to the colony. Initially, the annual cost of indentured servants was below that of slaves, and planters continued to rely on indentured laborers. However, as the cost of indentured labor rose, the colonies began to transition to slave labor which was a considerably less expensive form of unskilled labor.
Black slave labor had other advantages in social control, distinguishable by the color they were easier to identify, they were unarmed and had no legal protection in conditions of labor or the levels of brutality that could be applied to ensure control. This shift in labor restructured the class system, elevating the indentured servant from the bottom to a new class with social privileges and protection of both property and human rights. The image of the African became associated with savagery, paganism, immorality, ignorance, and primitiveness. In short, racism materialized.
Research to this point has established trends in the slave trade to be multifaceted beyond racial assumptions including warfare, economics, debt and even sexual in nature but none specific to a single ethnicity. Racism is correlated to the institution of slavery in America as a product of the systems political and social climates cultivated within the institution of slavery. However, this does not conclusively correlate racism to acts of enslavement but instead to a collective reaction to social restructuring both of class and within labor divisions.
The American expansion from labor slavery to racial slavery does not imply ethnically derived systems nor establishes a consistent presence of ethnically driven motivators in human bondage. Consider again the Chikunda, ethnically diversified captives, soldier slaves endowed with both economic and political privileges. Both Greek and Roman societies chose their slaves from among outsiders (‘barbarians’) though, it was not defined in racial terms and during the Han and Song periods gender defined slave preference and Tang literature refers to Kunlun or Black African slaves pointedly elevating African slaves as rare luxury items. None of the systems, including that of colonial America exhibit definitive racial influencers in origination, the divide comes as a social justification for inhumane acts. Further scholarship needs to be applied to distinguish between racially motivated systems of enslavement and institutions of slavery that promoted racial division as a means of controlling social order.
Bibliography

Abramovitz-Zelnick, Rachel. Not Wholly Free: The Concept of Manumission and the Status of Manumitted Slaves in the Ancient Greek World. Leiden: Brill, 2005.
Campbell, Gwyn. Structure of Slavery in Indian Ocean Africa and Asia. London: Routledge, 2004.
Dendy, Christina. “Overview of the Slave Trade in Ancient Africa.” Ancient Africa: Overview of The Slave Trade in Ancient Africa. January 2011. 1.
Finley, Moses. The ancient economy. University of California Press, 1999.
Galenson, David W. “The Rise and Fall of Indentured Servitude in the Americas: An Economic Analysis.” The Journal of Economic History. 44 (1 )1984. 1-26.
Galenson, David W. “White Servitude and the Growth of Black Slavery in Colonial America.” The Journal of Economic History 41, no. 1 (1981): 39-47.
Harms, Robert W. Indian Ocean Slavery in the Age of Abolition. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013.
Heuman, Gad, and Burnard, Trevor, eds. “The Routledge History of Slavery.” Florence: Routledge. 2010
Hopkins, Keith. Conquerors and slaves. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1978.
Kusimba, Chapurukha M. “Archaeology of Slavery in East Africa.” The African Archaeological Review no. 2 2004.
Marshall, Lydia Wilson. The Archaeology of Slavery: A Comparative Approach to Captivity and Coercion. Carbondale, Southern Illinois University Press. 2015.
Miller, Joseph C. The Problem of Slavery as History: A Global Approach. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2012.
Snyder, Christina. “The Long History of American Slavery.” OAH Magazine of History 27, no. 4 (October 2013): 23-27.
Tallant, Harold D. “Slavery.” Salem Press Encyclopedia 2014.
Thornton, John K. (John Kelly). Africa and Africans in the making of the Atlantic world, 1400-1800. Cambridge University Press, 1998.
Walvin, James. Atlas of Slavery. Harlow, England: Routledge, 2006.
Wilson, Carter A. Racism from slavery to advanced capitalism. Thousand Oaks, Calif. SAGE, 1996.

Tarim Basin Mummies (Academic Research)

Tales of the Dead

Deciphering the Tarim Basin Mummies

The Tarim Basin is China’s largest inland basin covering an area of 530,000 square kilometers at an altitude of 800 to 1,300 meters.  Located south of Xinjiang Uyghur in an independent territory between the Tianshan Mountains, Kunlun Mountains and Arjin Mountains. With annual precipitation less than 100 millimeters, the climate is extremely dry and the rainfall is less than 50 millimeters for most of time. [1] 9hedmapxDespite formidable conditions this area has been for thousands of years an important crossroad between the eastern and western parts of Eurasia known as the silk road. Through satellite images mapping the main routes of the Silk Road in this region it is evident that all three routes along the North rim and South rim circumvent the Taklimakan Desert, which is situated in the center of what is the Tarim River Basin. This indicates that this region would have experienced heavy traffic in trade and cultural exchanges. Trade must be determined as a factor in the unusual circumstances by which burial sites containing the remains of Caucasoid individuals arrived in China, however it does not account for the age of the mummies dated to the 1st and 2nd millennia BCE, nine hundred years before documented interaction with the east. The Tarim Basin mummies defy accepted assumptions giving evidence of western European contact with China at a much earlier period. Archeological evidence in artifacts located at the burial grounds further challenges historians and Chines history posing the possibility of entire European communities within China as early as four thousand years ago altering ideas of the origins of the original settlers. It is the purpose of this research through modern finds, known ancient trade routes and linguistic studies to investigate an initial time period of exchange and of greater interest the language development that connects Indo-Europeans to the Tarim Basin. It is the premise of this research that through collective overview of the DNA findings, archeological evidence and language studies a shared lineage between the Proto-Indo-Europeans and Proto-Tokharians will be identified within ancient Xianjaing, china.

In 1970 Wang Binghu China’ leading archeologist, Wang Binghua began a systematic search for ancient sites in the northeast corner of Xinjiang under the presumption that ancient peoples would have located settlements along a stream. As he travelled through communities Binghua would question the locales whether they had ever found any broken bowls, wooden artifacts, or the like. It wasn’t until 1978 that he was told of a place called Qizilchoqa, or ‘Red Hillock.’, the location where the first mummy was located. [2] Since the original discovery hundreds of other perfectly preserved three and four-thousand-year-old mummies have been excavated from four major burial sites dispersed between the arid foothills of the Tian Shan in the remote Taklimakan desert.

Victor Maier, professor of Chinese at the University of Pennsylvania and a collaborative investigator with Chinese scientists excavating these sites elaborates in his journal “Ancient Mummies of the Tarim Basin” several unique mummies he encountered on expeditions of which six of these will be considered in this paper to emphasize the distinctly European culture of the Tarim Basin mummies.

One of the oldest of these discovered in 1980 is the Beauty of Loulan, dated to about 1800 B.C.E.  She was discovered in the northeastern corner of the Tarim Basin buried wearing a warm cloak or shroud, a hat, boots, a wooden comb, a basket, and a winnowing tray, the ancient agricultural tool for sep2arating grain from chaff.

 

 

 

 

 

Approximately 120 kilometers to the west-south-west of Loulan in Ordek’s Necropolis, remotely located in the desert at Small River Cemetery excavators unearthed The Beauty of Xiaohe in a boat coffin. Archeologist estimate that she is from same period and culture as the Loulan Beauty. The Xiaohe tombs are a bit peculiar in that it seems as if all evidence of the society was contained within the coffins, clothes, jewelry wooden masks and other carvings. The graves give the appearance of being relocated to the burial ground from another area as archaeologists have searched for hundreds of kilometers around the tomb complex and have not found any other evidence that could relate to the Xiaohe people or their life style.

3Further compounding the mystery of the Xiahoe tombs is variations in coffins. In addition to wooden coffins four clay covered coffins were found surrounded by six to eight wooden stakes. More strange however are the six coffins containing wooden male representations marked with a red X.[3]

One of the more well-known mummies in this paper is the Charchan Man recovered from a tomb near the vil­lage of Zaghunluq, in the central por­tion of the southern edge of the Tarim Basin. 4-e1532356250204

c27a3119191934362082541ee50f4acaThis site according to Mair is considerably more recent than the two discussed above and dates to around 600 BCE. This is evidenced in Charchan man’s clothing and that of his family, two wives and an infant all buried in rich burgundy clothing signifying colorful dyes in use for textile production at this time.

Like the Charchan man, Yingpan man also was clothed in brightly colored clothing. He is an interesting case, unlike the aforementioned mummies he appears to have been very wealthy and his body is not nearly as pristinely preserved. Yingpan Man’s face is covered by a white mask with a strip of gold foil across the forehead. He is clothed in elaborately embroidered in Greco-Roman motifs and buried with rich trappings. This alongside his burial location along an ancient caravan trail indicates a well-connected merchant or noble status.

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A Roman merchant is impressive and a bit out of place but not nearly as strange as the fourth and second century “witches” of Subeshi. These mummies were entombed with pointed black hats that resemble the iconic head- gear of their sisters in medieval Europe. [4] One of females exhumed had been buried wearing a heavy glove that may indicate that she hunted with a raptor.  The men were no less interesting, including a man whose head was encased in a felt helmet and another who may have been one of the world’s oldest surgery patients signified by the horsehair stitches creating a suture on his chest. [5]

Of all the Caucasoid mummies the man from Hami with a dozen hats divulges more artimair_8facts that point to European ancestry than any other. Found at the Qizilchoqa cemetery near Wupu archeologist uncovered an eccentric corpse interned with a large collection of distinctive hats. Among the marvelous collection buried with him are a beret made of the world’s first nalebinding (a technique like crocheting) and a Phrygian-style cap made of thick brown felt with striking white ornamental stitching.

7

 

Also from this site are plaids employing the same weave (diagonal twill) as plaids from Celtic sites in Europe dating to around the same period 1000 BCE. [6]

 

 

The harsh climates of the Tarim Basin preserved each of these mummies naturally due to extreme aridity and the saline soils of the environment.  Combined with severely cold winters that prevented the processes of putrefaction and decomposition nature has allowed scientist and archeologists a clear view of these ancient peoples. A view that shares significant characteristics with European genetic and demands investigation into why and when western societies found their way to China through migration and trade.

The Tarim Basin and the burial grounds of the Caucasoid mummies is located in the Xinjiang region of China situated on the ancient trade route between China and the Mediterranean. It is the proximity to the “silk road” that researchers believe brought the European societies to China eventually formulated the cultural and biological diversity of the people of the Tarim Basin. There are two predominant theories that archeologists and anthropologist have determined as most likely contributors to the origins of the peoples of the Tarim basin.

tarim_basin_map_small

The first is the “steppe hypothesis” which asserts an occurrence of at least two population influxes from the Russo-Kazakh steppe. Investigations have drawn parallels between the earliest bronze age sites of the Tarim basin with the migration herders of the Afanasievo culture through artifacts that exhibit a shared material culture, burial rites and skeletal traits which could imply that Afanasievo culture as the earliest settlers. (ca. 3300–2000 B.C.). Dr. David W. Anthony, an anthropologist at Hartwick College in Oneonta, N.Y., working with Russian archeologists has discovered traces of wagon wheels in 5,000-year-old burial mounds on the steppes of southern Russia and Kazakhstan offering evidence that the wheel, wagons and chariots were introduced into China from the West supporting the theory of western migrations. Contributing to this theory wheels similar to those in use in western Asia and Europe in the third and second millenniums B.C. have been found in graves in the Gobi Desert, northeast of the Tarim Basin and in the Tarim Basin ritual horse burials similar to those in ancient Ukraine have been excavated furthering evidence of an exchange of technological advances.[7] The second occurrence is signified in excavation through the introduction of new material culture, clothing styles and burial customs associated with the Andronovo culture occurring in the late Bronze Age with (ca. 2100–900 B.C.).

The second theory, the “Bactrian oasis hypothesis” assumes a two-step settlement as well but differs in origins of original inhabitants suggesting that the irrigation systems, wheat remains, woolen textiles, bones of sheep and goats, and traces of the medicinal plant Ephedra found in Xinjiang points to the Oxus civilization whose heritage is traced to northern Afghanistan and the northeast corner of Iran, while Margiana is further north, in what is today Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Institute for Research on World-Systems University of California-Riverside assumes the stance that the presence of Margiana grave goods in these regions indicates the presence of trader-priests who were organizing the exchange of the desired raw materials for products from the Margiana-Bactria homeland but were not engaged in regular East to West trading along the Silk Road. It is their hypothesis that early interaction with China was probably mediated by down-the-line trade among steppe nomads and that as a result of the spread of agriculture across the region settlements Bactrian settlements began to emerge.

In researching the histories of interactions of the people of Xiaohe with outside societies it is vital to understand an early timeline of the ancient trade route of the silk road. In additional to the natural migration patterns of herders as early as 100 B.C. ambassadors began diplomatic journeys to Sulla and Wu-ti under the orders of Parthinian king Mithridates, to establish an important link between Rome and China.  By the Roman conquest of Egypt in 30 B.C., regular communications and trade between India, Southeast Asia, Sri Lanka, China, the Middle East, Africa and Europe was extensive both on land and by sea. Diplomatic excursions were referenced in Book VI of Pliny’s Naturalis Historia, an account during the reign of Claudius from 41 to 54 A. D. tells of a delegate from Taprobanê, today’s Sri Lanka to Rome giving indication that YingPan man may have been a part of a diplomatic voyage. [8] The silk road served not only for trade but for exchanges of ideas and this is evidenced in 1 A.D. when Buddhism began to spread from India into Central Asia. In that same period Xiongnu raids upset Chinese power in Tarim region, where the mummies were discovered, a possible signifier of the value of that region as a cultural point for travelers during this period. The Xiongnu were soon defeated by Chinese General Pan Ch’ao and the Silk road was stabilized expanding caravan trades into two routes – north and south.  During this same period Greco-Egyptian geographer, Claudius Ptolemy, writes his geography, and attempts to map the Silk road greatly influencing the expeditions among peoples of different regions and cultures.[9] Over the next five hundred years the silk road was an avenue of exchanges of materials and ideas between peoples rising to its golden age during the Tang dynasty a period in which foreign cultural influences most freely shared. Understanding the region, burials and the migration of Caucasoid peoples in the Tarim Basin is all intriguing and packed with possibilities but as with all research there is a degree of doubt. Recent technology could provide definitive proof of genetics to support archeological investigations of artifacts and migration patterns with the introduction of tests performed on the mummified corpses from the Xiaohe tomb complex to determine genetic lineage.
Gravesite_70.976x87in-copy

The Xiaohe cemetery in the Xinjiang, region of present day China was excavated between 2002 and 2005, and consisted of five strata with radiocarbon dates ranging from 4000 to 3500 years ago. This site contains the oldest and best-preserved mummies thus far discovered in the Tarim Basin.[10] Researchers believe that these inhabitants of the Xiaohe tomb are key to understanding earliest settlers, migration patterns and the extent of interactions between the people of Xiaohe and other peoples. During excavation ninety-two individuals of the one hundred and sixty-seven graves were transported to DNA laboratory of Jilin University, to be subjected to DNA analysis of teeth and bone. Thirty-six of these individuals successfully yielded twenty-one distinct DNA haplotypes, of which eighteen could be assigned to twelve previously defined haplogroups. There are two haplotypes observed in Xiaohe, the basal U5a that is found broadly in Europe and central Asia, and the U5a haplotype found exclusively in Europe for modern people suggesting a strong European connection. Analysis of DNA from the deepest layer of burials of the Xiaohe site revealed that the first settlers had European paternal lineages, and maternal lineages of European and central Siberian origin, consistent with the “Steppe hypothesis” of the origins of the first inhabitants. [11]

However, analysis of the more recent burial layers reveals more widespread mitochondrial lineages suggesting a later genetic blend of both east and west that is an indication of cultural exchanges that must be considered in the deciphering of the Tarim basin Mummies . Having explored archeological and anthropological hypothesis of origins based on archeological evidence, Deoxyribonucleic Acid tests that revealed a degree of European genetics and the importance of the silk trade route with its proximity to the Tarim basin mummies it should now be considered a comprehensive study of language.  Exploring the common origin of Latin, Greek and Sanskrit, the ancient language of Hindu law and religion that ultimately formed the parent language, now called Proto-Indo-European (PIE) and how this may relate to the Tarim mummies in discovering lineage and traditions.

According to “Genes, language, and culture: an example from the Tarim basin.” By Thornton, Christopher P., and Theodore G. Schurr and published in the 2004 Oxford Journal European explorers in the nineteenth century returned from Xinjiang with the only known texts we can associate with the Tarim Basin mummies. Buddhist manuscripts dating to the sixth-eighth centuries AD that had been written in languages and or dialects of a previously unknown linguistic family, Tocharian.[12] An extinct branch of the Indo-European family considered by most scholars to be related to western Indo-European languages such as Celtic and Italian that to date has only been reconstructed back to around 500–400 BC. [13] This article stresses that there are two immediate problems with the  Yuezhi–Guti–Tocharian analogy. Asserting that historians eager to associate the languages translated from the documents discovered in the Tarim Basin historically with the people mentioned in Greek and Indic texts subjectively labeled them Tocharian . Secondly it is asserted that there is no evidence linked to the mummies that suggests   an   association   between   these   important archaeological finds and this extinct linguistic family.[14] Dr. Michael Puett, a historian of East Asian civilizations at Harvard University contrasts this view with the notion of diffusion stating that “Research on the Tocharians, the mummies and related artifacts revealed clear processes of diffusion as ca be seen in language chart that displays comparison and transition of words through intermingling. Puett is supported in this view by Dr. Colin Renfrew, an influential archeologist at Cambridge University in England contesting that the manuscripts dated between the sixth and eighth centuries A.D., may be an implication that the language represents an extremely early branching off the original, or proto-Indo-European, language. [15] Dr. Mair who is on the forefront of research in the Tarim basin mummies admits that these tantalizing peoples nor their artifacts bear solid records of their earliest linguistic or spiritual status. Acknowledging that the Indo-European Tocharian language of the region is attested from a much later date (6th-8th c. A.D.) than the mummies, which can only tentatively be identified as belonging to the ancestors of the Tocharian speakers. However, Mair, a professor of Chinese and Indo-Iranian literature at the University of Pennsylvania and James Mallory, a distinguished Indo-European linguist and archaeologist at Queen’s University in Belfast based on strong circumstantial evidence are convinced that the Afanasievo culture—a steppe-related culture to the north of the Tarim Basin, might have been the source of the people who created the earliest Tarim mummies and perhaps brought the Proto-Tocharian language into the region. With no concrete evidence it is difficult to determine language of people but there can be an assumed ancestral lineage and transmission of language through migration of peoples.[16]

Research of the Tarim Basin mummies has been an exhilarating adventure despite the enigma and mystery that surrounds these ancient peoples. Emigrational patterns and DNA samplings point to an early western expansion into the east but science has yet to formulate concrete evidence that empirically defines the Caucasoid inhabitants as original settlers or to define a direct relationship to the Tarim basin and its additional inhabitants. Genetics and burial artifacts of the Caucasoid people evidence clear migration from either the North or the East.

More confounding is the lack of written texts directly related to the Tarim basin mummies that would tell the culture, the beliefs and the histories. It can be assumed for now hypothetically, that these silent artifacts are contributors to the Tocharian language in one form or another as a necessity of intermingling. As of this writing the information is scarce and we must rely on the evidence researched that multiple ancient societies of European lineages migrated into the Tarim Basin. That these people shared technological exchanges, engaged in agriculture and commerce creating uniquely European settlements at a period earlier than previously known and by doing so contributed to modern heritage of the region. The Tarim mummies for years to come will be tantalizing historians with their mysteries and possibilities.

 

Bibliography

Abeydeera, Ananda. “New Light on the First Sri Lankan Embassy to Rome Mentioned by Pliny the Elder.” Sri Lanka Journal of the Humanities 35, no. 1/2 (November 2009): 55-74. (accessed September 6, 2016).

Anthony, David W. “Tracking the Tarim Mummies.” Archaeology, 2001., 76, (accessed September 6, 2016).

China Report. n.d. http://www.drben.net/ChinaReport/Sources/China_Maps/Map-Satellite-Tarim_River_Basin-Taklamakan_Desert-1A.html.

Chunxiang, Li, et al. “Analysis of ancient human mitochondrial DNA from the Xiaohe cemetery: insights into prehistoric population movements in the Tarim Basin, China.” BMC Genetics 16, no. 1 (July 2015): 1-11. (accessed September 6, 2016).

Mair, Victor H. “Ancient Mummies of the Tarim Basin.” Expedition 58, no. 2 (Fall2016 2016): 24-29. (accessed October 7, 2016)

“Middlemen and Marchers States in Central Asia and East-West EmpireSynchrony.”. Accessed October 8, 2016. http://www.irows.ucr.edu/papers/irows30/irows30.htm.

“Silk Road chronology,” accessed September 23, 2016, http://www.silk-road.com/artl/chrono.shtml.

“The Mummies of Xinjiang | DiscoverMagazine.com,” Discover Magazine, accessed October 7, 2016, http://discovermagazine.com/1994/apr/themummiesofxinj359.

“The Mystery of the Xiaohe Mummies in China,” Ancient Origins, accessed October 7, 2016, http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-asia/mystery-xiaohe-mummies-china-00578.

Thornton, Christopher P., and Theodore G. Schurr. “Genes, language, and culture: an example from the tarim basin.” Oxford Journal Of Archaeology 23, no. 1 (February 2004): 83-106. (accessed September 6, 2016).

Wagner, M, et al. “The ornamental trousers from Sampula (Xinjiang, China): their origins and biography.” Antiquity 83, no. 322 (n.d.): 1065-1075. (accessed September 6, 2016).

Wilford, John N. “Mummies, Textiles Offer Evidence Of Europeans in Far East – The New York Times.” The New York Times – Breaking News, World News & Multimedia. Accessed October 8, 2016.

中国石油天然气集团公司. Accessed October 7, 2016. http://www.cnpc.com.cn/en/xhtml/pdf/23-Tarim%20Basin.pdf.

 

 

[1] 中国石油天然气集团公司. Accessed October 7, 2016. http://www.cnpc.com.cn/en/xhtml/pdf/23-Tarim%20Basin.pdf.

[2] “The Mummies of Xinjiang | DiscoverMagazine.com,” Discover Magazine, accessed October 7, 2016, http://discovermagazine.com/1994/apr/themummiesofxinj359.

[3] “The Mystery of the Xiaohe Mummies in China,” Ancient Origins, accessed October 7, 2016, http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-asia/mystery-xiaohe-mummies-china-00578.

[4] Mair, Victor H. “Ancient Mummies of the Tarim Basin.” Expedition 58, no. 2 (Fall2016 2016): 24-29. (accessed October 7, 2016)

[5] ibid

[6] ibid

[7] John N. Wilford, “Mummies, Textiles Offer Evidence Of Europeans in Far East – The New York Times,” The New York Times – Breaking News, World News & Multimedia, accessed October 8, 2016,

[8] Abeydeera, Ananda. “New Light on the First Sri Lankan Embassy to Rome Mentioned by Pliny the Elder.” Sri Lanka Journal of the Humanities 35, no. 1/2 (November 2009): 55-74. (accessed September 6, 2016)

[9] ibid

[10] Chunxiang, Li, et al. “Analysis of ancient human mitochondrial DNA from the Xiaohe cemetery: insights into prehistoric population movements in the Tarim Basin, China.”

[11] ibid

[12] Thornton, Christopher P., and Theodore G. Schurr. “Genes, language, and culture: an example from the tarim basin.” Oxford Journal Of Archaeology 23, no. 1 (February 2004): 83-106. (accessed September 6, 2016).

[13] ibid

[14] ibid

[15] Wilford, John N. “Mummies, Textiles Offer Evidence Of Europeans in Far East – The New York Times.” The New York Times – Breaking News, World News & Multimedia. Accessed October 8, 2016.

 

[16] . “The riddle of the Tarim basin mummies.” Mankind Quarterly 41, no. 4 (nod): 437-446. t (accessed September 6, 2016).

Why Preserve History

We live in a technology driven society built upon the great minds, trials and errors and histories of the human race. We have everything, and there is little left to want. But with all that we have there is one great shortcoming, we forget! For every advancement, every ease, every single aspect of our lives moving forward we travel further from our humble beginnings and much is lost to the hustle and bustle of progress.

Unlike the mechanisms that drive us forward today, we have real history, a hard fought history that demands an emotional and mental awareness from its benefactors. An awareness derived from gratitude of all things, ideas, peoples and places that have brought the human race to this great state of enlightenment. The very enlightenment that drives us further from clear understanding and knowledge of how truly great we are and have become because of our history.

When the heart stops beating, and the body fails, the mind’s memory, stories and loves are lost forever. We can not reboot, restore or replace what is lost. That is why historical societies, commissions with active members, writers passionate and committed, and professionals dedicated to preserving are imperative. It is our duty to preserve and honor the monuments, buildings, memories and papers that testify to the continuum of our towns, our communities, our peoples and our nation for the generations to follow.

Herodotus, Ptolemy I, Theodore Roosevelt, and Christopher Browning had an extraordinary vision and a capacity for detail and perspective. For all their wisdom, their highest achievement is so memorable that we are forever in their debt. They wrote things down; they did not leave history to be lost forever. Without their writings we would have no permanent record of events. Oral histories have built traditions, maintained legends and kept close the lives of our ancestors with much fondness, but too much room for error and exaggerations.

We must capture history and commit it to paper, protect structures that speak loudly of days past and retain documents in a manner that they may never be damaged. It is not too late to start preserving history, on a small or grand scale or to form a historical societies that do so with integrity, strength and iron will. Decades and centuries from now, our successors will want to know what life in this decade, this century was like, what buildings were lost, the politics of our time, the schools and the religions and the struggles we as communities and as a nation faced, overcame or succumbed to. They will want to know because these will become foundations on which the next generations will build upon, will look to and will we disappoint them, NAY, instead we will lay the blueprint, the foundation for a lineage of pride.

The answer is clear, the mission is clear, it is concrete as the revolutionaries of old: We must preserve, we must protect and never forget. History must be preserved to continuously seek betterment and to grow on the wisdom of our History and to have a Jolly time saving the memories of our great nation!

Our History is a treasure hunt if you may, a new age Holy Grail and an immeasurable resource to the future. There are untold riches to discover in the documents and in the relics forgotten in attics and basements, in the buildings we preserve, and from the minds of those that join us to share a past we do not remember. History inherently is not designed to be pretty or cater to the sensitive; it is a reminder of all that is ugly and all that was beautiful and victorious. History is the DNA of societies and the heartbeat that drives civilization forward that is why we must preserve History great and small!

Fairy tales, folk lore and myths

 

Fairy tales, folk lore and myths are excellent indicators of political, societal and psychological dilemmas across cultures and throughout history. The journey of the modern fairy tale begins with oral traditions handed down through generations and there is evidence of the earliest forms of written tales (The Golden Ass) dating back as far as 100–200 B.C.E. A fairy tale by definition is any type of short story that features magic, enchantments, and fantasy characters such as fairies, and goblins, elves, among others that are fictional in nature. Whereas myths and legends are narratives which generally involve belief in the truthfulness of the events described and are plainly moral tales. The term “fairy tale” will throughout this research encompass folk lore, myth and other different or alternative genres of children’s literature. Perhaps it is for all the complexities of the fantasy that sociologist, psychologist and governments have examined the meanings, moralities and uses of fairy tales and similar genres such as folklore, legend and mythology for society and individuals. Though the fairy tale has through the ages undergone many transformations from the heroism of the Gods and pagan magic rituals to the stylized characters of Disney, evolving as society evolves, the core remains the same and that is in the ideology that the tale represents the society in which it was created. Fairy tales are “related to the belief systems, values, rites, and experiences of the peoples.” (Zipes)
At times the fairy tales have been corrupted or intentionally created to relay an agenda of political attitudes to fit within current societal experiences. The use of fairy tales in politics is evidenced in L. Frank Baum’s “Wizard of Oz”, it is speculated that the Cowardly Lion was a character created as a mockery of 19th century politician, William Jenning Bryan, a populist, who ran for president in 1896 and 1900. “Cowardly Lion –Wm. Jenning Bryan, a famous politician and Populist Presidential candidate in 1896 and 1900 for monetary reform and a terrific orator. As a Populist Presidential candidate he sought to go to the capitol city – the Emerald city. ” (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: A Monetary Reformer’s Brief Symbol Glossary) Authors have used the fairy tale as a medium to expose perceived injustices of social or political nature as with George Orwell’s “Animal Farm,” an allegory to social inequalities of the working people during the Russian revolution. . George Orwell’s “Animal Farm” was not only a statement of the politics of the Russian revolution but represented the social view of the working people and the needed resistance to oppression by those in power.
Christopher Hollis argued: “It was the Orwellian thesis, right or wrong, that power inevitably corrupts and that revolutions therefore inevitably fail their purpose…..The lesson of Animal Farm is clearly not merely the corrupting effect of power when exercised by Communists, but the corrupting effect of power when exercised by anybody.” (Hollis)
The Third Reich as well utilized fairy tales to create political propaganda through the existing characters of the wolf in “Little Red Riding Hood” and the character of “Cinderella” to portray Jewish population as being of mongrel ethnic origin and causing suffering to the Aryan race. (O’Neill) Politics and society are often reflections of one another therefore fairy tales cannot be justified or condemned for the element of politics without understanding the societal issues of the time. Reiterating that fairy tales are the product of the particular society or culture in which created it is important to remember that fairy tales, folk lore and myths tales were composed in traditional societies and can cautiously be assumed to reflect the populations that produced them. (Zipes)
Fairy tales reflect social patterns and dilemmas and are often an effort to expose or change social order, power or authority. Like, Orwell, Oscar Wilde also wrote tales of resistance to social separations of classes with lessons to make a point about the relationship between morality and art. “Life. Is the solvent that breaks up Art, the enemy that lays waste her house.”(Wilde, Oscar). Jonathan Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels” an allegory, uses ludicrousness and hyperboles to depict the worst of human nature, to comment on the politics of the British government, and to parody the travel narratives popular at the time. (Damrosch) Today the debate of social equality in fairy tale focuses less on classes and more gender and ethnic equality. “Cinderella” is dependant on Prince Eric to save her from low social status and the state of poverty, the rags to riches scenario and “Sleeping Beauty” is hopeless, cursed and rescued from evilness by Prince Charming, “Snow white” the plotted victim of an evil stepmother rescued first by seven little men and finally by the archetype hero prince all send the message that the female gender is weak, pliable and dependant on the male gender for survival. The effect of childhood stories and their message of gender positioning and duties are often reflected in adult ideologies.
Both men and women have a tendency to make assumptions that women belong in specific types of jobs. Psychologists have performed experiments and studies to support this concept. They had a mixed group of girls and boys, and asked them to write “female” or “male” to a list of job occupations and personality traits. Most of the secretary, assistant, or housework was categorized under “female” while lawyers, CEOs, and higher-up positions were designated to males. (Green)
Fairy tales have not only elements of gender bias but also an underlying intonation of racial and ethnic bias. In 1965, Nancy Larrick, a teacher, an author and anthologist of childrens book published “The All-White World of Children’s Books” in which she identified the degree to which children’s literature was biased against black children and other ethnic groups. Larrick brought attention not only to the lack of ethnic characters but also to portrayel of ethnic groups when present in stereotyped and unrealistic characters. Modern fairy tales have since then become more diversified, but still highly controversial and debatable when it comes to interpreting and incorporating ethnic characters. Social classes and ethnic orientation can define a person’s identity and the manner in which tales are perceived may directly affect the value of one’s own view of self-worth and it is the perceptions of individuals of fairytales in social context that modern psychologist are now examining for use in treatment .
Fairy tales, folk lore and myths have been examined and used in research of psychology and in clinical therapy. Fairy tales have been referenced in treatment of children because of their symbolism by psychologist such as Freud and by Carina Coulacoglou who developed the Fairy tale test as well as by Jungian psychotherapist in adults. Carina Coulacoglou has likened fairy tales to dreams filled with symbolism, displacements and externalizations. Coulacoglou also states that the evidence of the importance of fairy tales in the psychic life of children is evidenced as aspects of fairy tales continue on into the dreams of adults having an ongoing presence and signifigance and that fairy tales portray universal conflicts. (Coulacoglou, Carina) The study of children’s fascination or preoccupation with fairy tales within the literary and a cognitive-developmental perspective regarding symbolism, interpretation and the unconscious relationship to fairy tales is a speculative field for analysts of Freudian and Jungian theories. Carina Coulacoglou developed the fairy tale test to assist therapist in assessing the child’s personality traits and how these traits interrelate. Fantasy and role play are key to development and maturity, and outside of childhood psychiatrist have also seen success in therapy of adult patients through role play, association and dramatization. Fairy tales connect the inner identity to the outer reality in a shared and universal context. Fairy tales, folk lore and myths are effective in therapy because we can relate to the characters emotionally and psychologically. “The ubiquity of myths and fairy-tales can be explained as reflecting universal existential conflict.” (Evan)Fairy tales are the embodiment of existential conflict in the individual context and as social views change so are they becoming the existential conflict in social context as well.
A recent study has shown that parents feel traditional fairy tales too scary for children and more parents are heading towards softer more educational characters and stories. “A recent British study found that 50 per cent of parents pass on “Rumpelstiltskin” and “Rapunzel” due to kidnapping themes. Fifty-two per cent dismissed Cinderella as outdated because it’s based on a woman doing housework all day” (Pearce)Another poll of 3,000 British parents, placed 66 per cent of parents believing that despite traditional fairytales having stronger morality messages than modern counterparts they were not appropriate for children. (Ellicott) During the 1990’s Golden Books came under fire from parents for the violent endings in “Little Red Riding Hood”, “The Three Little Pigs” and “Chicken Little” and have rewritten the tales to be more appealing to parents that feel that childrens books should be less frightening. (Duckett) Fairy tales have become more diversified and politically correct but still struggle to entertain in a politically Correct society. Disney, a major producer of childrens fairy tale movies, and who produced “Alladin” recently became involve in cultural debates over the “Latin” Princess Sofia who was inspired by a village in Spain. Nancy Kanter, Disney Junior Worldwide’s senior vice president of original programming and general manager responded in a way fitting for modern social views;
All our characters come from fantasy lands that may reflect elements of various cultures and ethnicities but none are meant to specifically represent those real world cultures. The writers have wisely chosen to write stories that include elements that will be familiar and relatable to kids from many different backgrounds including Spain and Latin America. and still entertain, teach and inspire children. (Rodriguez)
Despite rewritings, inclusions, exclusions and consideration to the varirty of ethnicities,
cultures and genders modern fairy tales in all medias will be continuously evolving in keeping with social norms.
As of 2014 Fairy tales continue to be representative of political views, societies, cultures and used in psychological treatment for both children and adults. Fairy tales still entertain, educate and mold children, A recent study found that sudents learning English had better outcomes and improved learning outcomes when teachers modified the Tools of the Mind approach by reading fairy tales in both English and in Spanish, then involving the children in play with toys that were related or similar to the stories, (Yettick) Historians view fairy tales as valuable sources that document the world through the eyes of the people, revealing social conflicts, internal and external psychological experiences and cultural attitudes.
In his 1976 ground-breaking book, “The Uses of Enchantment,” Bettelheim concluded that fairy tales, with their frightening wicked witches, vicious wolves and lost waifs, are irreplaceable in educating the young and helping them cope with the world and their subconscious fears of things like abandonment and engulfment.
Fairy tales, folk lore and myths are enchanted, political and psychotherapeutic.

Works Cited

Coulacoglou, Carina. Exploring the Child’s Personality: Developmental, Clinical and Cross-Cultural Applications of the Fairy Tale Test. Springfield: Charles C Thomas Publisher, LTD, 2008. Print.
Davies, Evan. “Refraining, Metaphors, Myths and Fairy-Tales.” Journal of Family Therapy 10.1 (1988): 83-92. Print.
Jones, Justin T. “Morality’s Ugly Implications in Oscar Wilde’s Fairy Tales.” Studies in English Literature, 1500 – 1900 51.4 (2011): 883-903. ProQuest. Web. 4 Apr. 2014.
Leith, Dick. “Living With a Fairytale: ‘The Green Man of Knowledge’.” Changing English: Studies In Reading & Culture 6.2 (1999): 169. Humanities International Complete. Web.
Princeton Press The Cultural Evolution of Storytelling and Fairy Tales: “Human Communication and Memetics.”

Colonial mob Justice

A Necessary Evil

Mob attacks on those loyal to the King known as loyalists or Tories by the Patriots during the revolution were brutal yet necessary in the fight for independence. Attacks on the loyalists were not simply a matter of unrest or heathenry, they were a statement of resistance and the outcome of the overbearing need to end tyranny under the crown by any means. Those that were loyal to British rule, British oppression and British control of matters in the colonies were considered an enemy of Americas and were dealt with harshly. Mob attacks included, tar and feathering, mock hangings, destruction of property and the more judicial approach of banishment. In the modern era such acts would be intolerable, even criminal, yet in context of rebel colonial life these attacks were an absolute necessary evil. Richard Brown, author of Strain of Violence: Historical Studies of American Violence and Vigilantism perhaps solidifies the necessity of violence best as “In our two great national crises—the Revolution and the Civil War—we called on violence to found and to preserve the nation. Apart from its role in the formation and preservation of the nation, violence has been a determinant of both the form and the substance of American life.” (Brown, 1975) Revolutionary Colonial America was a divided nation and violence and uprising was inevitable
Of Men and Rats or Of Patriots and Loyalists.
Loyalists or Tories were faithful to the king and supported British rule of the Americas and were to their misfortune a minority in every colony. Loyalists were socially diverse and included farmers, merchants, Anglicans, as well as Dutch, Scottish and German immigrants and the Iroquois Indians. Long Island and New York City had such a large population of Loyalists or Tories that they became known as Torytown. Tories were despised by the Patriots and very harshly treated, even women of Patriotic inclinations were known to suspend their gentle meetings to tar and feather outspoken loyalists. It was of the opinion of the rebels that “A Tory is a thing whose head is in England…its body in Ameri-ca, and its neck ought to be stretched’” (Grant and Blakeley, 1982). A Patriot in contrast may have had loyalty to the King but fought passionately for self-Governance and fair representation. Patriots were known as Rebels, Revolutionaries, Congress-Men, American Whigs and the Sons of Liberty.
The Congress men were the 13 delegates from the colonies that made of the first Continental Congress which formed and convened on the matter of unfair taxation and eventually drafted the Declaration of Independence. Patriots that felt that it was parliament’s duty to keep King in order formed the American Whigs, modeled after the English Whigs. The name Whig first appeared in the England during the 1680s in England referring to the Protestants, who held that Parliament could prevent the establishment of a line of Catholic Kings through succession. Of those most resistant and radical in their fight against a Catholic monarchy were the Whigamores, a Presbyterian group in Scotland, hence the name Whigs. Interesting note, the name Tories came from the same period and referred to the party tending to the doctrine of the rights of King James II. The secret society, The Sons of Liberty served to protect the rights of the colonists against the abuses of the British government.
In 1773 The Sons of Liberty resisted through the Boston Tea Party, the Tea Act, the act passed by parliament that allowed the British India tea company to ships its tea directly to North America duty free of taxes. The Patriots believed in republicanism, where the head of state is a representative of the people, chosen by the people who hold shared authority rather than the people being subjects of the head of state. Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and Thomas Paine were leaders of the idea of governing through a republic. The Patriots were gravely concerned with unfair taxation without representation. Their slogan was “No taxation without representation, “as the believed their interest were not represented in British parliament. Both the Patriots and the Loyalists strongly believed in their own just cause, while the Patriots sought Independence that would free them from tyranny the Loyalists believed that the firm hand of Parliament was necessary to maintain order. The Loyalists stood firm that the Crown was the legitimate government and resisted the American Revolution. Loyalists were generally older, more established, had a sentimental attachment to Britain through business or family and felt British rule was necessary for trade and military protection. Loyalists through tradition believed that the colonial assemblies and Parliament were the absolute means of democracy and government, many even relied on land negotiations and treaties that Brittan had contracted between European settlers and Native Americans. African Americans were loyal because they had been promised freedom from slavery.
The American Patriots rejected the authority of Parliament to tax them without elected representation and felt that Brittan was not looking at the interest of the Colonies nor allowing them self-governance. Patriots resisted the British government as having violated the constitutional rights of Englishmen and began protesting British rule in earnest. In 1773 protests escalated into the Boston Tea Party, in which an entire shipment British tea was dumped into the Boston Harbor, resulting in quick reaction by Parliament. Parliament imposed punitive laws, the Intolerable Acts. Four of which were The Boston Port Act which closed the port of Boston until the East India Company had been repaid for the destroyed tea and until the king was satisfied that order had been restored. The Massachusetts Government Act that allowed only the King. Parliament or the Governor to appoint positions in Colonial government ad restricted town meetings in Massachusetts to once a year limiting Colonial control. The Administration of Justice Act placed the Royal governor in the position to order that trials of accused royal officials take place in Great Britain or elsewhere within the Empire if he decided that the defendant could not get a fair trial in Massachusetts, which limited the true justice in cases of maltreatment by the officials. And finally the Quartering Act which allowed a governor to house soldiers in other buildings if suitable quarters were not provided. These acts not only evoked outrage in the Massachusetts colonists, but elsewhere as well colonists feared more than ever the limits of the Kings power to dominate the American colonies. American Patriots viewed the Coercive Acts, the Intolerable Acts as a violation of their constitutional rights, their natural rights, and their colonial charters and the acts themselves as a threat to the liberties of all of the thirteen colonies, not just Massachusetts. Retaliations by the Patriots quickly escalated into Mob attacks and individual humiliations in acts such as Tar and Feathering.
Tar, Feather, Terrorize and Banish. Mob attacks were the result of frustrations with the monarchies control in America and lack of support from British Parliament that fell on the heads of those loyal to the King. Tarring and feathering was a popular almost folksy means of intimidation and fear tactic used by the Patriots against the Loyalist. Tarring and feathering did not originate in Rebel America but dates back as far as medieval times.
In 1189, Richard I of England ordered that any crusaders found guilty of theft “were to have their heads shaved, to have boiling Pitch dropped upon their Crowns; and after having Cushion-Feathers stuck upon the Pitch, they were to be set on shore, in that figure, at the first place they came to.” Centuries later, in 1623, the Bishop of Halverstade ordered that tar-and-feathers be applied to a party of drunken friars and nuns. From this brief survey it is clear that the practice of tarring and feathering was imported to the New World rather than created there. (Irvin, B. H. (2003).

To tar-and-feather was more than the act itself to the Patriots, it was a means to shame and humiliate. The victims of this form of attack were often paraded through town amidst a crown of onlookers to expose, ostracize and embarrass the offending Tory and hopefully reform and deter others. Patriots also hindered courts, as was the case in the Berkshires when a mob assembled & “forced the Justices of the Court of Common Pleas from their Seats on the Bench and shut up the Court House, preventing any Proceedings at Law. At the same Time driving one of his Majesty’s Justices of the Peace from his Dwelling.” (Oliver, 1774) And in Taunton when the Mob attacked the House of Daniel Leonard, Esqr. One of his Majesty’s Justices of the Peace; & a Barrister at Law, firing Bullets into the House &obliged him to fly from it to save his Life. (Oliver, 1774)
Tories were victim of not only Mob attacks, tar and feathering, looting but also faced prosecution in by local magistrates for any number of offenses that would justify removal of the Tory from the population. John Howe, a third generation Bostonian was the only member of his family to remain a loyalist and was eventually one of the 309 citizens accused of treason under the) Confiscation and Banishment act signed April 30th 1779.
From Violence to Freedom. The acts of the Patriots which would now be considered criminal if not a form of domestic terrorism where in truth key to the success of American Independence from the crown. Mob attacks against Loyalists put fear in those resisting independence and limited the resistance from loyalist within the colonies. Few that had endured the humiliation of being tarred and feathered would speak out against the idea of revolution again and no witness to the violence the Patriots were willing to use would willingly place themselves in the position to be publicly ridiculed or possibly harmed, effectively reducing any outward show of loyalty to the crown. The Boston Tea Party as well not only clearly spoke against unfair taxation, but sent a message to the King that the Americas were not easily controlled and would use whatever tactic necessary to resist British rule. The intolerable Acts that resulted in the Sons of Liberty attack on British tea served only to resolve the American fight for Independence. In response to these acts, Massachusetts patriots issued the Suffolk Resolves, formed a secret Government, the Provincial Congress, and began training militia outside British-occupied Boston to wage war if necessary, all of which were acts of Treason in Revolutionary America as they would be in modern times. In September 1774, the First Continental Congress convened, consisting of representatives from each of the colonies, to determine the course of action or actions needed to end British rule in the Americas. The first act of Congress was to accept the proposal of John Adams that Americans would obey Parliament, but would resist all taxes in disguise. Later that year Congress called for a boycott of all British goods enforced by new committees authorized by the Congress. July 4th 1776, Continental Congress declared Independence from Brittan and formed a new nation, The United States of America, truly united against tyranny and unfair representation. The American revolutionary war would eventually become a world war involving Brittan, Spain, France, the Netherlands and Mysore. Twenty thousand plus men were lost to battle for both America and Britain before Indolence was finally achieved in 1783. A harsh reality is in fact that every great change in The Americas and other nations has been won not only by great speakers, forward thinkers and vigilant fighters but also with a degree of violence that pushed the urgency of the matter in a manner that words would fail to convey. In the case of the mob attacks of Loyalist by Patriots we see clearly the path from violence to freedom.
References
Brown, Richard Maxwell. Strain of Violence: Historical Studies of American Violence and Vigilantism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1975. EBook Academic Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed May 24, 2014).
Grant, John N., and Phyllis R. Blakeley. 1982. Eleven Exiles: Accounts of Loyalists of the American Revolution. Toronto, Ont: Dundurn Press, 1982. EBook Academic Collection (EBSCOhost), EBSCOhost (accessed May 24, 2014).
Irvin, B. H. (2003). Tar, feathers, and the enemies of American liberties, 1768-1776. The New England Quarterly, 76(2), 197-238. Retrieved from http://ezproxy.snhu.edu/login?url=http://search.proquest.com/docview/215294471?accountid=3783
Oliver, peter. Origin and Progress of the American Rebellion, 1781; appendix based on events compiled in The Boston Weekly News-Letter, 23 Feb. 1775
Schlesinger, A. M. (1955). Political mobs and the American Revolution, 1765-1776. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 99(4), 244-250. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/3143703