Jōmon people: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "thumb|diorama from ''Wikpedia'', wikipedia.org/wiki/Jōmon_people#/media/File:Sannai_IMG_20161009_143947.jpg Around 12,000 BCE in northeastern Japan, sedentary foragers known as the Jōmon were "contemporaneous with and likely earlier than the Natufian period in the Fertile Crescent." They "were known for being a largely egalitarian society that managed to coexist with the natural world around them, something unheard of for much of this world...")
 
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[[File:Jōmon people|thumb|diorama from ''Wikpedia'', wikipedia.org/wiki/Jōmon_people#/media/File:Sannai_IMG_20161009_143947.jpg]]
Around 12,000 BCE in northeastern Japan, sedentary foragers known as the Jōmon were "contemporaneous with and likely earlier than the [[Natufian]] period in the Fertile Crescent." They "were known for being a largely egalitarian society that managed to coexist with the natural world around them, something unheard of for much of this world’s history."<ref>Matt Klampert, "Jamon and the World," yukigunijapan.com/jomon-and-the-world.</ref>
Around 12,000 BCE in northeastern Japan, sedentary foragers known as the Jōmon were "contemporaneous with and likely earlier than the [[Natufian]] period in the Fertile Crescent." They "were known for being a largely egalitarian society that managed to coexist with the natural world around them, something unheard of for much of this world’s history."<ref>Matt Klampert, "Jamon and the World," yukigunijapan.com/jomon-and-the-world.</ref>
James C. Scott, ''Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States' (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017).
James C. Scott, ''Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States' (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017).


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Revision as of 17:50, 19 March 2025

Around 12,000 BCE in northeastern Japan, sedentary foragers known as the Jōmon were "contemporaneous with and likely earlier than the Natufian period in the Fertile Crescent." They "were known for being a largely egalitarian society that managed to coexist with the natural world around them, something unheard of for much of this world’s history."[1] James C. Scott, Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States' (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017).

  1. Matt Klampert, "Jamon and the World," yukigunijapan.com/jomon-and-the-world.