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Ethnohistory 2002 49(2):259-280; DOI:10.1215/00141801-49-2-259
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Articles

The Chief Is Dead, Long Live... Who? Descent and Succession in the Protohistoric Chiefdoms of the Greater Antilles

L. Antonio Curet

Field Museum of Natural History

Abstract.

The rules of succession described in the early Spanish chronicles for Caribbean chiefdoms have been used by many scholars to reconstruct a Taino kinship system. This article argues that these conclusions were reached by using unfounded assumptions, especially confusing rules of succession with rules of descent. Furthermore, it is suggested here that Taino rules of succession were not simply about the right to govern through descent but were a form of customary law that was manipulated by chiefs to consolidate and stabilize power. Thus the vagueness present in the rules of succession could have been an integral part of the transmission system of the position of high office among the protohistoric chiefdoms of the Greater Antilles.




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W. F. Keegan
All in the Family: Descent and Succession in the Protohistoric Chiefdoms of the Greater Antilles--A Comment on Curet
Ethnohistory, April 1, 2006; 53(2): 383 - 392.
[Abstract] [PDF]




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Copyright 2002 by American Society for Ethnohistory