Agrarian Societies
The first agrarian societies appeared about 6,000 years ago with the invention of the plow. The
important of the plow was that it
- controlled weeds which would compete with horticultural gardens and necessitated moving
those garden every 2 to 4 years.
- maintained the fertility of the soil by turning top soil.
Size and density - Agrarian societies were larger and more dense than previous societies. They
could support over 100,000 people with densities of over 100 people per square mile. Modern
agrarian societies often have rapidly expanding populations.
Permanent settlements. Agrarian societies were the first societies to develop cities. Farming
allowed people, for the first time, to be able to be born, live to be an adult, and die in the same
place. The surplus food also allowed a small portion of the people to live in cities where they
were not directly involved with food production.
Social institutions. Agrarian societies developed more elaborate and complex institutions.
- The Family is still the major institution. The economy is primarily a family business. For the
farmers, the farm is the family business. For urban craftsmen and shop keepers, their shop was
family owned and operated.
- The Economy establishes monetary systems of exchange. Money systems increase markets
because products can be sold to people who don't produce things you want. It subverts the
control the family has over its members and increases individualism.
- Religion is very powerful. It provides a rational for giving surplus to leaders. The "Creator"
and "Involved" gods that originated in horticultural and pastoral societies are still part of the
ideology. Gods are seen as concerned with the moral conduct of humans. As societies are
more expansive and include various subcultures, monotheism replaces multiple gods.
- Politics is primarily a feudal system based on heredity.
- Education expands as an institution. Only a small group are actually educated. This is not yet
something for the masses.
- Art and leisure consist primarily of art, music and dancing. Games of physical skill still
prominent (97%); games of chance (74%) and strategy games increase (71%). Much
entertainment was raucous and crude. Cock fights, gladiators and public hangings common.
- Warfare is constant in agrarian societies. They fight each other and wipe out earlier types of
societies. Standing armies become common.
Stratification is very extreme. Possibly highest of all societies for both class and sex.
Other - There is a decrease in head-hunting, cannibalism and human sacrifices. Life is very hard.
Improvements in transportation increase trade and production.
Go to Hunting & gathering, Horticultural, Pastoral, Industrial, Post Industrial societies.
Go to primer topics.
For further reading I suggest: Human Societies: An Introduction to Macrosociology by Gerhard
Lenski, Jean Lenski and Patrick Nolan. McGraw-Hill, Inc.