Space and Communal Agency in Pre-Modern Societies
Examines how monumental spaces shaped power, community identities, and political agency in ancient societies through collective practices and competing uses of space.

Monumental spaces were fundamental in constructing power, political order and collective identities in the ancient and pre-modern world. Authorities dedicated considerable resources to building power landscapes that represented their ideals about what a harmonious society and an ordered world should be under their inspired guidance. However, social stability actually depended on the rulers’ capacity to integrate diverse social sectors beyond the usually restricted circle of the elite. These sectors may influence decision-making and produce formal or informal institutions that the rulers should consider. Communal and civic agency appears thus as a fundamental field of research. Whereas these sectors are frequently underrepresented in the written and monumental record, the traces of their values, aspirations, needs and social influence may be detected through archaeology. In Mesoamerican cities, for example, with their often loose urban layouts and autonomous neighbourhoods, the rulers needed to gather people as spectators to legitimate their authority. Plazas therefore became essential to negotiate consent and social consensus. In the Classical world, agoras, forums and amphitheatres were intended to promote civic values, deliberation and collective identity. Finally, social confrontation could result in disputed interpretations, alternative uses, abandonment and destruction of built environments and spaces. The traditional focus on elite areas and buildings may thus conceal the political importance of spatial forms and constructions serving communal needs.

This book delves into the intricate relationship between built environments, collective identities and civic agency. It also scrutinises the potential conflicts that can emerge from the competing or alternative uses of space, whether public, ritual, civic or a combination of these. By presenting a selection of historical case studies from various regions of the world, the book aims to challenge existing concepts and perspectives about the civic and communal influences in settlement organisation and monumentality. It also sheds light on the boundaries of rulers’ authority and the presence of collective institutions, identities and decision-making forms that are seldom discussed in official sources.
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Space and Communal Agency in Pre-Modern Societies
Examines how monumental spaces shaped power, community identities, and political agency in ancient societies through collective practices and competing uses of space.

Monumental spaces were fundamental in constructing power, political order and collective identities in the ancient and pre-modern world. Authorities dedicated considerable resources to building power landscapes that represented their ideals about what a harmonious society and an ordered world should be under their inspired guidance. However, social stability actually depended on the rulers’ capacity to integrate diverse social sectors beyond the usually restricted circle of the elite. These sectors may influence decision-making and produce formal or informal institutions that the rulers should consider. Communal and civic agency appears thus as a fundamental field of research. Whereas these sectors are frequently underrepresented in the written and monumental record, the traces of their values, aspirations, needs and social influence may be detected through archaeology. In Mesoamerican cities, for example, with their often loose urban layouts and autonomous neighbourhoods, the rulers needed to gather people as spectators to legitimate their authority. Plazas therefore became essential to negotiate consent and social consensus. In the Classical world, agoras, forums and amphitheatres were intended to promote civic values, deliberation and collective identity. Finally, social confrontation could result in disputed interpretations, alternative uses, abandonment and destruction of built environments and spaces. The traditional focus on elite areas and buildings may thus conceal the political importance of spatial forms and constructions serving communal needs.

This book delves into the intricate relationship between built environments, collective identities and civic agency. It also scrutinises the potential conflicts that can emerge from the competing or alternative uses of space, whether public, ritual, civic or a combination of these. By presenting a selection of historical case studies from various regions of the world, the book aims to challenge existing concepts and perspectives about the civic and communal influences in settlement organisation and monumentality. It also sheds light on the boundaries of rulers’ authority and the presence of collective institutions, identities and decision-making forms that are seldom discussed in official sources.
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Space and Communal Agency in Pre-Modern Societies

Space and Communal Agency in Pre-Modern Societies

by Juan Carlos Moreno García (Editor)
Space and Communal Agency in Pre-Modern Societies

Space and Communal Agency in Pre-Modern Societies

by Juan Carlos Moreno García (Editor)

Hardcover

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Overview

Examines how monumental spaces shaped power, community identities, and political agency in ancient societies through collective practices and competing uses of space.

Monumental spaces were fundamental in constructing power, political order and collective identities in the ancient and pre-modern world. Authorities dedicated considerable resources to building power landscapes that represented their ideals about what a harmonious society and an ordered world should be under their inspired guidance. However, social stability actually depended on the rulers’ capacity to integrate diverse social sectors beyond the usually restricted circle of the elite. These sectors may influence decision-making and produce formal or informal institutions that the rulers should consider. Communal and civic agency appears thus as a fundamental field of research. Whereas these sectors are frequently underrepresented in the written and monumental record, the traces of their values, aspirations, needs and social influence may be detected through archaeology. In Mesoamerican cities, for example, with their often loose urban layouts and autonomous neighbourhoods, the rulers needed to gather people as spectators to legitimate their authority. Plazas therefore became essential to negotiate consent and social consensus. In the Classical world, agoras, forums and amphitheatres were intended to promote civic values, deliberation and collective identity. Finally, social confrontation could result in disputed interpretations, alternative uses, abandonment and destruction of built environments and spaces. The traditional focus on elite areas and buildings may thus conceal the political importance of spatial forms and constructions serving communal needs.

This book delves into the intricate relationship between built environments, collective identities and civic agency. It also scrutinises the potential conflicts that can emerge from the competing or alternative uses of space, whether public, ritual, civic or a combination of these. By presenting a selection of historical case studies from various regions of the world, the book aims to challenge existing concepts and perspectives about the civic and communal influences in settlement organisation and monumentality. It also sheds light on the boundaries of rulers’ authority and the presence of collective institutions, identities and decision-making forms that are seldom discussed in official sources.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798888571934
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Publication date: 06/30/2025
Series: Multidisciplinary Approaches to Ancient Societies (MAtAS) , #5
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.70(w) x 9.40(h) x (d)

About the Author

Juan Carlos Moreno García (Ph D in Egyptology, 1995) is a CNRS senior researcher at the University of Paris IV-Sorbonne, as well as lecturer on social and economic history of ancient Egypt at the École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE) in Paris. He has published extensively on the administration, socio-economic history, and landscape organisation of ancient Egypt, usually in a comparative perspective with other civilisations of the ancient world, and has organised several conferences on these topics.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Community, public space and collective political agency in pre-modern societies
Juan Carlos Moreno García
2. Understanding the North-West Palace in the Neo-Assyrian capital of Nimrud as people's movement and sensorial experience of space
Paolo Brusasco
3. A tale of two tells: Making pots, making monuments, making polity
Anne Porter
4. Building monuments to build communities: Monumental space as public space in the Iron Age Levant
Timothy Hogue
5. Identities, space, monumentality at Avaris
Silvia Gómez-Senovilla
6. Community, public space and civic agency in pharaonic Egypt
Juan Carlos Moreno García
7. Political memory and imagined diversity. Agorai and theatres in Near Eastern Hellenistic cities: Public spaces and political agency
Claudia Horst
8. Plazas and theatrical performances in ancient Maya society: A case from El Palmar, Mexico
Kenichiro Tsukamoto
9. Real, imagined, vibrant: Ruins-as-cemeteries in ancient coastal Peru
David Chicoine and Matthew Helmer
10. Collectivity and monumentality in Indigenous eastern North America
Victor D. Thompson and Jennifer Birch
11. Reimagining structures of power: The role of kiva architecture in religious and political reorganisation in the US Southwest
Susan C. Ryan
12. Agency and invisibility in the Islamic city: Qadīb al-Bān and the city's edge
Ethel Sara Wolper
13. Power and monumentality in (Islamic) towns of pre-colonial Africa
Monika Baumanova
14. Power, patronage and pilgrimage within Early Historic and medieval Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka: The development of state and Sangha relations and the representations and limits of royal control
Christopher Davis, Robin Coningham and Prishanta Gunawardhana
15. The importance of communal spaces in Scandinavia: Collective control vs elite authority and processes of state formation (AD 800–1350)
Marie Ødegaard and Kjetil Loftsgarden
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