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Ref ID: 32871
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Morrison, Kathleen D.
Lycett, Mark T.
Title: Centralized power, centralized authority? Ideological claims and archaeological patterns
Date: 1994
Source: Asian Perspectives (1994)
Abstract: Elite claims of power and authority may take material expression in both the archaeological and historical records. Such claims may be expressed through the renovation, rebuilding, realignment, or construction of monumental architecture
the appropriation of symbols of power and authority
or may be made outright in verbal and written media. The South Indian empire of Vijayanagara (c. A.D. 13001600) laid claim to a vast portion of the Indian subcontinent, but scholars agree neither on the nature nor the extent of power exercised by the imperial center. In this paper, we examine the ideological claims of the Vijayanagara political elite, as they are materially expressed. Specifically, we differentiate the forms and spatial extent of centralized power and centralized authority in the imperial "core" versus several "peripheral" regions through the distribution and form of fortifications and temples and through a quantitative spatial analysis of inscriptions. Such claims can be related to material conditions only in the "core" region
relationships between ideological claims and archaeological patterns in that area suggest avenues for future archaeological research in complex societies.
Date Created: 12/28/2002
Volume: 33
Number: 2
Page Start: 327
Page End: 350