The Role of the Aged in Primitive Society |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 35
Página 14
The number of tribes representing a dominant or fairly regular tendency to private property in land ( 29 + = ) , and which also show a tendency to dominance in agriculture ( 10+ ) , is placed in the upper left - hand corner of a box .
The number of tribes representing a dominant or fairly regular tendency to private property in land ( 29 + = ) , and which also show a tendency to dominance in agriculture ( 10+ ) , is placed in the upper left - hand corner of a box .
Página 45
As the sons in a family grow up , they are given land by their father , who keeps the rest of it for himself , definite partitions of the inheritance taking place at his death or sometimes later still . If the father becomes too old to ...
As the sons in a family grow up , they are given land by their father , who keeps the rest of it for himself , definite partitions of the inheritance taking place at his death or sometimes later still . If the father becomes too old to ...
Página 247
... 100 88 55 57 58 Traits 59 60 1 women 67 30-127 Communal sharing of food and property rights of aged men 68 30-128 Communal sharing of food and property rights of aged women 69 27-127 Communal ownership of land and property rights of ...
... 100 88 55 57 58 Traits 59 60 1 women 67 30-127 Communal sharing of food and property rights of aged men 68 30-128 Communal sharing of food and property rights of aged women 69 27-127 Communal ownership of land and property rights of ...
Comentarios de la gente - Escribir un comentario
No encontramos ningún comentario en los lugares habituales.
Contenido
Research Procedure | 1 |
The Assurance of Food | 20 |
Property Rights | 36 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 10 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
abandonment able activities aged men aged women Agriculture appear association become believed called ceremony chief child Codified laws coefficients Collection correlations council cultural custom dance death dwelling dying elders Eskimo especially family rights family support father favorable fear Fishing give hand head Herding Hunting important including seniority rights influence judges land legends live magic married Matrilineal descent Matrilineal inheritance Matrilineal succession Matrilocal residence Matripotestal family authority medicine mother natural Numbers old age old men old woman Organized priesthood ownership parents Permanency person position possessed practice present prestige priests primitive property rights Ratio received regarded relatives reported respect rights of aged shamans sharing social societies sometimes son-in-law spirits statistical subjection support of aged traits tribes usually village wife young mates younger youth