Peer Polity Interaction

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Peer Polity Interaction ( interaction peer community ) is one of modern archeology , occupied concept, which was originally designed around a common framework for the discussion of the origin of the polis to create in the Aegean. According to Colin Renfrew's definition , Peer Polity Interaction stands for the entire spectrum of interaction (including imitation, competition, war and the exchange of goods and information) between neighboring autonomous communities.

literature

  • Colin Renfrew, John F. Cherry (Eds.): Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-Political Change . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1986, ISBN 0-521-11222-2 .
  • John Ma: Peer Polity Interaction in the Hellenistic Age . In: Past and Present . 180, 2003, pp. 9-39.
  • Anthony Snodgrass: Interaction by Design: The Greek City State . In: Ders .: Archeology and the Emergence of Greece . Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh 2012, ISBN 9780748623334 , pp. 234-257.

Web links

  • Summary of the article by Anthony Snodgrass [1]

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Colin Renfrew: Introduction: Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-Political Change. In: Colin Renfrew, John F. Cherry (Eds.): Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-Political Change . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1986, ISBN 0-521-11222-2 , pp. 1-18.