
Recent scientific breakthroughs have pushed the known timeline of humanity back far beyond what earlier scholars imagined, suggesting our ancestors roamed Europe during the last glacial period and perhaps even earlier. This volume unfolds that vast prehistory, showing how early peoples moved from simple survival to the first organized groups. It sets the stage for a sweeping look at the stages of human development—savagery, barbarism, and finally civilization.
The author traces the emergence of communal structures—gentes, phratries, and tribes—that bound early humans together, and follows their transformation into more complex institutions of law, family, and property. By comparing archaeological and linguistic evidence from across the globe, especially the rich American record, the book highlights the common threads that link disparate cultures. Readers will see how ideas about kinship and ownership evolved from rudimentary sharing to the sophisticated concepts that dominate modern life.
Throughout, the narrative asks why some societies progressed faster than others and what forces shaped their paths. With clear language and vivid examples, the work invites listeners to reconsider the deep roots of our own social systems and the shared journey of humanity.
Full title
Ancient Society Or, Researches in the Lines of Human Progress from Savagery, through Barbarism to Civilization
Language
en
Duration
~21 hours (1248K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-06-13
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1818–1881
A pioneering 19th-century American anthropologist, he helped shape early thinking about kinship, social organization, and the study of Indigenous societies. His best-known works explored the Haudenosaunee and argued that family systems could reveal how human societies develop over time.
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