Rapid emergence of the Archaic Tongan state: The royal tomb Paepaeotelea

Date

Authors

Clark, Geoffrey
Reepmeyer, Christian
Melekiola, Nivaleti

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Antiquity Publications

Abstract

New research indicates that the royal tomb Paepaeotelea was built c. AD 1300–1400, more than 200 years earlier than its traditional association with Uluakimata I, who ruled when the Tongan polity was at its greatest extent. The large and stylistically complex tomb marks a dramatic increase in the scale of mortuary structures. It represents a substantial mobilisation of labour by this early archaic state, while the geochemical signatures of stone tools associated with the tomb indicate long-distance voyaging. The evidence suggests that the early Tongan state was a powerful and geographically expansive entity, able to rapidly organise and command the resources of the scattered archipelago.

Description

Citation

Source

Antiquity

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31