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by Faun Rice


  recreated at the kingdom level in late pre-Conquest times in the relations be-

  tween the Texcoco “Chichimecs” and the Mexica “Toltecs” (Ixtlilxóchitl 1840;

  Townsend 1987; Douglas 2010; Duran 1994). The Triple Alliance was rather

  more of a diarchy in which the Texcoco ruler–particularly the famous King

  Nezhualcoyotl–bearing the inherited title of “Lord of the Chichimecs,” ap-

  pears as second in authority to the Mexica “Lord of Culhua.” The Texcoco kings

  adopted the Mexica tutelary god, Huitzilopochtli, and enshrined him alongside

  Tlaloc in the central temple of their own city. Moreover, at least from the time

  of the Moctezuma I, inaugurated in 1440, the Texcoco rulers were the king-

  makers in Tenochtitlan. The Chichimec kings of Texcoco legitimated the Toltec

  kings of the Mexica: Nezhualcoyotl and his successor Nezhualpilli were the

  principal electors of the Mexica tlatoani, and the ones who actually crowned the

  latter in the investiture ceremonies.

  The Texcoco rulers’ claim as Lord of the Chichimecs represented their

  descent from the legendary Chichimec conqueror Xotlotl, said to have cre-

  ated a great “Empire” in the Valley of Mexico.17 True to classical stranger-king

  traditions, the Texcoco people’s own story is that the “primitive” Chichimecs

  17. The other title of the Texcoco king, “Lord of Alcohua,” as the heritage of the “empire”

  of Xolotl, bore the same Chichimec connotation as “lord of the Chichimecs.”

  THE STRANGER-KINGSHIP OF THE MEXICA

  245

  led by Xolotl predated the “civilized” Toltecs in the occupation of the Valley.

  In Eduardo de J. Douglas’ reading of the old Texcoco documents such as the

  Tlohtzin Map, the Chichimec ancestors are depicted as “self-generating and

  autochthonous, like the Mixtec ancestors”; while in the Codex Xolotl and the

  Quinitzin Map, “the Toltecs are the migrants, and the Chichimecs, the native

  inhabitants . . .” (2010: 55, 58; cf. Bierhorst 1992: 5 for an analogous tradition).

  In thus depicting their ancestors as the autochthons, the Texcoco traditions

  differ from the common narratives of Chichimec migrations into the Valley fol-

  lowing the collapse of Tollan of the Toltecs. But that is not the only anomaly of

  Texcoco’s Chichimec identity.

  The more interesting anomaly is that the Texcoco rulers, for all their Chi-

  chimec identity, were affiliated genealogically and assimilated culturally to the

  Toltecs in the same fundamental ways as the Mexica kings who claimed to

  be the Lords of Culhua. Beginning with Xolotl’s immediate descendants, No-

  paltzin and Tlohtzin, the founders of Texcoco dynasty repeatedly married and

  fathered their successors by Toltec women: brides and mothers who, as Doug-

  las notes, “transmit civilization, and the Toltec legacy, to their daughters and

  eventually their male descendants” (Douglas 2010: 105). But only eventually to

  their male descendants, who rather follow their fathers as Chichimecs for some

  generations. Xolotl’s grandson Tholtzin was a Chichimec, although his mother,

  Nopaltzin’s wife Azcaxochiti, was a Toltec, a daughter of the royal house of Cul-

  hacan—the same kind of alliance that produced Acamapichtli and launched the

  Toltec heritage of Mexica kings. In another example, two members of Xolotl’s

  court move away and marry the daughters of the ruler of a Toltec city; each cou-

  ple has a daughter and a son, and the daughters are born Toltecs and the sons

  Chichimecs (ibid.: 223 n. 46). The implication of ethnic affiliation descending

  in separate male and female lines, the former Chichimec and the latter Toltec, is

  what actually is pictured diagrammatically in Texcoco documents. Whether this

  was an expedient the illustrator devised for representing double descent—pat-

  rilineal and matrilineal—is hard to say.18 But safe to say, the self-representation

  of the Texcoco aristocracy as “Chichimec” is arbitrary: as arbitrary as it is politic.

  18. In this connection, an emphasis on matrifiliation in an otherwise patrilineal order

  is not necessarily an indication of a cognatic or a double-descent system (cf. Calnek

  1974; Kellogg 1986), inasmuch as a kinship order of preferred patrilineal succession

  and group affiliation commonly involves vital complementary relations to affinal/

  maternal kin (Leach 1961; Sahlins 2013).

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  ON KINGS

  “Do not forget that you are Chichimec,” the dying Texcoco king Ixlilxochiti

  told his son Nezhualcoyotl (Ixtlilxóchitl 1840: 127).

  It follows that the Toltec identity of Mexica kings is equally arbitrary, since

  their maternal descent from Culhuacan kings does not differentiate them from

  Chichimec rulers who could claim as much. Rather than some sort of pre-

  scriptive identity, the process in play is a high-stakes mode of complementary

  schismogenesis in which major kingdoms selectively position themselves vis-à-

  vis each other by adopting contrasting values from a common stock of cultural

  traditions. Texcoco was already involved with the Tepanecs of Azcapotzalco in a

  conflict of the symmetrical schismogenesis variety before the rise of the Mexica

  and the formation of the Triple Alliance. Not long after the Tepanec ruler Tezo-

  zomoc proclaimed himself “Lord of the Chichimecs,” which was something of

  a usurpation in the Alcohua view, the Texcoco king Ixlilxochiti went him one

  or two better by having himself installed as “Universal Monarch” and “Lord

  of All the Earth” (Davies 1980: 56). When the Mexica came along as Toltecs,

  their ruler assuming the title of “Lord of Culhua,” it was not so much a play of

  a symmetrical kind as what Bateson called “complementary schismogenesis,”

  which works rather on claiming a status “different to and better than” the other

  party.19 By virtue of such oppositions, a complex set of values may come into

  operation: the way the Chichimecs are mere “barbarians” from the perspective

  of the civilized Toltecs, but in their own view “hardy and great warriors” of the

  hinterlands as opposed to the city-dwelling Toltec artists and craftsmen. On

  the other hand, as Bateson (1935, 1958) pointed out, insofar as such contrasting

  values are complementary and interdependent, the conflict between them may

  reach a point of equilibrium and reciprocal exchange.20 It seems fair to say that

  this is what happened in the case of the Texcoco “Chichimecs” and the Mexica

  “Toltecs,” no doubt motivated by a political situation in which alliance was the

  better part of valor.

  I close, then, with one of the many anthropological lessons that could be

  drawn from such histories of interacting and interdependent societies. Clearly,

  these societies are formed in relation to one another: perhaps to the extent that

  19. In other registers, the Mexica double claim of being Chichimecs and Toltecs—or

  alternatively worshipers of Huitzilopochtli and Tlaloc—thus as Lords of Heaven

  and Earth—would indeed symmetrically top even the Lord of All the Earth.

  20. For an excellent example, see Lévi-Strauss’ (1971) study of the differentiation and

  reconciliation of the Native American Mandan and Hidatsa peoples.

  THE STRANGER-KINGSHIP OF THE MEXICA
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  the legitimacy of their own rulers depends on their foreign origins—stranger-

  kingship—or that these rulers take on borrowed notions of authority that are

  beyond their own political means—galactic mimesis. The lesson is that anthro-

  pology has long been implicated in a major theoretical scandal, insofar as it has

  been futilely engaged in various ways of explaining cultures from within, as if

  they were self-fashioning, although even their differences are formed in relation-

  ships to others—schismogenesis. “Human societies are never alone,” as Lévi-

  Strauss (1952: 9) said, although he might have added that anthropologists—as

  others in the human sciences—have generally acted as though they were. I won’t

  go into the reasons, which range from the prevalence of nationalist concepts to

  the limitations of ethnographic practice, hence the habitual epistemological in-

  clination to know cultures as isolated monads. Suffice it to note that, with some

  important exceptions such as globalization and world-systems studies, virtually

  all our received paradigms of cultural order and development—functionalism,

  structural-functionalism, cultural materialism, evolutionism, Marxism of base

  and superstructure, the new ontology and the old ecology, patterns of culture,

  even postmodern discourses, epistemes, and subjectivities—all these paradigms

  suppose that the forms, relations, or configurations at issue are situated within

  a more or less coherent cultural scheme, and that the articulations and dynam-

  ics of that scheme are the theoretical matters at issue. French structuralism has

  had an interesting history in this respect, likewise inner-directed so long it was

  based on Saussurean notions of a systematic semiotic field in which “tout se

  tient,” but from which it broke out in Lévi-Strauss’ intercultural permutations

  of mythical structures. By and large, however, as Fredrik Barth succinctly put

  it decades ago, “Practically all anthropological reasoning rests on the premise

  that cultural variation is discontinuous: that there are aggregates of people who

  essentially share a common culture, and the interconnected differences that dis-

  tinguish such culture from others” (1969: 9).

  The scandal is that this is empirically not so and evidently never has been

  so. The great majority of societies known to ethnography and archaeology, as

  remote in space and far back in time as we can get, are formed by their situation

  within fields of cultural others. Even as Immanuel Wallerstein (1976) was de-

  veloping the notion of a capitalist world-system, Stanley Tambiah had worked

  out the galactic polity, and Kajsa Ekholm (1980) and Jonathan Friedman (1992)

  had discovered the five-thousand-year-old history of regional core–periphery

  configurations focused on dominant civilizations (cf. Ekholm and Friedman

  1979). Not to forget Alfred Kroeber’s (1945) similar discussion of the Eurasian

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  ecumene and its underdeveloped margins, Morton Fried’s (1975) arguments

  about the relations between pristine states, secondary states, and dependent

  “tribes,” and Aidan Southall’s (1988) depiction of “segmentary states.” Early on,

  Kroeber (1947) and Clark Wissler (1938) were mapping Native American “cul-

  ture areas” that were likewise centered on certain “dominant cultures” or marked

  by “cultural climaxes.” More recently, Deborah Gewertz (1983), Anthony Forge

  (1990), and Simon Harrison (1990), reporting on the peoples of the Middle

  Sepik, New Guinea, and Dan Jorgensen (1990c, 1996), on the Sepik Headwa-

  ters, have ethnographically recorded just such regional systems, focused on the

  Iatmul and Telefol peoples, respectively. These studies show that by means of

  the demonstration-effects of punctuated warfare and the demonstrated efficacy

  of the spirits and rituals of the leading peoples, regional patterns of core–pe-

  riphery relations analogous to the galactic polities of “high cultures” exist as

  well in the tribal zone. They may even involve a degree of economic domina-

  tion, insofar as the agricultural prosperity of the peripheral peoples depends

  on rituals controlled by the central groups. In sum, this hierarchical system of

  “interculturality,” as it may be called, is the normal state of cultural affairs in

  many places. Perhaps everywhere. Certainly from my own limited knowledge

  of the primary texts on Native Mesoamerica and the brilliant scholarly analyses

  made of them, I suspect that such interculturality is equally a feature of Mexica

  history. It seems appropriate, then, to leave the last word to the greatest student

  of intercultural relations among Native American peoples, Lévi-Strauss:

  It is high time that anthropology freed itself from the illusion gratuitously in-

  vented by the functionalists, who mistake the practical limitations imposed on

  them by the kind of studies they advocate for the absolute properties of the ob-

  jects with which they are dealing. An anthropologist may confine himself for one

  or more years within a small social unit, group or village, and endeavor to grasp it

  as a totality, but this is no reason for imagining that the unit, at levels other than

  the one at which convenience or necessity has placed him, does not merge in

  varying degrees with larger entities, the existence of which remains, more often

  than not, unsuspected. (1990: 609)

  chapter 5

  The people as nursemaids of the king

  Notes on monarchs as children, women’s uprisings,

  and the return of the ancestral dead in central

  Madagascar

  David Graeber

  The institution of kingship embodies a kind of paradox. Kings are both omnipo-

  tent and helpless. On the one hand, the essence of sovereignty is the sovereign’s

  power to do as he likes with his subjects and their possessions, and the more ab-

  solute the monarchy, the more absolute, arbitrary, and unaccountable this power

  tends to be. On the other hand, kings are, in part for this very reason, dependent

  on their subjects. They are fed, clothed, housed, and have their basic physical

  needs attended to by those ostensibly under their power. And the more absolute

  their power, the greater that dependency will also tend to be.

  For those educated in European philosophy, this observation will imme-

  diately call to mind Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s master–slave dialectic,

  where the conqueror, in reducing his rival to servitude, becomes dependent on

  him for his means of livelihood, while the conquered at least achieves a kind of

  paradoxical autonomy, and mastery, in work. But Hegel was by no means the

  first to have noticed this dynamic. There have been times and places, far from

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  ON KINGS

  Hegel’s Germany, where the paradox is seen as lying at the very center of the

  idea of kingship; not just in the reflections of philosophers but in the ritual life

  surrounding kings themselves.

  In this essay I’d like to explore one of them. In the Merina kingdom of the

  north central plateau of Madagascar, kings were quite often represented as in-

  fants, toddlers, or petulant adolescents. They were assumed to be both willful,

  diff
icult, and utterly dependent on their subjects. Framing institutions of gov-

  ernment in this fashion created a peculiar moral alchemy whereby selfishness,

  imperiousness, even occasional outbursts of vindictive violence, could actually

  be seen as endearing, or, at the very least, as reinforcing the feeling that it was

  the duty of commoners to attend to royal needs. Yet this way of imagining royal

  power clearly cut two ways. For one thing, it was accompanied by a sense that,

  while the living ruler could be seen as a kind of perpetual minor, it was dead

  kings—the royal ancestors—who really represented mature authority. For an-

  other, it gave subjects a language with which to chasten and admonish rulers,

  whether in their own names or the names of those ancestors, whenever they

  were seen to have gone too far.

  THE PEOPLE AS NURSEMAIDS OF THE KING

  251

  This aspect of Merina kingship has largely been ignored in the existing

  scholarly literature. But as soon as you start looking for it in the primary sources,

  it’s everywhere.

  It is one of the unique pleasures of studying the Merina kingdom that these

  sources are so rich. After King Radama I invited foreign missionaries into his

  kingdom to set up a system of primary education in 1820, literacy became wide-

  spread, and the result was an unprecedented outpouring of texts, official and

  unofficial—ranging from histories, compendia of customs, poetry, oratory and

  folklore, including a 1,243-page collection called the Tantara ny andriana eto

  Madagascar (“History of the kings of Madagascar”) which consists of a detailed

  history and ethnography of nineteenth-century Merina1 society in pretty much

  all of its aspects, drawn from a wide variety of authors. Infuriatingly, since most

  of this material only reaches us through missionary sources, almost none of the

  authors’ names have been preserved. (The Tantara, for instance, is remembered

  as the work of one Père Callet, a Jesuit priest who assembled and edited the

  manuscripts.) Still, combined with the detailed correspondence, legal records,

  and official registers preserved in the National Archives, they provide an almost

  unparalleled window on nineteenth-century Merina society.

  What I’m going to do in the fol owing pages, then, is to examine how the

 

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