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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Johannes Renger —<br />

fertility of fields was maintained by a rigid fallow system. <strong>The</strong> hazards of salinization<br />

caused by artificial irrigation were met by leaching and drainage. Unparalleled in<br />

antiquity is the high seed–yield ratio of 1:16 up to 1:24 and yields of roughly 750<br />

kilograms per hectare. 7 Second to cereal agriculture was date palm cultivation.<br />

Animal husbandry<br />

Typical of Mesopotamian animal husbandry was the herding of sheep and – to a lesser<br />

degree – goats. Sheep provided wool for high-quality textile production, the main<br />

Mesopotamian staple for trade with the outside world. Cattle served in Mesopotamia<br />

mainly as plough animals. Besides sheep, goats and cattle, donkeys and mules were<br />

important for transport needs, especially for caravans in long-distance trade. Pigs,<br />

ducks and geese were kept among individual households. Animal husbandry, with<br />

its very high levels of breeding and herding, was interdependent with agricultural<br />

production. 8 However, the need for pasture also competed for available land where<br />

herding took place in more densely inhabited and agricultural areas. Especially cattle<br />

made great demands for green pasture, since unlike sheep and goat they could not<br />

find sufficient food in the steppe areas (Renger 1994a).<br />

Reciprocity and redistribution<br />

While the modes of allocation or the manners of acquisition of the daily necessities<br />

of life took specific forms in Mesopotamia they gave rise to considerable debate<br />

between economic anthropologists, economic historians and historians of the Ancient<br />

Near East. For Polanyi (1977: 35f.) the difference between a premodern and a modern,<br />

capitalist, market-oriented economy becomes especially evident with regard to<br />

particular modes of exchange. Reciprocity and redistribution were rather easily accepted<br />

even by Near Eastern scholars adhering to economic concepts that apply the market<br />

principle to economic analysis. <strong>The</strong>y do so despite the fact that reciprocity and<br />

redistribution are essential parts of Polanyi’s concept of marketless trading, a concept<br />

that denies the existence of markets in ancient societies and their economies. It should<br />

be noted, however, that Polanyi does not totally deny the existence of trading, of<br />

exchange mechanisms that he called market substitutes and market elements (1977:<br />

125f.). But his basic assumption remains valid that the exchange of goods (and<br />

services) takes place predominantly under reciprocal or redistributional conditions<br />

and not necessarily in the form of market exchange governed by a supply-demandprice<br />

mechanism.<br />

<strong>The</strong> redistributive nature of Mesopotamian society and economy is most obvious<br />

in the fourth and third millennia BC but the reciprocal modes of exchange are much<br />

more difficult to detect in the written records of this period. Official and private<br />

letters from the eighteenth to seventeenth centuries BC, however, attest such reciprocal<br />

exchange (Renger 1984) which opens the possibility that it also existed in earlier<br />

periods. Moreover, considering the general context of these letters it becomes obvious<br />

that reciprocity was operative only in parts, in segments of society. Other segments<br />

were determined by redistribution. Reciprocity and redistribution as the primary<br />

modes of exchange in ancient Mesopotamia should, therefore, not be seen in an<br />

evolutionary context since they existed side by side during the entire history of<br />

192

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