From the valley to the shore: A hypothesis of the spatial evolution of ceremonial centres on Tahiti and Ra‘iatea, Society Islands

Authors

  • Tamara Maric Laboratoire d’Ethnologie Préhistorique UMR 7041 Service de la Culture et du Patrimoine Centre International de Recherche Archéologique Polynésienne (CIRAP)

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.125.3.239-262

Keywords:

Settlement patterns, ceremonial architecture, marae, ethnohistory, toponymy, Society Islands, Polynesian chiefdoms

Abstract

This article compares the geographic and organisational patterns of four major chiefly ceremonial places in the Society Islands. On the island of Tahiti, archaeological data relating to monumental temple (marae ari‘i) architecture is integrated with ethnohistoric records and toponymic analysis to reconstruct local ethnohistories of the Tahitian chiefdoms of Vaiari, Papara and Manotahi (Puna‘auia). The ethnohistoric records identify a shift in the location of major religious and ceremonial centres, from original inland locations to coastal sites, around the end of the 17th and 18th centuries in the context of strong political influences from the Leeward Society Islands. The patterns of late Tahitian ceremonial complexes are compared with archaeological and ethnohistorical data from the chiefdom of Opoa on Ra‘iatea Island, where the same model of spatial and diachronic evolution seems to have previously occurred. This analysis suggests that chiefdom of Opoa, focused on the great marae Taputapuatea, had a strong influence on Tahitian polities, through the foundation of new marae Taputapuatea in the Windward Islands and accompanied by new boundaries which demarcated sacred landscapes.

Author Biography

Tamara Maric, Laboratoire d’Ethnologie Préhistorique UMR 7041 Service de la Culture et du Patrimoine Centre International de Recherche Archéologique Polynésienne (CIRAP)

Tamara Maric is a French archaeologist working at the Service de la Culture et du Patrimoine in Papeete, the French Polynesian Government office which oversees archaeology in the region. She studied settlement patterns on the island of Tahiti for her thesis research at the Université de Paris-1. Since 2013, she has been part of the technical team conducting a World Heritage project at Taputapuatea Marae on Ra‘iatea Island, under the direction of the French Polynesian Government.

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Published

2016-09-25