Posted on 09/29/2014 8:21:20 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Who runs the world? In these six societies: Girls.
By standard definition, a matriarchy is a family, group or state governed by a matriarch (a woman who is head of a family or tribe). Anthropologists and feminists have since created more specific classifications for female societies, including the matrilineal system. Matrilineality refers not only to tracing ones lineage through maternal ancestry, it can also refer to a civil system in which one inherits property through the female line. While the legendary Amazons (probably the most widely known matriarchy) are relegated to mythology, there are a handful of female-led societies that thrive in the real world today.
1. Mosuo
Living near the border of Tibet in the Yunnan and Sichuan provinces, the Mosuo are perhaps the most famous matrilineal society. The Chinese government officially classifies them as part of another ethnic minority known as the Naxi, but the two are distinct in both culture and language.
The Mosuo live with extended family in large households; at the head of each is a matriarch. Lineage is traced through the female side of the family, and property is passed down along the same matriline. Mosuo women typically handle business decisions and men handle politics. Children are raised in the mother's households and take her name.
The Mosuo have what's called walking marriages." There is no institution of marriage; rather, women choose their partners by literally walking to the mans home and the couples never live together. Since children always remains in the mothers care, sometimes the father plays little role in the upbringing. In some cases, the father's identity is not even known. Instead, the males childrearing responsibilities remain in his own matrilineal household.
2. Minangkabau
At four million people, the Minangkabau of West Sumatra, Indonesia, (pictured above, during a harvest season celebratino) are the largest known matrilineal society today. In addition to tribal law requiring all clan property to be held and bequeathed from mother to daughter, the Minangkabau firmly believe the mother to be the most important person in society.
In Minangkabau society, women usually rule the domestic realm while the men take the political and spiritual leadership roles. However, both genders feel the separation of powers keeps them on an equal footing. Upon marriage, every woman acquires her own sleeping quarters. The husband may sleep with her, but must leave early in the morning to have breakfast at his mothers home. At age 10, boys leave their mothers home to stay in men's quarters and learn practical skills and religious teachings. While the clan chief is always male, women select the chief and can remove him from office should they feel he failed to fulfill his duties.
3. Akan
The Akan people are a majority in Ghana, where they predominantly reside. The Akan social organization is fundamentally built around the matriclan, wherein one's identity, inheritance, wealth, and politics are all determined. All matriclan founders are female, but men traditionally hold leadership positions within the society. These inherited roles, however, are passed down matrilineallymeaning through a man's mothers and sisters (and their children). Often, the man is expected to not only support his own family, but those of his female relatives.
4. Bribri
The Bribri are a small indigenous group of just over 13,000 people living on a reserve in the Talamanca canton in the Limón province of Costa Rica. Like many other matrilineal societies, the Bribri are organized into clans. Each clan is made up of extended family, and the clan is determined through the mother/females. Women are the only ones who traditionally can inherit land. Women are also endowed with the right to prep the cacao used in sacred Bribri rituals.
5. Garo
Much like their Khasi neighbors in the North-East Indian state of Meghalaya, the Tibeto-Burman-speaking Garos pass property and political succession from mother to daughtertypically, he youngest daughter inherits her mother's property. Much like the Akan, however, the societiy is matrilineal but not matriarchal: the men govern the society and manage property.
Oftentimes, the youngest daughter's marriage is arranged for her. But for non-inheriting daughters, the process can be much more complex. In Garo tradition, the groom-to-be is expected to run away from a proposal of marriage, requiring the bride-to-be's family to "capture" him and return him to his potential bride's villiage. This back-and-forth is repeated until the bride either gives up, or the groom accepts her proposal (often after she has made many promises to serve and obey him). Once married, the husband lives in his wifes house. Should it not work out, the union is dissolved without social stigma, as marriage is not a binding contract.
6. Nagovisi
The Nagovisi live in South Bougainville, an island west of New Guinea. Anthropologist Jill Nash reported Nagovisi society was divided into two matrilineal moieties, which are then divided into matriclans. Nagovisi women are involved in leadership and ceremonies, but take the most pride in working the land entitled to them. Nash observed that when it comes to marriage, the Nagovisi woman held gardening and shared sexuality at equal importance. Marriage is not institutionalized. If a couple is seen together, sleeps together, and the man assists the woman in her garden, for all intents and purposes they are considered married.
I guess that explains the phenomenal success of these same countries.
How many probes have these places sent into space?
Crickets....
i guess that’s why i have heard of all these six powerhouse societies vying for world dominance.
gee this list sure looks like modernity to me
“7. North America”
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And don’t you forget it,kiddo !!!!
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i bet none of these female-run societies pay for women’s birth control and abortions. backward hicks. /s
Some more stories for Hillary.
I sure hope there is some distance between them and the Muzzies.
I had a friend who was a math professor with an interest in Anthropology. He and an anthropologist had a project in which they crunched huge numbers of facts gathered about societies all around the globe. Not much significant jumped out EXCEPT this: Almost inevitably, cultures that had plows pulled by animals or men were almost always patralenial. Apparently the extra organization and/or strength needed for plowing changed horticulture from a women’s and kid’s activity, to a manly one. The exceptional benefits that flowed improved agriculture made men more important.
Unfortunately for those guys, their days of hunting, fishing or just lazing around with the guys, were OVER!
Oldplayer
Yea ...an old friend of mine in CT had a wife who got involved with another man ...She sued for divorce and got the house , car , kids and alimony until the kids became adults . Oh - and the other man moved into the house after the divorce .
Thriving manufacturing centers all!
/chauv
Someone needs to inform the esteemed ruling ladies photographed that those hats look stupid. Obviously no one has thus far braved their wrath to do so, because they’ve just kept getting bigger and bigger, to Seussian dimensions. But, it clearly needs to be done. They’re wasteful and unsustainable, on top of looking stupid.
Speaking of Doctors but Freud rather than Seuss, I suspect he’d see penis envy in those things. They’re the third world ruling female version of a red Corvette, lol.
That’s a lizard.
With a possible rare exception, societies of this type are matrilineal, not matriarchial.
Men still run the society and most if not all of its dominant positions. Kinship being traced through the mother is about the only difference from the more traditional patriarchal society.
I not getting married again; I’m just gonna find a woman I hate and buy her a house...
/joking
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