Your place or mine? A phylogenetic comparative analysis of marital residence in Indo-European and Austronesian societies
Accurate reconstruction of prehistoric social organization is important if we are to put together
satisfactory multidisciplinary scenarios about, for example, the dispersal of human groups. Such
considerations apply in the case of Indo-European and Austronesian, two large-scale language
families that are thought to represent Neolithic expansions. Ancestral kinship patterns have
mostly been inferred through reconstruction of kin terminologies in ancestral proto-languages
using the linguistic comparative method, and through geographical or distributional arguments
based on the comparative patterns of kin terms and ethnographic kinship ‘facts’. While these
approaches are detailed and valuable, the processes through which conclusions have been drawn
from the data fail to provide explicit criteria for systematic testing of alternative hypotheses.
Here, we use language trees derived using phylogenetic tree-building techniques on Indo-European
and Austronesian vocabulary data. With these trees, ethnographic data and Bayesian phylogenetic
comparative methods, we statistically reconstruct past marital residence and infer rates of cultural
change between different residence forms, showing Proto-Indo-European to be virilocal and
Proto-Malayo-Polynesian uxorilocal. The instability of uxorilocality and the rare loss of virilocality
once gained emerge as common features of both families
Share this page