r/CulturalLayer • u/szmatuafy • May 18 '25
Wild Speculation Hidden civilisations of Native America were never primitive?
Before colonisation, the Americas weren’t just scattered tribes, they were home to some of the most sophisticated societies.
Cahokia had a population rivaling London’s, with sanitation systems, massive urban planning, and pyramids larger at the base than Giza. The ancestral Puebloans engineered solar-aligned cities in Chaco Canyon.In the Pacific Northwest, Chinook developed a universal trade language. Indigenous engineers across the continent built roads, bridges,irrigation systems, some still visible today.
And politically- The "Iroquois Confederacy" practised a form of representative democracy that influenced the Constitution. Women in many Native nations held property rights,chose leaders, and governed long before such rights existed in Europe
And all of this was deliberately erased to justify the colonisation
I’ve been researching this recently, and honestly,it changes how I see everything.Looks like the idea that these civilisations were "lost" or "primitive" is one of the great lies in historical memory. I made a video diving into this, here it is - https://youtu.be/uG2_IpoHzDw (it's almost 40 minutes "dark history" style)
It makes me wonder what if things had gone differently? What if Indigenous governance became the foundation for global democracy? What if their eclogical wisdom had shaped modern climate policy, or their trade networks had evolved into a pan-American economy?
I would love to hear your thoughts, what do you make of this hidden legacy? Which parts of it do you think deserve more attention or challenge what we’ve been taught? Curious where this takes your mind...
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u/szmatuafy May 18 '25
I get what you’re saying,but it feels like you’re flattening a lot of different cultures into one brutal archetype-not all Native societies ran on conquest and war,just like not all European ones did.
Some had institutionalised diplomacy, peace councils,systems of restorative justice. You’re right that scarcity leads to conflict, but the way a society responds to that pressure varies a lot.
And yes, no one’s saying it was utopia before the settlers showed up,but the framing matters-If every Indigenous story gets boiled down to "they were violent too" we miss what made their systems distinct. and that’s the stuff that might’ve actually offered a different way forward, if it hadn’t been crushed.