Generally, by the beginning of the 19th century, most African societies had attained the communal mode of production. A few were under the slave mode of production, others were under the feudal mode of production, quite a few others were under a mixture of both the feudal and slave mode of productions. There fore, the modes of productions developed by African societies during pre-colonial era are, 1) Primitive communalism 2) Slavery 3) Feudal mode of production.
I am not sure I understand the question. Slaves did the work they were told to do.
Feudalism Every sovereign state
The germanic tribe, the Slavs, introduced Feudalism.
No there is no connection between the concept of feudalism and democracy.
It is life around production.
It is life around production.
because capitalism is one of the biggest business in whole country and that is why is dominant mode of production
Hira Singh. has written: 'The Asiatic mode of production' -- subject(s): Asiatic mode of production
Generally, by the beginning of the 19th century, most African societies had attained the communal mode of production. A few were under the slave mode of production, others were under the feudal mode of production, quite a few others were under a mixture of both the feudal and slave mode of productions. There fore, the modes of productions developed by African societies during pre-colonial era are, 1) Primitive communalism 2) Slavery 3) Feudal mode of production.
pastoral.
Children have the most tasks in a subsistence mode of production, where they are often involved in basic activities like gathering food, caring for animals, or helping with household chores.
my penis
it characterised by classes of have and haven't
Primitive mode of production was characterized by the following features or characteristics. Ownership of the means of production was collective It was a classless society Tools used in production were crude Firstly people lived by hunting and gathering No exploitation People started living in caves
Not much to write home about. Little was known in Europe in Marx's day, and he tended to write off pre-colonial societies. Some see an African variant of a stagnant "Asiatic mode of production", others a local feudalism with some slavery thown in, some a slave-based economy developing feudal elements. A few adventurous souls have hypothesised an "African mode of production" based on village organisation modified by long-distance trade.
Emergence of classes of haves and have nots