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Jeffrey Fleisher

Jeffrey Fleisher

· Professor & Department Chair, AnthropologyVerified

Rice University · Anthropology

Active 1978–2026

h-index23
Citations1.9k
Papers8322 last 5y
Funding$260k
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About

Jeffrey Fleisher is a Professor of Anthropology at Rice University and serves as the Department Chair. He is an archaeologist specializing in eastern and southern Africa, with research focused on questions concerning rural communities in urban settlement systems, non-elite people in cities, and communities beyond the frontiers of large-scale societies. His work explores the roles that rural and non-elite populations play in urban societies, their participation in social, economic, and religious spheres, and the transformation of village settlements as urban centers develop. Fleisher's research investigates how material culture and space contribute to social inequality and power, and how everyday items such as ceramics, coins, and architecture are used in public performances and the construction of value. Methodologically, he has pioneered new approaches to ephemeral archaeological contexts, integrating excavation, geophysical surveying, and soil chemistry analysis. His research projects include extensive work on the eastern African Swahili coast, examining urban polities and rural settlements from the 7th to 16th centuries AD. He has studied the participation of non-elite populations in the Swahili world, focusing on regions such as Pemba Island and the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Songo Mnara. His work at Songo Mnara has included scientific analyses like geophysical surveys and geoarchaeological research, contributing to understanding how open spaces and monuments functioned as sites of social power and memory. Currently, Fleisher's research, funded by the NEH, involves a collaboration in the Kafue River floodplain in Zambia, aiming to reconstruct the cultural history of mobility and demographic change in the region through an interdisciplinary archive linking archaeological, ecological, ethnohistorical, and linguistic data. His academic background includes a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in Anthropology from the University of Virginia, and he has received several honors, including the Sarah A. Burnett Teaching Prize and the Charles Duncan Award for Outstanding Academic Achievement.

Research topics

  • Archaeology
  • Sociology
  • Geography
  • Social Science
  • Political Science
  • Ethnology
  • Computer Science
  • History
  • Linguistics
  • Ancient history
  • Law
  • Cartography
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Demography
  • Zoology
  • Biology
  • Ecology

Selected publications

  • Petrographic insights into Indian Ocean earthenwares: potential and future directions

    SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01

    preprintOpen access
  • Hunting, Fishing, and Herding in Later Stone Age and Iron Age Zambia: A Review of Zooarchaeological Evidence

    African Archaeological Review · 2025-02-14

    review
  • Unveiling 4500 years of environmental dynamics and human activity at Songo Mnara, Tanzania

    Quaternary Science Advances · 2024-05-03 · 2 citations

    articleOpen accessSenior author

    Coastal East Africa has undergone massive transformations through the Late Holocene, with a combination of changes in sea level, increasing human settlement, and ensuing use of coastal resources. A comprehensive multi-proxy analysis, including pollen, phytolith, charcoal, stratigraphy, particle size, and geochemical data from sedimentary cores extracted from mangrove ecosystems combined with soils from archaeological contexts, provided valuable insights into vegetation dynamics, environmental changes, and human interactions within the mangrove ecosystem of Songo Mnara Island, Tanzania over the last 2590 BCE (4540 cal yr BP). The bottommost layers indicate a lack of vegetation, as deduced from the presence of coral rags and high calcium and carbonate content, possibly due to high mid-Holocene sea-level. Evidence of mangrove taxa suggests a decrease in sea level, enabling the establishment of mangroves from around 2590 BCE. A brief period of sea-level rise occurred between 90 BCE and 320 CE before sea-level fell until 1570 CE. Significant evidence of human activity is recorded from around 1400 CE indicated by increased charcoal, crop phytoliths, and evidence of marine resource utilisation. The timing of this human-environment interaction is also linked to the time of lower sea level. However, there was evidence suggesting human abandonment of the island from around 1500 CE. This coincided with a subsequent rise in sea levels and potentially prolonged drought conditions spanning from 1570 to 1700 CE. These factors likely contributed to a shortage of food resources in the area, impacting both agricultural practices due to the scarcity of natural freshwater and the accessibility of marine food resources. From 1700 CE to the present, fluctuations in sea level have been observed, with a signal of recent sea-level rise in tandem with shifts in mangrove, terrestrial herbaceous taxa and fire activity. The low sedimentation rates within mangrove areas suggest that the mangroves on Songo Mnara Island may not keep pace with the current rate of sea-level rise.

  • An archaeometallurgical investigation of iron smithing in Swahili contexts and its wider implications

    Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences · 2023-06-16

    articleOpen access

    Abstract This paper presents the most extensive archaeometallurgical study of iron-smithing debris excavated in East Africa. It presents an integrated methodology, including morphological, chemical, petrographic, and contextual analysis of iron slag excavated from secondary ironworking contexts. Iron slag from three Swahili sites was analysed—Unguja Ukuu located on the southwestern coast of Zanzibar, and Tumbe and Chwaka situated in the north-east of Pemba Island. The results suggest that Unguja Ukuu smithing is associated with oxidising hearth atmospheres and high amounts of CaO, while slag from Tumbe and Chwaka indicates reducing hearth atmospheres and high silica:alumina ratios, potentially pointing to the use of a flux. Distinct technical traditions can be seen at Unguja Ukuu when compared to Tumbe and Chwaka, suggesting a regional rather than chronological pattern. Temporal continuity is evident throughout the occupation of Unguja Ukuu and between sites of different periods in north-western Pemba. The spatial distribution of iron slag at these sites suggests that smithing was taking place across the extent of Unguja Ukuu, while slag scatters were more localised and disassociated from domestic contexts at Tumbe and Chwaka. The wealth of information on technological and organisational aspects of smithing obtained during this study indicates that an integrated methodology can yield valuable data for a variety of smithing sites, irrespective of excavation strategies.

  • Entwined African and Asian genetic roots of medieval peoples of the Swahili coast

    Nature · 2023 · 35 citations

    • Geography
    • Ancient history
    • History

    . Subsequent interactions with Asian and African people further changed the ancestry of present-day people of the Swahili coast in relation to the medieval individuals whose DNA we sequenced.

  • Assembling Islamic practice in a Swahili urban landscape, 11th–16th centuries

    Journal of Social Archaeology · 2023 · 9 citations

    • Sociology
    • Political Science
    • Sociology

    Spanning c. 1050–1500 CE, a burgeoning Swahili community called Chwaka built a sequence of four mortared coral mosques in their town of wattle-and-daub houses on Pemba Island, Tanzania. The mosques’ placement, construction, and use played an active role in creating and strengthening an Islamic community and help us define changes in social practice within the town and the larger polity in which it existed. It is argued that the construction of each mosque was an act of assembling, drawing people, other-than-human things and affective social practices together in ways that help tell an urban story. This research provides insights into the residents’ socioeconomic and cultural priorities and the town’s changing relationship with villagers from the surrounding region, contributing to understandings of Swahili urbanism and urban practice.

  • Data for: Entwined African and Asian Genetic Roots of Medieval Peoples of the Swahili Coast

    Harvard Dataverse · 2023-01-04

    datasetOpen access

    The urban peoples of the Swahili coast traded across eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean and were among the first sub-Saharan practitioners of Islam. The extent to which these early interactions between Africans and non-Africans were accompanied by genetic exchange remains unknown. We report ancient DNA data for 80 individuals from six medieval and early modern (1250-1800 CE) coastal towns and an inland town postdating 1650 CE. Many coastal individuals had over half their DNA from primarily female African ancestors, with large proportions and occasionally more than half from Asian ancestors. The Asian ancestry included both Persian and Indian-associated components, with eighty to ninety percent from Persian males. Peoples of African and Asian origins began to mix by about 1000 CE, coinciding with large-scale adoption of Islam. Before about 1500 CE, the Southwest Asian ancestry was mainly Persian-related, consistent with the narrative of the Kilwa Chronicle, the oldest history told by people of the Swahili coast. After this time, the sources became increasingly Arabian, consistent with evidence of growing interactions with southern Arabia. Subsequent interactions with Asians and Africans further changed the ancestry of Swahili coast people relative to the medieval individuals whose DNA we sequenced.

  • Diet, economy, and culinary practices at the height of precolonial Swahili urbanism

    Journal of Anthropological Archaeology · 2022-03-11 · 17 citations

    articleOpen access

    Swahili cuisine is known across Africa and globally as a highly distinctive product of a cosmopolitan, coastal, urban society. Here we present a comprehensive study of precolonial Swahili diet and culinary practices at the coastal town of Songo Mnara, positioning archaeological and ethnographic understandings of cuisine in a long-term coastal tradition. We explore contemporary food cultures and then present the first direct evidence for precolonial cuisine by combining ceramic lipid residue analysis with archaeobotanical, zooarchaeological, and faunal and human stable isotopic data. Integrating these datasets produces a detailed picture of diet at the site of Songo Mnara during the peak of precolonial Swahili urbanism. Lipid residue analysis demonstrates how plant and animal products were consumed and valued in ways not discernible from plant and animal remains alone. We also note special treatment for particular foodstuffs, including an association of fish consumption with high-status spaces and vessels, and preferential management of cattle for milk. A more complex picture of urban life emerges, recognizing influences of taste, class, and culture. Our findings demonstrate the potential of multi-layered anthropological studies for exploring cuisine and urban life in coastal contexts across the globe.

  • Glass Beads from Songo Mnara, Tanzania: Chemical Composition and Evidence for Local Bead Manufacture

    African Archaeological Review · 2022-08-05 · 11 citations

    articleSenior author
  • The Entwined African and Asian Genetic Roots of the Medieval Peoples of the Swahili Coast

    bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2022-07-11 · 42 citations

    preprintOpen accessCorresponding

    The peoples of the Swahili coast of eastern Africa established a literate urban culture by the second millennium CE. They traded across eastern Africa and the Indian Ocean and were among the first sub-Saharan practitioners of Islam. An open question has been the extent to which these early interactions between Africans and non-Africans were accompanied by genetic admixture. We report genome-wide ancient DNA from 80 individuals in five medieval and early modern (1300-1800 CE) coastal towns, as well as people from an inland town postdating 1650 CE. Over half of the ancestry of most coastal individuals came from African ancestors; these African ancestors were primarily female. A slightly smaller proportion of ancestry was from Asia. This Asian component was approximately eighty to ninety percent from Near Eastern males and ten to twenty percent from Indian females. Peoples of African and Asian origins began to mix by around 1000 CE, a time when archaeological evidence documents changes on the coast that are often interpreted as marking the large-scale adoption of Islam. Before roughly 1500 CE, the Near Eastern ancestry detected in the individuals was mainly Persian-related, consistent with the narrative of the Kilwa Chronicle, the oldest history told by the Swahili themselves. After this time, the sources of Near Eastern ancestry became increasingly Arabian, consistent with the archaeological and historical evidence of growing interactions between the Swahili coast and parts of southern Arabia. Subsequent interactions of Swahili coast peoples with other Asian and African groups further changed the ancestry of present-day peoples relative to the ancient individuals we sequenced, highlighting how Swahili genetic legacies can be more clearly understood with ancient DNA.

Recent grants

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Awards & honors

  • CTE Faculty Fellow, 2021-24
  • Sarah A. Burnett Teaching Prize in the Social Sciences, 2017
  • Charles Duncan Award for Outstanding Academic Achievement, 2…
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