CULTURE

What Happens When a Globalized World Collapses: Archaeologist Eric Cline Explains How Bronze Age Civilizations Adapted, Survived or Vanished


We live, as we’re often told, in the era of glob­al­iza­tion. In fact, we’ve been told it so often over the past few decades that it now hard­ly seems like an obser­va­tion worth mak­ing. But how­ev­er thor­ough­ly our era is defined by con­nec­tions between far-flung nations, soci­eties, economies, and cul­tures, we should­n’t flat­ter our­selves into think­ing we are pio­neers in a whol­ly new glob­al­ized real­i­ty. As clas­si­cist Eric Cline explains in this recent Big Think inter­view, an inter­con­nect­ed world flour­ished in the late Bronze Age, and espe­cial­ly the four­teenth and thir­teenth cen­turies BC. “Life was pret­ty good” in those days, he says, at least if you lived in one of the lands around the Mediter­ranean and Near East that con­sti­tut­ed what he calls the “ancient G8.”

The mem­ber peo­ples of this ret­ro­spec­tive orga­ni­za­tion includ­ed the Myce­naeans and Minoans in Greece, the Hit­tites in mod­ern-day Turkey, the Assyr­i­ans and the Baby­lo­ni­ans in mod­ern-day Iraq, as well as the Cypri­ots, Egyp­tians, and Canaan­ites. Alas, as implied by the title of Cline’s 1177 BC: The Year Civ­i­liza­tion Col­lapsed, their good times togeth­er did­n’t last.

In that book, and in lec­tures on YouTube, he’s explained the vari­ety of fac­tors that con­tributed to the dis­so­lu­tion of that once pros­per­ous “small-world net­work.” His sur­pris­ing pop­u­lar­i­ty for a his­to­ri­an of the Bronze Age owes in part to his will­ing­ness to draw com­par­isons with that time and our own. Many of his fans sure­ly found him out of curios­i­ty over one ques­tion: is our “flat” twen­ty-first-cen­tu­ry world sim­i­lar­ly head­ed for a col­lapse?

If so, we might pay less atten­tion to why the ancient G8 col­lapsed, and more to what became of its for­mer­ly inter­de­pen­dent soci­eties when the cri­sis had run its course. Such is the sub­ject of Cline’s After 1177 B.C.: The Sur­vival of Civ­i­liza­tions, and of the Big Think inter­view extract at the top of the post. Some coped, some adapt­ed, some trans­formed, and oth­ers sim­ply van­ished. Cypri­ots and the Phoeni­cians of Canaan, for exam­ple, remade them­selves to thrive in the chaos; the Egyp­tians mud­dled through with a mix­ture of adap­ta­tion and cop­ing; the Myce­naeans and the Minoans lost more or less every­thing, includ­ing their writ­ing sys­tem, and had to rebuild from square one. But the tru­ly cau­tion­ary tale is that of the Hit­tites, whose civ­i­liza­tion­al anni­hi­la­tion appears to have been in large part self-inflict­ed. “Don’t be a Hit­tite,” is one of Cline’s pieces of advice; anoth­er is to gain an under­stand­ing of antifragili­ty soon­er rather than lat­er.

Relat­ed con­tent:

Why Civ­i­liza­tion Col­lapsed in 1177 BC: Watch Clas­si­cist Eric Cline’s Lec­ture That Has Already Gar­nered 7.6 Mil­lion Views

Is Amer­i­ca Declin­ing Like Ancient Rome?

Göbek­li Tepe: The 12,000-Year-Old Ruins That Rewrite the Sto­ry of Civ­i­liza­tion

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.





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