Late Bronze Age Collapse

(acoup.blog)

79 points | by dmonay 2 hours ago

5 comments

  • Amorymeltzer 3 minutes ago
    Patrick Wyman—of the Tides of History podcast—just put out a new book, Lost Worlds, which is worth a read if this is your bag. The basic premise is that the way ancient history is typically taught, "that we moved linearly from foraging to farming, and then from country farmers to city-dwelling, tax-paying subjects of kings and emperors," is essentially wrong. He goes on:

    >All of those developments occurred in an orderly sequence: First farming and village life arrived; then surpluses born of human achievement that created social inequality; then hierarchies with priests and chieftains at the top; then massive monuments, cities, states, and writing to keep track of it all. Geographically, the old story of those developments centered on the Fertile Crescent of western Asia, and to a lesser extent the Nile Valley of Egypt....

    >That story is wrong in some respects and incomplete in far more.

    It's a constant rise and fall, with innovations and cities/civilizations that both did and didn't succeed often equally valid and appropriate paths to take. Sounds kind of bog-standard, I guess, but it's rife with examples of "Oh yeah here's a 1,500 year-old city, but it was 7,000 years ago and then disappeared so you've never heard of it."

  • evanjrowley 1 hour ago
    Seems to be a popular topic.

    Historian Eric H. Cline has multiple books citing this time period, specifically 1117 BCE as the inflection point for the bronze age "collapse", defined by a deterioration of international shipping routes that weakened the nation-states of the era. I've learned about it recently because YouTube began recommending videos about it.

    For example: https://youtu.be/choxcHXhZhE?is=t5lDwQQpqPsE2k5M

    One historical event that Cline focuses on is a severe centuries-long drought. It's something the ACOUP article seems to omit. Cline does not focus as much on destruction of bronze-age sites although there is one port city in particular which is linked to the international trade of the time. Exactly who destroyed it appears to be a mystery but it could be linked to the migration theory that ACOUP dismisses. The migration may have actually come as a result of the previously mentioned drought.

    • Brendinooo 8 minutes ago
      It injects some really interesting color into the Tanakh/Old Testament - I'm not sure anyone has definitively lined up the Bronze Age Collapse with Biblical events, but it sure seems to be in the neighborhood of the period between the Exodus and King David.

      One can easily see the events leading to the Exodus being enabled by (or causing, depending on who you ask!) the weakening of Egypt, and the period in Joshua and Judges describes a power vacuum: no centralized king over the area, lots of back-and-forth struggles for control; as the Philistines, sometimes referred to by historians as an actual group of the Sea Peoples, often impose their will with instruments of iron.

    • darkfloo 56 minutes ago
      Shameless plug for my favourite YouTuber of all time https://youtu.be/aq4G-7v-_xI?si=GviYcvEtOAJ1mln7
    • forlorn_mammoth 8 minutes ago
      > deterioration of international shipping routes

      like a closing of a certain straight that was essential for a large percentage of a necessary resource?

    • pfdietz 49 minutes ago
      The drought explanation seems particularly plausible for the Hittites, IMO. They had grain storage, but ~3 years of drought would exhaust that. So if the climate becomes just a bit drier the chance of such a three year run increases enough to likely crash their society.

      Today we have a huge buffer from the large use of grain to feed animals. In a crisis it could be diverted as human food, with some effort. Large geographic range from global shipping also smooths out blips. Still, a Toba-like eruption would be bad news.

      • stymaar 16 minutes ago
        > Today we have a huge buffer from the large use of grain to feed animals.

        This, plus the gigantic amount of agricultural land being used for biofuel production (almost as much as cattle food).

      • idiotsecant 37 minutes ago
        It's unlikely that rich countries would experience famine as severely as poor ones and consequently they would probably still demand meat. Grain that could feed people would still feed livestock.
        • bryanlarsen 23 minutes ago
          A draw down of animal stocks increases meat supply in the short term. As grain gets more expensive, farmers sell animals for meat rather than keeping them to reproduce.
          • stymaar 12 minutes ago
            But “As grain gets more expensive” middle eastern countries (that rely almost entirely on import for their grain source) would start facing grain shortage (due to balance of payment issues) or at least severe deprivation of the poorer part of their population.

            The Tunisian, Egyptian, Syrian and Libyan revolutions didn't occur at the same moment out of coincidence…

    • ape4 11 minutes ago
      I think it's a popular topic because so many people are wondering when our civilization will fall.
    • icegreentea2 41 minutes ago
      I don't think Bret (the author of ACOUP) omits drought - he leads his section on plausible theories with "period of drying and consistent crop failures". While Bret dismisses the out to in migration/invasion theory, he does support the idea of intra-region migration/warfare (perhaps induced by drought/crop failures).
    • DicIfTEx 51 minutes ago
      The fantastic Fall of Civilizations podcast also had an episode about it: https://fallofcivilizationspodcast.com/2019/01/21/episode-2-...
      • pixl97 51 minutes ago
        Ha, beat me too it. FoC is a great channel.
    • the-smug-one 32 minutes ago
      Eric Cline has an interview on "Tides of History" podcast.
  • timbits98 16 minutes ago
    Given the era, it seems likely that the collapse was the work of multiple angry gods. The author doesn't cover this possibility.
  • lordleft 48 minutes ago
    Beware the Sea Peoples
    • evanjrowley 43 minutes ago
      In an alternate timeline, The Sea Peoples are Romans sailing to England, the Anglo-Saxons, the Normans. Things became fuzzy when the English themselves became other civilization's Sea Peoples.
      • appreciatorBus 27 minutes ago
        I would wager that almost every civilization has been some other civilization’s sea people at some point in it’s history.
        • stymaar 10 minutes ago
          Well, at least not civilizations where dreams dry up.
    • forinti 30 minutes ago
      There's a Portuguese saying "há mouro na costa" which is literally "there are moor at the coast" and means that there is something fishy going on.
      • hackyhacky 24 minutes ago
        The Moors existed about 1900 years after the Sea People of the Bronze Age.
        • nkrisc 13 minutes ago
          I don’t think they’re implying the moors are responsible for the Bronze Age collapse, merely drawing parallels.
  • onion2k 25 minutes ago
    The Bronze Age was the third best age.
    • dn3500 13 minutes ago
      After the one where humans first harnessed water power, the Dam Age, and when we started wearing clothes, the Garb Age.