"Lessons From The Last Time Civilization Collapsed"
From NPR
August 19, 2014:
Consider this, if you would: a network of far-flung, powerful,
high-tech civilizations closely tied by trade and diplomatic embassies;
an accelerating threat of climate change and its pressure on food
production; a rising wave of displaced populations ready to sweep across
and overwhelm developed nations.
Sound familiar?
While
that laundry list of impending doom could be aimed at our era, it's
actually a description of the world 3,000 years ago. It is humanity's
first "global" dark age as described by archaeologist and George
Washington University professor Eric H. Cline in his recent book 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed.
1177
B.C. is, for Cline, a milepost. A thousand years before Rome or Christ
or Buddha, there existed a powerful array of civilizations in the Near
and Middle East that had risen to the height of their glory. Then,
fairly suddenly, the great web of interconnected civilizations imploded
and disappeared.
The question that haunts Eric Cline is why.
What drove such a complex set of societies to all perish almost all at
once? The answers and its lesson, Cline argues, are a story we moderns
should not ignore. When I asked him about the parallels between 1177
B.C. and A.D. 2014, Cline responded:
"The
world of the Late Bronze Age and ours today have more similarities than
one might expect, particularly in terms of relationships, both at the
personal level and at the state level. Thus, they had marriages and
divorces, embassies and embargoes, and so on. They also had problems
with climate change and security at the international level. These are
not necessarily unique to just them and us, but the combination of
similar problems (climate change and drought, earthquakes, war, economic
problems) at the very same time just might be unique to both."
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