The End of Civilization
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APOCALYPSE
It has been predicted countless times over thousands of years. In the generation following 1200 BC it actually happened, and no one saw it coming. The great civilizations of the age fell. The magnificent cities of the Eastern Mediterranean were destroyed or simply abandoned.
We have glimpses of the events from Homer's epic tales of the Trojan War, and from hieroglyphics that tell of desperate battles fought by Egypt's Pharaohs to hold back invading hordes, but the complete story of how and why the Eastern Mediterranean collapse came about has yet to be told.
The End of Civilization takes a fresh look at the evidence and develops a narrative that traces the collapse step by step and exposes the reasons behind it.
Gordon Donnell
Gordon Donnell is an award winning writer of mystery and thriller.
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The End of Civilization - Gordon Donnell
Copyright © 2016 Gordon Donnell.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the author except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
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ISBN: 978-1-5320-0235-9 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-5320-0236-6 (e)
iUniverse rev. date: 07/11/2016
CONTENTS
Looking Back In Time
Voices From The Past
The Egyptian Empire
The Hittite Empire
The Mycenaean Empire
Empire Building 101
Sargon of Akkad
Imperial Arms And Armies
Imperial Campaigns
Hittite Imperial Expansion
Shipwreck at Uluburun
The Battle of Kadesh
The Cost of Kadesh
Egypt and the Empire After Kadesh
The Hittites After Kadesh
Trade, Troy and the Mycenaeans.
The Advantage Shifts
The Sea People
The Bible Tells Me So
The Chain of Events
Additional Reading
INTRODUCTION
WHEN WE HEAR TODAY OF the end of civilization it usually comes as a warning of nuclear Armageddon or the impact of a hurtling asteroid. The phrase post-apocalyptic conjures up images of a morally and technologically stunted society along the lines film and fiction have conditioned us to imagine. In fact, civilization did end more than 3,000 years ago. The result was a post-apocalyptic society from which grew the western world as we know it.
In the years following 1300 BC the vast arc of land around the Eastern Mediterranean Sea was ruled by three empires; Egyptian, Hittite and Mycenaean. Within one hundred years the Hittite and Mycenaean Empires ceased to exist. Major cities across the region were destroyed or abandoned. The prevailing social order vanished. Both empires made extensive use of written language. Neither left any record of what had befallen them. The third great empire, Egypt, slipped into decay from which it never recovered. Scholars remain at a loss to explain why.
Archaeologists have painstakingly excavated the ruins of their cities for clues. Historians have learned to read the exploits of imperial rulers painted and carved on the walls of tombs and religious shrines. Diplomatic letters, bureaucratic edicts and records of merchant transactions baked into clay tablets offer a wealth of supporting detail. It has not been enough to produce concrete answers.
Written source material from any period presents difficulties. Much of it was set down in languages that no longer exist. All of it is subject to conflicting translation and interpretation. Since it served the immediate purposes of those who commissioned and prepared it, the contents are tainted by their prejudices. This can both reveal and obscure the truth. Some survives only as fragments of a larger, lost whole. Some only through reference and summary. Thus it often provides only glimpses into life and events. It cannot be read as a coherent narrative with a beginning, middle and end.
Archaeology also has limits. Only a fraction of the physical artifacts of any civilization survives thousands of years. The excavation process may produce only a random sample of those. Some known or suspected sites cannot be excavated because they lie under modern settlements. Political restrictions place others off limits. Modern conflicts make exploration in portions of the Eastern Mediterranean too dangerous. In addition, sound excavation technique requires that some material be left in the ground in context for removal in the future when better scientific tools may permit a more revealing examination.
Most of the written and physical evidence has been known for decades or longer. Egyptian hieroglyphics were deciphered in the 18th Century AD. The Hittite dictionary was essentially complete by the mid 20th Century AD. Decryption of Mycenaean Linear B followed soon after. The available material has been subjected to diligent study by scholars trained and experienced in interpreting the past. This raises the question of how it is now possible to determine the cause of the simultaneous fall of the Eastern Mediterranean empires when we do not have any significant body of new evidence. The answer is in several parts.
First, empires are distinct from the cultures that assembled them. They have their own structure and dynamics. Close study of the dominant societies will not explain the failure of empires any more than a close study of the internal combustion engine will explain traffic jams. We have to integrate knowledge of the individual Egyptian, Hittite and Mycenaean cultures with an understanding of the concept and complexities of empire.
Second, the convergence of causal events may be as important as the events themselves in determining the fate of an empire. A corollary in modern times is a strong wind blowing through a steel girder bridge. Normally this is a non-event. In one famous case, however, wind conditions were exactly right to trigger a phenomenon called aeroeslatic flutter. This is what makes a taut rope vibrate in a high wind. The span suffered a catastrophic failure, duly recorded on newsreel footage titled Galloping Gertie. The failure was explained only when engineering analysis was expanded beyond the standard load and vector calculations.
Finally, the sporadic nature of the available evidence has sometimes worked against a solution to what caused the failure of the Eastern Mediterranean empires. Faced with an absence of information, well intentioned scholars often resorted to best guesses in an attempt to construct a comprehensive history. Unfortunately some of these guesses, consecrated by time and hallowed by usage, have become enshrined as fact. Accordingly, we will pay special attention to what we know, or think we know, and how we came to know it.
Our examination will begin with a review of the methods of source analysis, so we can understand and evaluate the material that has come down to us. This will be followed by a thumbnail sketch of the three empires under consideration, so we will have a general concept of the Eastern Mediterranean world of the time. From there we will proceed to a discussion of how ancient empires were created and the conditions under which they flourished. In order to determine how empires disintegrate, it is necessary to understand the principles on which they are built and maintained.
We will then be in a position to trace the sequence and chronology of events that brought about the overall disintegration of civilization in the Eastern Mediterranean.
Redmond, Washington
2016
LOOKING BACK IN TIME
SOME YEARS AGO A WORK crew made a gruesome discovery in a remote area of Washington State; a human skeleton. The authorities began an investigation. Missing persons records were checked. The remains were forwarded for pathology to determine whether the cause of death was natural, accidental or homicide. The mystery was finally solved after considerable scientific effort. The remains were the now famous Kennewick Man, who perished 9,000 years ago.
Items pulled from the ground seldom advertise their age. Fortunately the nature of the physical universe and the habits of humankind permit us to apply science and ingenuity to establish dates in the distant past. Before we journey back more than 3,000 years to the Late Bronze Age we should understand the methods used to determine the dates we will visit.
Stratigraphy
This technique is based on the fact that gravity brings everything to ground on a more or less immediate basis. A spectacular example occurred sixty five million years ago. A massive asteroid struck Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. The force of impact sent its component elements high into the atmosphere, to be carried broadcast on air currents until they settled out. We know of the impact because the crater has been identified. We can date it because a world-wide layer of traces of the element lithium, which is more common in asteroids than on earth, settled above rock layers dated to that time. This layer became part of the world’s geologic time line as layers were set down on top of it.
The date roughly coincides with the disappearance of the world’s dinosaur population, leading to the theory that the impact accelerated a seismic event which was responsible for the extinction. This brings us to an important distinction. The dating is scientific, in the sense that it can be validated by repeated observation. The extinction theory is an extrapolation that may be suggested, but is not proven, by the dating.
Stratigraphy has been applied in many archaeological sites in the Eastern Mediterranean. One example is the city of Troy, which we will visit in later chapters. Troy is not one city, but a number of successive cities, each one built on the ruins of its predecessor. Occupation of the site of Troy goes back to what is referred to as the Neolithic Age, famously defined in the film Raiders of the Lost Ark as Neo, meaning new, lithic, meaning stone
.
A brief discussion of the concept of Ages is in order. Scholars have fallen into the habit of classifying human history according to the tools in common usage at various times. Stone, Copper, Bronze and Iron are the broad categories. Contrary to the timelines often published in history texts, there is no definite beginning or end to these Ages. For example, the popularly named Iceman, a complete set of human remains found frozen in the Alps and dated to just before 3,000 BC, was carrying both an axe with a copper blade and a knife with a stone (obsidian) blade.
The empires we will examine are dated to what is known for convenience as the Late Bronze Age, and came to grief in the 12th Century BC. Iron was being extracted in the area as early as 1,800 BC. A dagger with an iron blade was found in the tomb of the Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamen, who died around 1,330 BC. However it was the 9th Century BC before iron artifacts commonly outnumber bronze artifacts in archaeological excavations in the area.
While the concept of Ages is fluid, the process of stratigraphy can produce definite results. Successive strata can be dated by reference to the objects found there. Anything revealed by excavation can then be assigned a corresponding date range. The strength of dating by stratification is that it can be validated by observation and replication. Observation means that an object can be seen and/or photographed in context. Photography is important because camera media can record spectra, such as infrared, that the human eye cannot. Replication means that dating of reference samples can be repeated as many times as desired with similar results.
The primary weakness of this method, when it can be applied, is imprecision. The date of any stratum is only as precise as the dates of samples from the stratum. Those may be incomplete and subject to interpretation. Stratigraphy can be applied only when clear strata exist. This is not always the case. Items from different eras and cultures may be found in a jumbled array.
When stratigraphy is possible and properly applied we can have confidence in the results, within the limits of precision imposed by prevailing conditions.
Seriation
The dating technique of seriation is based on the transitory nature of mankind’s fascination with styles. A modern example is the American automobile. Initially it resembled the horse-drawn vehicles that preceded it. As engines grew, so did hoods. The 1930s brought streamlining. The 1950s brought fins. The 1970s brought outsized bumpers. An archaeologist of the future excavating in rural America will be able to date a town by the styles of wrecked autos left behind.
Archaeologists of today rely heavily on styles of pottery to establish dates. Pottery has been basic to civilization since man first learned to fire clay. It provided durable, contamination-free storage for food and liquids, as well as the plates, bowls and drinking cups from which to conveniently consume his meals. While it can be broken, it does not decay. Archaeologists are all but guaranteed some supply, however fragmentary, at any sizeable excavation.
Fragments of pottery can be reassembled and the surface decoration either discerned visually or raised by chemical or other means. Archaeologists can then compare the piece to a reference library and determine when it was in use. In general, a popular style starts with a small following, grows to domination, and then withers to a small following as new styles come into vogue. This trend is remarkably consistent. A relative count of styles can fine-tune the dating of a site.
Seriation is the most common type of dating currently in use. Dig teams spend prodigious amounts of time recovering bits of pottery, painstakingly referencing horizontal and vertical positions in the site and then sorting and attempting to assemble the bits into recognizable objects. Photographs of the finished products are often circulated among experts to ensure correct interpretation.
Computer software now allows virtual reconstruction of pottery based on the curvature of a relatively small number of fragments. Data point mapping allows virtual site reconstruction with precise vertical and horizontal location for all fragments unearthed during an excavation. These advances have both broadened and sharpened the application of seriation dating.
The strength of seriation lies in its broad application. It can produce date ranges where none would otherwise be available. Shortcomings do exist. The date ranges can be wide. Styles may persist longer in some areas than others. Disagreements among experts are not unknown.
One application of seriation that is not appropriate to the Late Bronze Age is dating by technique and technology. This is based on the belief that modern scholars know when certain techniques and technologies came into being. Any artifact displaying these must be from a date later than the supposedly known date of inception. The underlying belief is demonstrably flawed. For example, mortise and tenon joinery has been shown by radiocarbon dating and dendrochronology (both discussed later in this chapter) to be older than originally thought. The water screw, long thought to be a 3rd Century BC development of Archimedes, is alluded to in much earlier Mesopotamian writings.
Dendrochronology
Dendrochronology is an absolute dating method based on the pattern of annular tree rings. Trees grow at different rates each year. Dry years produce less growth. Wet years produce more. When a tree is cut down, an end-on view presents a pattern of concentric rings, each representing one year’s growth and each of a unique width. This pattern of thin and thick rings, particularly when taken over a longer time period, is statistically unlikely to be repeated.
The age of a tree felled today can be determined by a count of rings. The ring patterns of wood of an unknown age can be compared with those of the known pattern and, if they match at any point, a simple count of rings will give the age of the unknown piece. By a process of successively matching older and older samples, a reference chart can be built up going back many thousand years.
Archaeologists use such reference charts to compare with patterns in wooden artifacts. The year in which the tree used to produce the artifact was felled can be precisely determined. Current reference charts extend back