Late Bronze Age Collapse

34 points | by dmonay an hour ago

7 comments

  • evanjrowley 22 minutes 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.

      DicIfTEx 9 minutes ago

      The fantastic Fall of Civilizations podcast also had an episode about it: https://fallofcivilizationspodcast.com/2019/01/21/episode-2-...

        pixl97 8 minutes ago

        Ha, beat me too it. FoC is a great channel.

      pfdietz 7 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.

      darkfloo 14 minutes ago

      Shameless plug for my favourite YouTuber of all time https://youtu.be/aq4G-7v-_xI?si=GviYcvEtOAJ1mln7

  • lordleft 6 minutes ago

    Beware the Sea Peoples

      evanjrowley a minute 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.