ISBN-13: 9783565212453 / Angielski / Miękka / 116 str.
Around 1177 BC, the thriving civilizations of the Mediterranean-the Egyptians, Hittites, Mycenaeans, and Babylonians-collapsed almost simultaneously. Archaeologist Marcus Drake investigates this systemic failure in "The First Apocalypse." For decades, historians blamed the mysterious "Sea Peoples" for this destruction, but Drake argues for a much more complex and frightening reality.Using the latest data from pollen cores (showing climate change) and archaeoseismology (earthquake storms), Drake reconstructs a "perfect storm." He argues that the Bronze Age world was a hyper-connected, globalized economy reliant on complex trade routes for tin and copper. When drought and famine struck, the fragile supply chains snapped, leading to migration, war, and internal rebellion.The book is a warning about complexity. Drake draws parallels to our modern, interconnected world, showing how specialized societies are incredibly efficient but dangerously brittle. "The First Apocalypse" is a gripping documentary of how quickly order can turn to chaos when the systems we take for granted fail.
They had global trade, writing, and unparalleled wealth. Then, in a single generation, the lights went out. The story of history's first dark age.