After 1177 B.C. cover art

After 1177 B.C.

The Survival of Civilizations

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After 1177 B.C.

By: Eric H. Cline
Narrated by: John Chancer, Eric H. Cline
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About this listen

This audiobook narrated by John Chancer tells the gripping story of what happened after the Bronze Age collapsed—why some civilizations endured, why some gave way to new ones, and why some disappeared forever

Features Eric Cline’s FAQs as bonus content

At the end of Eric Cline's bestselling history 1177 B.C., many of the Late Bronze Age civilizations of the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean lay in ruins, undone by invasion, revolt, natural disasters, famine, and the demise of international trade. An interconnected world that had boasted major empires and societies, relative peace, robust commerce, and monumental architecture was lost and the so-called First Dark Age had begun. Now, in After 1177 B.C., Cline tells the compelling story of what happened next, over four centuries, across the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean world. It is a story of resilience, transformation, and success, as well as failures, in an age of chaos and reconfiguration.

After 1177 B.C. tells how the collapse of powerful Late Bronze Age civilizations created new circumstances to which people and societies had to adapt. Those that failed to adjust disappeared from the world stage, while others transformed themselves, resulting in a new world order that included Phoenicians, Philistines, Israelites, Neo-Hittites, Neo-Assyrians, and Neo-Babylonians. Taking the story up to the resurgence of Greece marked by the first Olympic Games in 776 B.C., the book also describes how world-changing innovations such as the use of iron and the alphabet emerged amid the chaos.

Filled with lessons for today about why some societies survive massive shocks while others do not, After 1177 B.C. reveals why this period, far from being the First Dark Age, was a new age with new inventions and new opportunities.

©2024 Eric H. Cline (P)2024 Princeton University Press
Ancient Archaeology Civilization World Emotionally Gripping Natural Disaster

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All stars
Most relevant
The title of my review says it all. I am sooo glad I started my adventure into this period with this book and its predecessor.

Here's where I'm going now: I'm convinced the Palace Economy system itself was the underlying cause of the vulnerabilities and frailty of those societies. No sooner had bronze brought productivity after the prior hand-to-mouth existence of stone, the political-gened ones donned helmet, armour, greaves, and spear, and creamed off the surplus value, thereby dissolving the buffer that might otherwise have absorbed the shocks of earthquake, drought, famine, pestilence, and climate change.

The Sea Peoples were the ordinary people of those proto-socialist command economies-cum-medieval aristocratic rackets, who rose up against the elites through want, oppression, and a ruthless unyielding elite who wouldn't give back an inch as the shocks came. You find little or nothing of them in the archeology, because once returned to a life of "crawling out of the earth, hand-to-mouth, straight back into the earth" by the surplus thieving elites there's nothing to find! No flash pottery, tombs, or other bling from them!

And no Enlightenment-like record of any ideological thoughts they may have had to end their epoch's aristo-rackets, or Thatcher-Reagan "Renaissance of Enlightenment" that ended the socialist command economies and re-estalished Adam Smith on the record either, because they couldn't write.

As statism, public sectorism, and democratic socialism heap debt on debt to fund a class of bureaucrats, crooked scientists, diversity and anti-Western civilisation commissars, while delivering less health, education, and social services through diminishing productivity, our latter-day "Palace Economies" expose us to the shocks that will initiate the collapse half of our cycle.

The author supplies pointers to the historians who are on this scent already: all hail the perfect chronicler and route-planner for my journey!

A masterful chronicle and springboard / route planner for this fascinating period.

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