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Bronze Age Networks

The Temporal Witnesses, Volume 3

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Bronze Age Networks

By: Ricardo Gomez
Narrated by: Wendy Baran
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Summary

The Temporal Witnesses Volume 3: Bronze Age Networks

Ancient peoples weren't isolated. They were globally connected. And someone doesn't want you to know.

Cuchu Ramirez and Matias Kim have mastered the basics of time travel, but their greatest discovery awaits. As federal restrictions threaten to eliminate pre-Columbian studies nationwide, they journey back 3,500 years to witness the Bronze Age Networks—and uncover proof that ancient peoples were more globally connected than modern politicians want students to believe.

The Heritage Foundation 2.0 has escalated from state censorship to federal coordination, systematically erasing evidence of sophisticated ancient internationalism. But Cuchu and Matias have 48 hours to witness trade networks, cultural exchange, and technological sharing that spanned continents millennia before European "exploration."

Three Civilizations. Three Trade Networks. One Ancient Globalization.

CHAVÍN DE HUÁNTAR, PERU (1200 BCE): High in the Andes, a religious and cultural center influences communities across thousands of miles. Cuchu experiences how artistic innovations and spiritual practices spread through voluntary cultural exchange, creating the first pan-Andean civilization without conquest or colonization.

CAHOKIA'S EARLY PERIOD, ILLINOIS (1200 BCE): The foundations of North America's greatest pre-Columbian city reveal continental trade networks moving materials from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast to the Rocky Mountains. Matias documents economic systems that connected diverse communities in voluntary cooperation across vast distances.

KNOSSOS, CRETE (1450 BCE): At the height of Minoan civilization, they witness sophisticated maritime trade connecting Africa, Asia, and Europe. Palace workshops process materials from three continents while female leaders negotiate international agreements—a cosmopolitan Bronze Age world that challenges every assumption about ancient "primitiveness."

©2025 Ricardo Gomez (P)2026 Ricardo Gomez
Ancient Historical Fiction
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