Eric Cline | 1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed
1177 BC: The Year
Civilization Collapsed
February 25,
2015
Dr.
Eric H. Cline
Professor of
Classics and Anthropology
Chair of the
Department of
Classical and
Near Eastern Languages and
Civilizations
Director of the
Capitol Archaeological Institute at
The George Washington University, in
Washington D.C.
For more than three hundred years during the
Late Bronze Age, from about 1500 BC to 1200 BC, the
Mediterranean region played host to a complex international world in which
Egyptians,
Mycenaeans,
Minoans, Hittites,
Assyrians, Babylonians, Cypriots, and Canaanites all interacted, creating a cosmopolitan and globalized world-system such as has only rarely been seen before the current day. It may have been this very internationalism that contributed to the apocalyptic disaster that ended the
Bronze Age. When the end came, as it did after centuries of cultural and technological evolution, the civilized and international world of the
Mediterranean regions came to a dramatic halt in a vast area stretching from
Greece and
Italy in the west to
Egypt,
Canaan, and
Mesopotamia in the east.
Large empires and small kingdoms, that had taken centuries to evolve, collapsed rapidly. With their end came the world’s first recorded
Dark Ages. It was not until centuries later that a new cultural renaissance emerged in Greece and the other affected areas, setting the stage for the evolution of
Western society as we know it today.
Blame for the end of the Late Bronze Age is usually laid squarely at the feet of the so-called
Sea Peoples, known to us from the records of the
Egyptian pharaohs Merneptah and
Ramses III. However, as was the case with the fall of the
Roman Empire, the end of the Bronze Age empires in this region was not the result of a single invasion, but of multiple causes.
The Sea Peoples may well have been responsible for some of the destruction that occurred at the end of the Late Bronze Age, but it is much more likely that a concatenation of events, both human and natural — including earthquake storms, droughts, rebellions, and systems collapse — coalesced to create a “perfect storm” that brought the age to an end.
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