The Bronze Age in Europe Audiobook By Charles River Editors cover art

The Bronze Age in Europe

The History and Legacy of Civilizations Across Europe from 3200-600 BCE

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The Bronze Age in Europe

By: Charles River Editors
Narrated by: Dan Gallagher
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While the Bronze Age is recognized as one of history’s most important phases, it’s been hard for historians to precisely date. The idea of the Bronze Age comes from a three-age system developed in the 19th century through which archaeologists and historians believe cultures evolved. These three ages are the Stone Age, the Bronze Age, and the Iron Age, and the concept of the system stems from the simultaneous development of museums in Europe during that time. In the Royal Museum of Nordic Antiquities in Denmark, Christian Jürgensen Thomsen, the director of the museum, began classifying objects of stone, bronze, or iron to better categorize and exhibit them.

Each archaeological artifact was thus sorted according to their materials and further organized by shape and style. Through such methodology, working alongside archaeological reports, he was able to show how certain objects changed over time (Fagan 1996, 712).

Such a typology, combined with stratigraphy noted in archaeological reports, was useful to early archaeologists with no reliable method for dating artifacts. By understanding which object came before or after, early archaeologists had a relative dating system with which to assess the age of an object or culture. This kind of system was useful to the archaeologists who often encountered objects from above-ground burials that lacked stratigraphy.

When this three-age system reached England, John Lubbock expanded on it by applying cultural anthropology to the ages. Over time, other researchers would gradually add their interpretations to the system, with many arguing for sub-divisions of the Stone Age or the introduction of a Copper Age between the Neolithic and the Bronze Ages (Rowley-Conwy 2007, 243).

The Bronze Age in Europe: The History and Legacy of Civilizations Across Europe from 3200-600 BCE looks at the different cultures that emerged over those crucial years. You will learn about the Bronze Age in Europe like never before.

©2019 Charles River Editors (P)2019 Charles River Editors
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Old broken thinking about old places

Perceptions of history have long been broken by the artificial east/west divide, and this book does nothing to heal that divide. Instead it perpetuates it with underlying assumptions about the west being more advanced and more important than anything east of Anatolia. It’s like describing half an inflating balloon without ever noticing the side with the neck where the air comes in. We should instead forget the notion that cultures developed independently, ever. Minoans and Bronze Age greeks only had culture because of the trade coming out of the vast central Eurasian steppe rivers and seas, and the Iranian Plateau of the Elamites. This book completely ignores this central and defining influence. Minoans and early Greeks did not invent the flow of trade, they were invented by it. They existed only to facilitate it, until their innovations began to slowly set them apart. That process is what this book ought to be about. But it is not. It instead pretends Bronze Age cultures emerged locally of their own accord, for unknown reasons, like neckless balloons inflating themselves. Without the full context this book will only teach you some names and places, without explaining how they came to be or how they were continuously transformed by the relentless flow of people, trade and culture from farther east.

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