The end of civilisation: Bronze Age collapse
One of the earliest examples of globalisation, and why it came crashing down.
More than 3,000 years ago a group of powerful and intricately connected Mediterranean kingdoms collapsed over the course of just a few decades.
The palaces of Mycenaean Greece were destroyed, entire cities in Hittite Turkey were abandoned, and whole empires disintegrated. Some civilisations disappeared completely. But what caused the so-called Bronze Age collapse - climate change, trade breakdown, internal rebellion, or a mysterious group of invaders known as the ‘Sea Peoples'?
Some historians have called the aftermath a 'dark age', but was it really as gloomy as that, and might this period of wealth, pressure, and decline offer us any lessons today?
Rajan Datar is joined by İlgi Gerçek, assistant professor of ancient Near Eastern languages and history at Bilkent University, in Ankara; Eric Cline, professor of classics, history, and anthropology at The George Washington University, in Washington DC, and author of ‘1177BC: The Year Civilisation Collapsed’; and Marc van de Mieroop, professor of history at Columbia University, in New York.
Producer: Simon Tulett
(Photo: The ancient site of Patara in Turkey's Antalya province. Patara (Patar in Hittite language), was once the capital of the Lycian Union. Credit: Mustafa Ciftci/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
Last on
More episodes
Broadcasts
- Thu 3 Nov 2022 10:06GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service
- Fri 4 Nov 2022 00:06GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service except South Asia
- Fri 4 Nov 2022 03:06GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service South Asia
- Sun 6 Nov 2022 03:06GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa only
- Sun 6 Nov 2022 14:06GMTÂ鶹Éç World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
Do you use US dollars even though they are not your country’s official currency?
Podcast
-
The Forum
The programme that explains the present by exploring the past