Peter Haugen

World History For Dummies


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have disappeared if it weren’t for a 1932 horror movie called The Mummy, which is wrong on every point of archaeology and Egyptian religion but features a compellingly compelling performance by Boris Karloff in the title role. The Mummy was successful enough that many remakes and variations followed.

      About 4000 BC: Egyptians begin burying their dead with ritual care.

      About 3300 BC: A well-equipped male traveler in the Italian Alps succumbs to an arrow wound and falls face-down into the snow.

      About 1600 BC: The volcano on the island of Santorini erupts, destroying the island, wiping out villages, and probably ending a civilization.

      1352 BC: Tutankhamen, young king of Egypt, dies and is mummified.

      About 1250 BC: A confederation of Greek kings and warriors attacks the city of Troy, in today’s Turkey.

      Ninth century BC: The bard Homer sings about the Trojan War.

      Early fourth century BC: In Athens, the philosopher Plato writes about Atlantis, a land lost under the sea.

      1870s: Heinrich Schliemann, a German commodities broker and amateur archaeologist, finds Homer’s Troy.

      1922: British archaeologist Howard Carter opens Tutankhamen’s perfectly preserved tomb.

      1991: Hikers in the Italian Alps discover the 5,300-year-old mummy of a well-outfitted traveler. Researchers nickname him Ötzi.

      Putting History into Perspective

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Seeing through the long lens of humanity’s time on Earth

      

Figuring out BC and AD

      

Accepting the relativity of the names of eras

      

Embracing contradictory characters

      In several places in this book, I refer to the year 1492, when the explorer Christopher Columbus, sailing under a Spanish flag, landed for the first time on an island in the Bahamas, east of Florida. That year is a big dividing point in history, in that it marks the beginning of European colonialism in the Americas. The Western Hemisphere changed in ways that were devastatingly tragic for the people who had been living there. Diseases from Europe killed them by the millions. The rest of the world, meanwhile, saw changes that ranged from new crops (corn, potatoes, tobacco, peppers, coffee) to population migrations, to new, lucrative markets for slave trading (the most pernicious kind of population migration). A global economy took root once European navigators realized they could sail to new worlds, and soon around the world, in their little wooden ships.

       Sorting out such terms as ancient, recent, and modern when they’re used by historians and other scholars and connecting them with the stretches of time that people have lived on the planet.

       Getting comfortable with labels such as classical and Victorian that historians use to refer to eras and periods. Often, these labels can seem more cryptic than helpful.

       Understanding the often-contradictory reasons why certain exceptional people are judged to be worthy of historical study.

      In all three cases, I suggest that you relax. The terminology is less important than you may think.

      In this chapter, you get a chance to ponder what it means to be human before you plunge into the cavalcade of civilizations that follows in Part 2. If you can work up a healthy sense of awe about our remarkable species and its beginnings, you’ll be better able to appreciate the broad sweep of time that people have been around. And you can see that historical language — including relative terms such as ancient and labels for eras such as Classical Greece — is somewhat flexible and may be used differently by different historians. As with any subject matter, there are different ways of looking at history and even different ways of evaluating people in history. Sometimes perspectives conflict, but they can also complement one another.

      Earth formed about 4.5 billion years ago, or so the astrophysicists say. My mind balks at the thought of such an expanse of time.

      You’ve probably seen the familiar illustration showing successive ancestor species marching single file, ever more upright and less hairy, toward modern humanity. Evolution didn’t happen that way, however. Evolution is rarely neat. Different kinds of more-or-less humanlike animals lived at the same time. Many were genetic dead ends and died out, although the genetic record reveals that other, related types of humans — including Neanderthals and Denisovans — interbred with our own ancestors, so in that way, they are us. All earlier hominids are extinct … unless you buy the idea that Sasquatch (Bigfoot) and Yeti (the Abominable Snowman) are your reclusive country cousins.

      

As a species, modern humans are young, and again, I’m speaking relatively. Homo erectus — if not your direct ancestor, at least a close relative — was on Earth much longer than modern people have been here. Homo erectus lived from about 1.7 million years ago to perhaps as recently as 108,000 years ago.

      If you think of the entire time since the emergence of hominids, perhaps 4 million years ago, to the present day as a single 24-hour day, Homo erectus lasted more than 8 hours. On that scale, modern humans have been here for about 15 minutes.

      Nearing the Neanderthal

      Neanderthals lived over a wide area stretching from today’s Belgium