2/8: After 1177 B.C.: The Survival of Civilizations by Eric H. Cline (Author)
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 1 June 2024
⏱️ 4 minutes
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Summary
2/8: After 1177 B.C.: The Survival of Civilizations by Eric H. Cline (Author)
https://www.amazon.ca/After-1177-B-C-Survival-Civilizations/dp/0691192138
At the end of the acclaimed history 1177 B.C., many of the Late Bronze Age civilizations of the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean lay in ruins, undone by invasion, revolt, natural disasters, famine, and the demise of international trade. An interconnected world that had boasted major empires and societies, relative peace, robust commerce, and monumental architecture was lost and the so-called First Dark Age had begun. Now, in After 1177 B.C., Eric Cline tells the compelling story of what happened next, over four centuries, across the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean world. It is a story of resilience, transformation, and success, as well as failures, in an age of chaos and reconfiguration.T
1631 EGYPT
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I'm John Batscher with Professor Eric Klein, his books. There's a sequel now after 1177 |
| 0:11.0 | BC. The world has ended, a combination of accident and intervention and invasion and migration and migration, |
| 0:20.0 | but we look to who survives, who adapts, who's resilient. |
| 0:24.0 | And we start with the Assyrians because they're in the Bible and they're easy to remember. |
| 0:28.0 | The professor teaches me, however, that the Assyrians were successful because they were almost always at war. |
| 0:34.7 | One particular king of the Assyrians was extremely successful, identifying what you recommend professor is. you're going to survive you need |
| 0:44.9 | leadership and the Assyrians had it. Yes absolutely that's one of the things that I |
| 0:49.1 | do in the final chapter of the of this new sequel is try to figure out why some of these societies, the G8 as I call them, |
| 0:58.0 | why some of them were more resilient, why they were able to make it through the collapse better than others. |
| 1:06.8 | And the Assyrians are one of the best examples. |
| 1:10.7 | They've got redundant systems in place, for example. |
| 1:14.0 | They still have their military, they still have writing, they still have their government, |
| 1:19.0 | the king is still in place, and that's where having a good leader at the right time might come in. |
| 1:25.9 | And so we know from their records, which we have for much of the time, though there's an |
| 1:31.8 | interesting gap right at the beginning, we know that their |
| 1:35.2 | leaders, as you say, are busy conducting war almost every year. |
| 1:40.4 | And in part it's because the people that they have been happily trading with back in the late Bronze Age, |
| 1:46.0 | they're having trouble. They don't have trading partners per se anymore, |
| 1:50.0 | so they simply take what they need during these next couple of centuries. |
| 1:55.0 | The Assyrians always at war conquering and raiding and pushing out from what was originally Asher and then their capital moves of Nineveh. |
| 2:08.0 | They seem to, they move in tandem with the Babylonians. |
| 2:11.0 | What was their relationship with it was Babylon a |
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