The History of the World in Bite-Sized Chunks
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Emma Marriott
Emma Marriott is a freelance writer and editor whose previous works for Michael O'Mara Books include I Used to Know That: History, Bad History: How We Got the Past Wrong and The History of the World in Bite-sized Chunks.
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The History of the World in Bite-Sized Chunks - Emma Marriott
By the same author:
I Used to Know That: History
Bad History: How We Got the Past Wrong
For my father, Charles Donald Mann (1931–2012)
First published in Great Britain in 2012 by
Michael O’Mara Books Limited
9 Lion Yard
Tremadoc Road
London SW4 7NQ
Copyright © Michael O’Mara Books Limited 2012
All rights reserved. You may not copy, store, distribute, transmit, reproduce or otherwise make available this publication (or any part of it) in any form, or by any means (electronic, digital, optical, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. Any person who does any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978-1-84317-886-6 in hardback print format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-929-0 in EPub format
ISBN: 978-1-84317-930-6 in Mobipocket format
Designed and typeset by www.glensaville.com
www.mombooks.com
CONTENTS
LIST OF MAPS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER ONE: First Empires and Civilizations
CHAPTER TWO: The Ancient World
CHAPTER THREE: The Middle Ages
CHAPTER FOUR: World on the Move
CHAPTER FIVE: Revolution and European Imperialism
CHAPTER SIX: A New World Order
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX
LIST OF MAPS
1 Ancient Empires: Africa and the Middle East c. 3500–60 BC
2 Ancient Empires: the Americas and the Far East c. 3500 BC–AD 900
3 The Early European Empires 336 BC–AD 1453
4 New Empires and Discoveries 1237–1857
5 Expansion up to the First World War 1400–1911
6 The Build-up to and Effects of the First World War 1899–1922
7 Main Theatres of the Second World War
INTRODUCTION
Our aim with this book was to encapsulate nearly 5,000 years of world history in one, relatively slim volume. The vast and often complex nature of our global history was to be distilled down into a format both simple and accessible, into a collection of ‘bite-sized chunks’.
Added to this, we resolved to give due prominence to the world’s earliest civilizations and ancient empires, and to provide a history of the world that would also venture beyond the well-trodden paths of European history.
The familiar stories of European and North American history are of course here, from the glories of the Ancient Greeks and the Norman invasions to the American Wars of Independence and the Wall Street Crash. But we also delve into the events and peoples of the Far East, Africa, the Middle East, Oceania and the Americas, to highlight, albeit briefly (as is the nature of the book), such gems as the Indus civilization in Pakistan, the Tang dynasty in China, the Kush kingdom in North Africa, and Nadir Shah in Persia.
Each entry is concise but comprehensive, a self-contained morsel of information that can be consumed on its own or digested alongside its fellow entries. We’ve tried to cover as much as we can within one volume (although it’s often more difficult to decide what should be left out than what should stay in). Cross-references are also given in the text to other entries and events, as history is nothing if not interlinked and shaped by what has gone before.
We begin with the world’s earliest civilizations, of which we know relatively little, but which nonetheless have great influence on life today. (In the words of the historian J. M. Roberts: ‘Distant history still clutters up our lives, and our thinking.’) Thereafter more than fifty-four centuries of world history are covered right up to 1945, with the entries split into subgroups encompassing the Middle East and Africa, Europe, the Americas, the Far East and Oceania. Often, modern names of countries and cities have been given, although older names have been retained when deemed more appropriate and familiar to the reader.
Our hope is that The History of the World in Bite-Sized Chunks will have pruned away some of the confusing mesh of history in order to get to some of its key facts, from mass migration and conflict to the dazzling achievements of the past and the numerous examples of man’s tenacity to survive, all of which still influences our thinking and makes us what we are today.
EMMA MARRIOTT
Grateful thanks to Dr Hilary Stroh (née Larkin), Lindsay Davies, David Woodroffe, Ana Bježančević, Greg Stevenson, Andrew John, Charlotte Buchan, Dominique Enright and Glen Saville.
CHAPTER ONE:
FIRST EMPIRES AND CIVILIZATIONS
3500 BC to 800 BC
MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA
SUMERIA
In about 5000 BC, farmers settled on the fertile land of southern Mesopotamia (now Iraq) known as Sumer, and from these humble beginnings the world’s first great civilization formed. Living along the river valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates (Mesopotamia is Greek for the land ‘between two rivers’), Sumerian farmers were able to grow an abundance of grain and other crops, the surplus of which enabled them to settle in one place. Sumerians also traded this surplus food for metals and tools with people as far away as present-day Pakistan and Afghanistan, and they dug a network of ditches and canals as drainage channels on their fertile but flood-prone lands.
By 3000 BC, a number of city-states had developed in Sumer, the largest being Ur, with a population of 40,000. The first known system of writing originated in Sumer: at first pictographic, it gradually evolved into a series of simplified wedge-shaped signs formed using reed stalks on clay tablets (the script came to be called ‘cuneiform’, meaning ‘wedge-shaped’ in Latin). Sumerians also devised complex administrative and legal systems, developed wheeled vehicles and potters’ wheels, and built great ziggurats and buildings with columns and domes.
The first great empire of Sumer was established by Sargon, king of Akkad (an ancient kingdom situated north of Sumer), in about 2350 BC. All Sumerian cities were united under his control and the empire stretched from Syria to the Persian Gulf. This dynasty was destroyed in about 2200 BC but after 2150 BC the kings of Ur re-established Sumerian authority in Sumer and also conquered Akkad. Following an invasion by the Elamites (a civilization to the east of Sumer) and the sack of Ur in around 2000 BC, Sumer came under Amorite rule, out of which emerged the great city-state of Babylon (see here).
ANCIENT EGYPT: THE OLD KINGDOM
The first great civilization in Africa began with the settlement of the Nile valley in the north-east of the continent in around 5000 BC. It’s now thought these early settlers were from the Sahara, where, some 2,000 years earlier, Africa’s first farming societies had developed before climate change had turned the Sahara into desert. This same climate change had dried out the swamps of the Nile valley, making it more of an attractive settlement for farming people.
By the mid-fourth millennium BC, the valley of the Nile was densely populated, towns had grown and the region had been divided into two Egyptian kingdoms. Traditional Egyptian chronology tells us that in 3200 BC, the pharaoh (ruler) Menes unified the two kingdoms of Egypt to create a single state. This saw the beginning of a 3,000-year civilization that was marked by monumental tomb-building projects and a flourishing of Egyptian culture.
The earliest period of Ancient Egypt, known as the Old Kingdom (c. 2575–2130 BC), was ruled by a number of powerful pharaohs and saw major developments in technology, art and architecture. During this era, hieroglyphic script was developed and the Great Sphinx and Giza pyramids were constructed (during which thousands of ordinary Egyptians died). The pyramids provided for the after-life of the pharaoh, and were closely associated with the cult of the sun-god Ra – their flared shape resembled the rays of the sun and provided for the deceased king a stairway to the gods.
ANCIENT EGYPT: THE MIDDLE AND NEW KINGDOMS
A period of stability in Egypt, known as the Middle Kingdom (c. 1938–1630 BC), followed a century of severe drought, famine and the collapse of central government.
Thereafter, Egypt’s pharaohs restored the country’s prosperity and stability, by securing its borders, increasing its agricultural output and acquiring vast mineral wealth (partly by reconquering land in lower Nubia that was rich in quarries and gold mines). This era was known for its jewellery and goldsmiths’ designs. The worship of Osiris, god of death and rebirth, also spread across Egypt, leading to the prevailing belief that everyone, not just the pharaohs, would be welcomed by the gods after death.
Ambitious building and mineral projects, along with severe floods along the Nile, led to a weakening of the pharaoh’s power in Egypt, enabling foreign settlers (mainly Hyksos, who were probably from Palestine) to seize control. The shift from a bronze- to an iron-based economy also contributed to the decline. This was followed by the New Kingdom (c. 1539–1075 BC), when control was re-established by the pharaohs and Egyptian influence extended into Syria, Nubia and the Middle East. Regarded as one of the greatest chapters of Egyptian history, many great temples were built, including the painted tombs of the Valley of the Kings. The era also included the reign of some of Egypt’s most famous pharaohs, including the female ruler Hatshepsut and the boy-king Tutankhamun.
Following the death of Egypt’s last great pharaoh, Rameses III, in 1070 BC, Egypt went into slow decline as it split into several small kingdoms. In around 719 BC, the Kushites (see here) conquered Egypt and ruled as pharaohs until they were pushed back to their own borders by Assyrians in 656 BC. Assyrian rule was followed by Persian conquest in 525 BC, occupation by Alexander the Great in 332 BC and finally Roman conquest in 30 BC.
BABYLONIA
Political power in Mesopotamia eventually moved north to the city of Babylon in Akkad, so that the entire plain became known as Babylonia. The first great dynasty of Babylon lasted about 300 years from around 1894 BC, reaching the peak of its influence under King Hammurabi (c. 1795–1750 BC).
1 Ancient Empires: Africa and the Middle East c. 3500–60 BC
During Hammurabi’s rule, the empire of Babylonia expanded to include all of southern Mesopotamia (including Sumer) and part of Assyria to the north. Hammurabi is famed for instituting the world’s first known set of laws (the code of Hammurabi) and also promoting science and scholarship.
After Hammurabi’s death, the Babylonian Empire declined, and from 1595 BC was dominated by Hittites (see below) and then by Kassites (mountain people from the east of Babylonia) who established a 400-year dynasty. During this time Assyria broke away from Babylonia, and a struggle ensued over several centuries for the control of Babylon. By the ninth century BC, Assyrian kings ruled Babylonia until the fall of the Assyrian Empire in the late seventh century BC.
Thereon, Babylonia fell under the power of the Chaldeans (a little-known Semitic people) and the empire prospered again, most notably under Nebuchadrezzar II (604–562 BC). He conquered Assyria and Palestine and revitalized the city of Babylon, rebuilding the temple of Marduk (the main god of Babylonia) and constructing the celebrated ‘Hanging Gardens’. In 539 BC Babylon was invaded by the Persians, under Cyrus the Great (see here), and the Babylonian Empire came to an end – although the city of Babylon remained important well into the fourth century BC.
HITTITE EMPIRE
The warrior people known as the Hittites, one of the great powers of the Bronze Age, ruled much of modern-day Turkey and Syria for over a thousand years. Their empire, which reached its greatest size between 1450 and 1200 BC, rivalled the empires of Babylonia and Assyria, as well as Ancient Egypt.
Much of what we know about the Hittites stems from the discovery of 10,000 cuneiform clay tablets in Hattusas, Turkey, in 1906. These, along with the remains of some of their ancient cities, revealed that the Hittites were feudal tribesmen who, not long after 3000 BC, swept south from a region north of the Black Sea into Anatolia, or Asia Minor, which is today the Asian part of Turkey. They rode horses and chariots, and were equipped with bronze daggers. By 2000 BC, Hittite dominions were united into an empire, with its capital at Hattusas. One of the first Hittite kings, Hattusili I (1650–1620 BC), invaded Syria, and his successor, Mursili I, sacked Babylon, although he was later killed and Hittite conquests were lost.
A still more powerful Hittite Empire arose in 1450 BC and by c. 1380 BC the great Hittite king Suppiluliumas had built an empire that encompassed Syria almost to Canaan (modern-day Israel). By the time of his descendant Muwatallis, Egypt and the Hittite Empire competed over dominance in Syria, which led to a fierce and much famed battle between the Egyptian pharaoh Rameses II and Muwatallis at Qadesh (c. 1300 BC).
It’s thought that the Hittites were the first civilization to produce iron on a large scale, using it for tools and weaponry, thus initiating the Iron Age (although iron wasn’t used by most civilizations until several centuries later). Hittite power suddenly collapsed when migrants, including Aegean Sea people (a mysterious coalition of migrants from the eastern Mediterranean), invaded the region c. 1193 BC.
ASSYRIA
In the fourteenth century BC, Assyria broke away from Babylonia (see here) and established an independent