How the world made the West A 4,000-year history

Josephine Crawley Quinn

Book - 2024

"In How the World Made the West, Oxford historian and classicist Josephine Quinn poses perhaps the most significant challenge ever to the "civilizational" thinking regarding the origins of Western culture and thought-that is, the idea that civilizations arose separately and distinctly from one another. Upending two centuries of conventional historiography and troubling the waters of our Western origin story, she locates the roots of the West in everything from literature from Sumeria, the law codes of Babylon, metallurgy from the Hittites, to sculpture from Egypt, irrigation from Assyria, and the art of navigation and the alphabet from Phoenicia, to name just a few examples. Rather than the very popular "West and the res...t" view of history, Quinn demonstrates that cultures come to life by borrowing heavily from others, near and far. Reducing the backstory of the modern west to a narrative that focuses on, or even begins with, Greece and Rome reveals an impoverished view of the past. Our west-centric understanding of modern history would have made no sense to the ancient Greeks and Romans themselves. Instead, ancient authors understood and talked about their own connections to and borrowings from others, and they consistently present their own history as the result of contact and exchange. Quinn builds on the writings they left behind, through rich analyses of ancient literary sources like the epic of Gilgamesh, holy texts, and newly discovered records revealing details about ancient life that are constantly emerging from archival research in the waterlogged sites of the north and the sands of the desert. A work of breath-taking scholarship, How the World Made the West also draws on the material culture of the times in art and artifacts as well as findings from the latest scientific advances in carbon dating and human genetics to thoroughly debunk the myth of the modern West as a self-made miracle"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

909.09821/Quinn
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 909.09821/Quinn (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 19, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Random House [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Josephine Crawley Quinn (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
xiii, 572 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 443-548) and index.
ISBN
9780593729793
  • Notes to the Reader
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. A Single Sail
  • Chapter 2. The Palace of Minos
  • Chapter 3. The Amber Routes
  • Chapter 4. The Erupting Sea
  • Chapter 5. Band of Brothers
  • Chapter 6. Alphabet City
  • Chapter 7. Regime Change
  • Chapter 8. I Am Not Your Servant
  • Chapter 9. Through the Pillars
  • Chapter 10. The Invention of Greece
  • Chapter 11. The Assyrian Mediterranean
  • Chapter 12. He Who Saw the Deep
  • Chapter 13. The Bitter River
  • Chapter 14. The King of Kings
  • Chapter 15. The Persian Version
  • Chapter 16. Continental Thinking
  • Chapter 17. Of Elephants and Kings
  • Chapter 18. Clouds in the West
  • Chapter 19. Fighting for Freedom
  • Chapter 20. Rome, Open City
  • Chapter 21. Trade Winds
  • Chapter 22. Salt Roads
  • Chapter 23. The Rise of the Barbarians
  • Chapter 24. Kings of the World
  • Chapter 25. The Father of Europe
  • Chapter 26. The Translation Movement
  • Chapter 27. The Sign of the Cross
  • Chapter 28. Kalila wa-Dimna
  • Chapter 29. The Land of Darkness
  • Chapter 30. A New World
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A world history, from ancient times to the discovery of America, emphasizing the contacts between disparate regions. Quinn, a classics professor at Oxford University, begins by noting the conventional wisdom that "Greece and Rome are the roots of Western Civilization." Arguing that this formula "impoverishes our view of the past," she shows how many of the ideas and technologies we associate with Greece and Rome were borrowed from Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Phoenician, African, and East Asian sources. Even in the earliest times, she points out, hunter-gatherers traveled widely in pursuit of game, inevitably meeting others from different parts and trading useful objects and ideas. The pioneering cities of Egypt and Mesopotamia relied on imported building materials and new means of transportation such as donkeys and wheeled vehicles. Ships were important from the outset, as revealed by artifacts from all over the ancient world found in the ruins of port cities on the Levantine coast. The book traces the stories of an imposing array of different early cultures, always focusing on their relations with others and how each of them drew on their predecessors and contemporaries. Quinn makes a point of reexamining many of the familiar landmarks of ancient history--notably the wars between Greece and Persia and between Rome and Carthage, with an emphasis on the "other" side. Even readers with a fairly good knowledge of history are likely to learn something new about, for example, the Etruscans or Phoenician colonies on the Iberian peninsula. This is probably not the first world history one should read, but to those already familiar with the conventional narrative, it adds an important new dimension. A fascinating look at world history from the broadest possible perspective. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One A Single Sail Byblos, c. 2000 BCE It is just after dawn on a warm morning about 4,000 years ago. We are at the port of Byblos, built across a promontory below the cool green slopes of Mount Lebanon. The fishing boats are already out, and the front is bustling: Barges stream in from merchant ships that dropped anchor the night before, young men joke around as they load up a donkey train with sacks and baskets and, south of the town's stone walls, rafts loaded with tree trunks glide down the river to the coast. High above the harbor stands a new temple with a tower guiding sailors to safe mooring, and with anchors built into its staircase and walls for good fortune. The people of this compact, glittering little town honor their debt to the sea. A couple of kilometers offshore a handsome sailing ship, larger than the rest, rides at anchor in the shallows. The northwesterly winds have dropped over the last few weeks, the temperature is cooling, and now the boat just awaits its passengers and crew. Trade has taken these men far and wide across a web of cities and empires, artisans and poets, a network rooted in the river valleys of Egypt and western Asia but connected to a bigger world beyond. They can speak several languages, and if we had run into them last night they could have told us some stories over a jar or two of the excellent local wine. One of the merchants has sailed down the coast and up the Nile, past more than a hundred of the pyramid tombs built by Egyptian priest-­kings, to do business in the sandy trading city of Kerma, capital of the gold-­rich land to the south that the Egyptians called Kush. From there he traveled across the eastern Sahara to the Red Sea, where he joined a convoy of ships traveling south to the Horn of Africa, in search of ivory, ebony, incense, and gold. Two more traders have made the long donkey trek toward Mesopotamia. First they headed north across the mountains through the Akkar Gap (today guarded by the Crusader castle Krak des Chevaliers) then east on flatter lands toward the Euphrates. One carried on overland to the Tigris to break bread with men who had hiked south through the Caucasus, leading fine horses and loaded with furs, and who told him of a flat plain farther north, stretching for months of riding time. The other shipped his wares down the Euphrates to the walled city of Ur just north of the Persian Gulf coast, a port far bigger than Byblos. There he visited the sacred precinct in the northwest of the city dedicated to the moon god Nanna and his consort Ningal, filled with temples and courtyards, government offices and the king's great palace. In the far corner he climbed the triple staircase of the new ziggurat, a stepped temple-­mountain built of bitumen and brick; from the top he watched ships depart for Arabia and the Indian coast and return laden with copper and precious stones. Down at the harbor itself he compared notes with an old man who had been sent to the Gulf from the Indus decades earlier to run his family's trading interests, and listened to his stories of a great green valley far to the east, with strange humped cattle and five enormous cities built of baked red clay. The conversation in Byblos that night transports us around a vast connected world in constant flux, full of travelers to whom civilizational thinking would make little sense. When the crew head off in the morning they will head in a new direction, toward the setting sun. Before we follow them ourselves, however, we have to go back to the beginning, to find out how much human history depends on human contact, and how they got this far. Humans have always sought one another out, even at species level: As a result of such encounters--­friendly or otherwise--­we all have a small but significant percentage of Neanderthal heritage in our genes, and the DNA of at least three other archaic human species survives in modern populations. Once Homo sapiens had supplanted other varieties across the planet, she kept on walking--­and sometimes paddling too. Hunter-­gatherers traveled with their prey and with the seasons, and they traveled to find one another, building mysterious megaliths together in the Taurus Mountains and celebrating feasts in halls made of mammoth bones along the Dnipro and the Don. They swapped raw materials: People in Cyprus and on the Red Sea obtained obsidian, a shiny, hard volcanic glass that made excellent cutting tools, from central Anatolia. They exchanged technical information as well: New designs for arrowheads spread quickly across a wide area from Mesopotamia to Syria. As the global climate settled and warmed at the end of the Ice Age 12,000 years ago, exchange became even more important in the so-­called Fertile Crescent (which really looks more like a boomerang). There in the new temperate conditions, abundant local game and wild plants prompted the first experiments in agriculture. Pioneers took local wild grasses with small, easily dispersed seeds and by careful and repeated selection they nudged them into producing fat, firmly attached grains, easier for humans to harvest, eat, and process into flour but now in need of human intervention to reseed. Another form of selective breeding turned wild animals into human servants: Dogs had long been bred from wolves for hunting companions, but now aurochs were transformed into cows, boars into pigs, and sheep were coaxed out of their natural aggression. Farming required a more sedentary lifestyle, but it still depended on contact and communication. Each domestication took place in a specific area of the Fertile Crescent--­wheat, cattle, and sheep in the northern hills, barley and pigs in different areas west of the Euphrates, and goats in what is now Iran. By around 7000 BCE, however, all the new breeds are found throughout the region. This involved more than just swapping seeds and stock: People had to explain to one another how to sow, cultivate, harvest, and cook the new plants, and how to breed, feed, and care for the new animals. Farming a wider range of crops and animals considerably reduced the risks of the agricultural lifestyle, dependent as it was on the weather and the gods. Agriculture still wouldn't have appealed to everyone: It is harder work than hunting and foraging, and a sedentary workforce is a breeding ground for infectious disease. But the returns promote population growth, which encourages migration in search of new land. From the seventh millennium BCE agriculture expanded across a vast swath of the world. Farmers took their animals, seeds, and skills south to Egypt, east to Iran and the Indus Valley, north to Anatolia, and from there west into Europe. They established themselves wherever they could sustain crops by good luck or human ingenuity, and at the expense of the people who used to hunt and herd across the new fields. The most successful experiments took place in the dry river valleys of Mesopotamia, the "land between the rivers," tucked inside the arc of the Fertile Crescent itself. Farming the rich alluvial soils between the Tigris and the Euphrates required the construction of an intricate network of canals and water channels, and rewarded the farmers with dramatic yields. They could now grow enough food to support others to become potters, priests, or administrators, and by the fifth millennium BCE towns had emerged. By the late fourth millennium BCE Uruk on the Euphrates was a true city of 250 hectares--­about the size of London's Soho--­with canals, temples, and a population of between 20,000 and 40,000 people. The administrative requirements of managing a large agricultural territory beyond the city walls meant that Uruk also developed the world's first known system of standard weights and measures, based on the load an average man could carry (a talent) and on the length of his forearm (a cubit). The first writing appears here too. Initially this was just a counting system--circles for tens, lines for ones--­but then scribes added pictograms to show what was being counted. By the end of the fourth millennium, they had extended this code to record the local language and then literature in signs imprinted into clay tablets with a stylus and now known as cuneiform, from the Latin for "wedge-­shaped." By the mid-­third millennium BCE a patchwork of cities ruled by kings covered southern Mesopotamia, some with tens of thousands of inhabitants. We can tell a similar tale about Egypt, where farming arrived on the Nile in the sixth millennium BCE. Complex irrigation technology was needed here too to trap and divert the annual floods, and the yields were again impressive. By the late fourth millennium large cities had grown up along the Nile, and around 3000 BCE the communities of Upper and Lower Egypt came together under the "Old Kingdom" dynasties that wrote in hieroglyphs, built the pyramids, and ruled over more than a million people. This is a story so familiar that it can sound like fate: the first steps on the ladder of progress assembled in the eighteenth century whereby hunters become herders become farmers, who build cities and acquire rulers, rules, and institutions--­in short, civilization. But in fact it reveals the holes in the traditional narrative of self-­development. Like earlier, smaller communities, the kingdoms of Mesopotamia and Egypt did not make themselves. Nor were they the only societies of interest in this era. Excerpted from How the World Made the West: A 4,000 Year History by Josephine Quinn All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.