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originally posted by: Quasiscientist
I suppose I'm just focusing on the wheel because I'm trying really hard to visualize what life and war was like during the First Dynasty of Ancient Egypt. Most of my mental imagery about this time comes from video games like Children of the Nile (I have no idea how accurate Children of the Nile depicts the cities of this time) and films like The Scorpion King (which I realize is extremely anachronistic.)
I know that ancient armies generally had three different types of troops, them being: spearmen (or "infantry"), horsemen (or "cavalry"), and bowmen (or "archers"). But if neither horses nor wheeled vehicles had been introduced to Egypt during its Early Dynastic Period, then I guess that that must mean that they couldn't have had cavalry... right?
I am feeling a bit surprised that wheeled vehicles did not appear 1,300 miles away in Egypt at the same time. I mean, after all, don't Egypt and Sumer both have very similar climates?
Both civilizations developed along river valleys... the Sumerian civilization developed along the Tigris-Euphrates river system, while the Egyptian civilization developed along the Nile river system. And these river valleys were themselves surrounded by hot and arid deserts.
www.nytimes.com...
...the ancient Egyptians already had a paved road by 2600 BCE?
I'm also curious to know if Egyptians of this time used pack animals to carry goods (within the cities, not from one city to another) or if they just carried their goods on their backs.
Didn't the ancient Egyptians establish colonies along the Mediterranean coastline of West Asia, in places like: Tel Arad, Besor, and Rafah?
I also know that the Egyptians had cedarwood transported from Lebanon, according to this article:
www.touregypt.net...
I'm not sure how effective this type of wood might be for constructing wheeled vehicles.
originally posted by: Byrd
Raffele's usually the go-to source for much of it, but his site isn't updated as often as one would like. In general, this material is at conferences. And no, chariots were not introduced until the time of Tutankhamun (his father, Akhenaten, was one of the first to have chariots. And no,they didn't have naval combat and no, Sumer didn't have a large empire back then. And no, horses weren't domesticated for chariot use until 2,000 BC and that wasn't anywhere near Egypt.
originally posted by: SentientCentenarian
I don't know the answer but I read once that 99% of all human history has been lost to us.
originally posted by: Blue Shift
originally posted by: SentientCentenarian
I don't know the answer but I read once that 99% of all human history has been lost to us.
At least. But on the other hand, a really huge chunk of human history consists of mundane crap like wandering around in groups looking for food, fighting between small tribes, farming and raising little proto-humans. Only thrilling to hardcore archeoanthropologist types.
originally posted by: Quasiscientist
Or maybe the beginning of history should start with the earliest known literature, such as maybe the "Instructions of Shuruppak" dated to 2600 BCE?
originally posted by: Blue Shift
That might be a more fruitful line of inquiry. There are supposedly "recordings" of natural events like floods and supernovae carved as symbols into rocks in various places. And you have some hard mud bricks with scratches on them indicating trading livestock or grains between people. But those aren't really literature. Maybe it would be better to ask what the first recorded "story" is that has to do with historical or mythological happenings, that was recorded in order to make a point about law or morals or some other bit of philosophy, or to tell the story of some particularly brave warrior.
originally posted by: tinymind
I noticed most of the replies mentioned the Sumerians, Egyptians, and even the Mayans. I am not sure how much of there history is passed down as oral or if it was written and documented to certain dates.
originally posted by: tinymind
Though there is some discussion about any exact date, the Chinese calender starts in @ 2698 BC and is considered to be continous from there. There is some debate over how many preceeded the "Yellow Emperor" but this is noted as the starting point.
originally posted by: tinymind
a reply to: fatkid
I noticed most of the replies mentioned the Sumerians, Egyptians, and even the Mayans. I am not sure how much of there history is passed down as oral or if it was written and documented to certain dates.
originally posted by: BestinShow
As far back as Cave Paintings...
originally posted by: peter vlar
a reply to: Quasiscientist
I would add one correction to your list. 60-70 KA is when Homo Sapiens first pushed out of the safety net of E. Africa. The oldest known Homo Sapien remains ( Homo Sapiens Idaltu) were found in the Omo Kibish Mational Park in what is today Ethiopia by Richard Leakey in the early 70's. In 2004 the Omo remains were dated to ~195 KA +/- 5 KA they are the current title holders of oldest Anatomically Modern Human (AMH).
Aside from that, not too shabby of a list
Further Reading
originally posted by: Byrd
a reply to: Quasiscientist
I think that looks reasonable (without checking dates mind you because I haven't time right now. There's some material about early Chinese dynasties that can shovel in there.