A good and thoughtful question, by the way.
originally posted by: Peeple
My question basically is this: is it a consideration that probably up to the late Middle Ages there was a fluctuating but never zero number of people
who lived inbetween settler and nomad life? And doesn't that mean they're not only invisible to us now, but were basically also not part of society
back then? Day laborers, Harvest helpers etc.
Well, yes there were and we do know things about them.
to me that would imply that there was a group that would be very vulnerable on the one hand, but also a huge vector that would have driven the
spread of 'culture'.
Uhm.... nope.
Culture is "the habits and practices and technology of a certain group." Nomads are not highly regarded in civilizations primarily because they're
outsiders and because they don't have a stake or participate in the cultures they encounter. Traders are more likely a source of exchange of
practices and information (as are the scholars of a civilization because they write to others outside their group and they are driven to find deeper
answers and more answers.) High level craftsmen would also seek out information from another culture.
But travelers don't have the resources commonly available to civilizations (in other words, "cultures that have settled into cities and city-states
and nations").
Why always with the 'came from'? Why always look at things colonial?
Not sure what you're asking here
Why can't it be that story tellers, singers and songwriters moved about a lot earlier too and by that predisposition of lifestyle (jk) were the
other vector that transported 'cullture' vertical. Travel with the peons, dine with the kings.
Not much market for it and one of the ways of enforcing local cultures is by plays, miracle shows, and homegrown storytellers. In addition there's a
language and symbolic gap -- "nefer netjer" would imply a lot of things to an ancient Egyptian but not to anyone else -- and a man holding two twisted
ropes means nothing to someone who isn't an ancient Egyptian (it's the symbol for eternity). Even storytelling pacing and style (themes that the
culture likes) are different from culture to culture.
And then there's the issue of sacred stories.
Take Rome and Greek for example, they had their myth where they came from, but in reality they never came from anywhere they were always there,
what changed was just the motivation to improve the circumstances.
Not true, actually. They weren't "always there." Lots of moving in and out, wars, takeovers, etc.
So on the example of the Mediterranean region & history, like the Romans said they were from Troy.
A good example of cultural mythmaking. Having important ancestors means you're more than a pile of nobody shepherds building huts. So we see claims
of descent from deities (often used to "prove" that a certain lineage is more royal than others) or a noble ancestor (lots of groups try to claim
descent from the "lost tribes of Israel") and so forth.
Maybe what it means the incentive in making the radical lifestyle choice to found a city came actually really through exchange of oral
history?
They tended to settle where the food sources were easy to harvest and on land that was easy to access for trade with other groups (and later easy to
farm). This means along coastlines, in river valleys, along estuaries, etc. Waterways are generally easy to travel (as opposed to lumbering across
mountains), have access to one thing we can't survive without for a few days (water) and resources for growing crops (water) and hunting (water, where
animals come to drink) and raising animals.
A little more philosophical: we always assume conflict and trade. But far more often the exchange between people is communication. That doesn't
seem to get the gravitas it deserves. At least that's how it appears to me.
We actually go into this in anthropology, in studying cultures and in history and archaeology (seeing how materials and words and so forth travel into
and through cultures.)
However, unless you know an academic trained in anthropology or archaeology or history, you're not going to run into this kind of evidence. And the
stuff on Youtube and on many websites is ...shallow and lame.
Jared Diamond's GUNS, GERMS, AND STEEL is a good book on culture and diffusion... more accessible than other books. I also greatly enjoyed THE FIFTH
SUN (about Mesoamerica and the rise of the Aztec warlords, which goes into the spread of culture from the Olmecs onward into the Aztecs and the
Conquistadores (among many many other topics in that book)
Empires of the Silk Road: A History of Central Eurasia from the Bronze Age to the Present (Hardcover) by Christopher I. Beckwith has also been
recommended (many of the books on the Silk Road will also cover this topic)
For an amusing and lighthearted take, I can recommend the Extra Credits (Extra History) video series
on the history of beer -- which may sound trivial but is actually a very important substance
(byproduct of baking, etc) and has an intriguing history.