Encyclopedia of Great Civilizations

Encyclopedia of Great Civilizations
Title Encyclopedia of Great Civilizations PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Total Pages 328
Release 1994
Genre China
ISBN 9781569240656

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Looks at eight civilizations including: Egypt, China, Japan, Greece, Rome, Vikings, Medieval Europe, Aztecs and Incas.

The Great Civilisations Vikings

The Great Civilisations Vikings
Title The Great Civilisations Vikings PDF eBook
Author Brenda Ralph Lewis
Publisher Ladybird Books
Total Pages 56
Release 2014-03-06
Genre Civilization, Viking
ISBN 9780723288992

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Great Civilisations: The Vikings is a gem from the Ladybird vintage archive. First published in 1976, this is a classic Ladybird hardback book packed with information about the Vikings, one of the great civilisations of history. This new facsimile edition features the in-depth, informative content Ladybird is known for and same beautiful pictures as the original, with a fantastic, full-colour dust-jacket.A perfect gift for any history fan!

Civilizations

Civilizations
Title Civilizations PDF eBook
Author Jane McIntosh
Publisher
Total Pages 240
Release 2003-05
Genre Civilization
ISBN 9780563488897

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Civilizations takes the reader forward from the earliest days of human settlement to the civilizations of the New World overthrown by the Spanish Conquistadors.

Great Civilizations of the East

Great Civilizations of the East
Title Great Civilizations of the East PDF eBook
Author Philip Steele
Publisher Southwater Publishing
Total Pages 0
Release 2001
Genre Asia
ISBN 9781842153642

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This insight into ancient Asian and Oriental culture is packed with information and projects.

LIFE the World's Great Civilizations

LIFE the World's Great Civilizations
Title LIFE the World's Great Civilizations PDF eBook
Author Editors of Life
Publisher Life
Total Pages 0
Release 2012-08-28
Genre Photography
ISBN 9781603202282

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This is the pictorial history of the rise (and fall) of great nations, from the ancients to today. But this is not just Rome and the Incas and British imperialism-though it certainly includes them-but lesser known civilizations that are often relegated to a footnote, or forgotten altogether. The ancient Anasazi Indians of the American Southwest apparently enjoyed an agrarian lifestyle that, after they mysteriously disappeared, would not be realized again on this continent for many generations. The natives of Easter Island sealed their own doom with a kind of communal hysteria that remains unclear. Several cultures put their mark on England's Stonehenge, and peeling the layers of that story is like parsing the experience of a very old tree, ring by ring. Of course the ages of empire are recounted: Egypt, Greece, Rome, China, Russia, Great Britain. We journey, photographically and archeologically, through Troy, and also the Mediterranean islands of Gnossos and Santorini (was this where Plato's Atlantis thrived before the cataclysm)? We climb to Machu Piccu, and trek to Australia to revisit the island continent when it belonged to its Aborigines. Obviously, many of the great civilizations belong to history, experiencing their glory before the advent of photography. There are no pictures of Alexander the Great or Genghis Khan or Napoleon beyond the painted ones. But there are many photographs of the civilizations they built and ruled, many of which were made for LIFE magazine, which looked at this story often. Near our book's end, we arrive at the ongoing narrative that is the United States of America: today's great civilization, built on a system called democracy. Our history and prospects are all the more fascinating when put in relief against the stories of all previous great civilizations.

Technology and Science in Ancient Civilizations

Technology and Science in Ancient Civilizations
Title Technology and Science in Ancient Civilizations PDF eBook
Author Richard G. Olson
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages 276
Release 2009-12-21
Genre History
ISBN 0313065233

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Why did the Greeks excel in geometry, but lag begin the Mesopotamians in arithmetic? How were the great pyramids of Egypt and the Han tombs in China constructed? What did the complex system of canals and dykes in the Tigris and Euphrates river valley have to do with the deforestation of Lebanon's famed cedar forests? This work presents a cross-cultural comparison of the ways in which the ancients learned about and preserved their knowledge of the natural world, and the ways in which they developed technologies that enabled them to adapt to and shape their surroundings. Covering the major ancient civilizations - those of Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, Greece, the Indus Valley, and Meso-America - Olson explores how language and numbering systems influenced the social structure, how seemingly beneficial construction projects affected a civilization's rise or decline, how religion and magic shaped both medicine and agriculture, and how trade and the resulting cultural interactions transformed the making of both everyday household items and items intended as art. Along the way, Olson delves into how scientific knowledge and its technological applications changed the daily lives of the ancients.

Why Did Ancient Civilizations Fail?

Why Did Ancient Civilizations Fail?
Title Why Did Ancient Civilizations Fail? PDF eBook
Author Scott A J Johnson
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 476
Release 2016-09-19
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1315512874

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Ideas abound as to why certain complex societies collapsed in the past, including environmental change, subsistence failure, fluctuating social structure and lack of adaptability. Why Did Ancient Civilizations Fail? evaluates the current theories in this important topic and discusses why they offer only partial explanations of the failure of past civilizations. This engaging book offers a new theory of collapse, that of social hubris. Through an examination of Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Roman, Maya, Inca, and Aztec societies, Johnson persuasively argues that hubris blinded many ancient peoples to evidence that would have allowed them to adapt, and he further considers how this has implications for contemporary societies. Comprehensive and well-written, this volume serves as an ideal text for undergraduate courses on ancient complex societies, as well as appealing to the scholar interested in societal collapse.