These eras are very important to human kind because they portray a very wide picture of how the humans started populating the planet. When reading chapter one of “Ways of the World” by Robert Strayer, one can see the description of how humans have evolved and how long it has taken for us to develop the knowledge, the abilities and the skills to survive and create a whole different world for ourselves. In the beginning, the purpose of humans was simply of “gathering and hunting”, but then I asked myself how historians can tell weather that was the only thing our ancestors did or did not; in the book, it is explained that historians came to that conclusion by studying the Paleolithic era.
In this Era, anthropologists have found many drawings and cavern paintings that have been clue to the discovery of such conclusion. In the drawings, our ancestors portrayed scenes of men and women using tools, made with stones, to be able to hunt and to fight bigger animals. A very interesting description given in the book is that during the Paleolithic era, our ancestors had very closed relationships. I was amazed at the fact that they did not have any kind of hierarchy even though they had chores divided between men and women. Both genders helped their group by providing the food and all enjoyed it.
The Paleolithic era accounts for 95% of humankind history and it has very significant importance in our study of history. It is also important to mention that even though a lot of facts are given in the book, they are more of speculations rather than actual facts, but still very well described according to evidence. So after studying the beginnings of humankind and the many Paleolithic societies that develop from that time, we jump (figuratively speaking) into the Neolithic era which happened 10,000 BC – 3000 BC.
The significance of this era is the birth of the agricultural beginnings and revolution, which “represented a genuinely revolutionary transformation of human life all across the planet and provided the foundation for almost everything that followed” (p36). The agricultural era happened due to the end of the Ice age. The weather was just perfect to start planting and it also helped Homo sapiens to start moving around the globe, which allowed the spreading of humans to different territories.
I personally think that the agriculture has been one of the most important discoveries for humankind, but at the same time, it has also been the one reason men started hierarchies and the creation of social classes. In the beginning, humans used agriculture as a way to feel both animals and themselves, but the more land they started acquiring and the more they were cultivating, the more they saw the opportunity for growing and exchanging the products. Nowadays societies used the same idea of having more and more to be able to sell and have more wealth than others; this idea of having more than others created gap between societies, the ones that were more “civilized” and the ones that were not. The earliest civilizations that emerged were in three places, “one was called the Cradle of the Middle East, the Mesopotamia and the Sumerian” (p56). All these civilizations “represent a new and particular type of human society, made possible by the immense productivity of the Agricultural Revolution” (p56).
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