There are certain things that I can't wrap my mind around. One such concept is: iron age, bronze age, ...etc.
So, I decided to check out how it came about.
So,
wiki wrote:
The three-age system in archaeology and physical anthropology is the periodization of human prehistory into three consecutive time periods, named for their respective tool-making technologies:
The Stone Age
The Bronze Age
The Iron Age
wiki wrote:Origin
The concept of dividing pre-historical ages into systems based on metals extends far back in European history, but the present archaeological system of the three main ages: stone, bronze and iron, originates with the Danish archaeologist Christian Jürgensen Thomsen (1788–1865), who placed the system on a more scientific basis by typological and chronological studies, at first, of tools and other artifacts present in the Museum of Northern Antiquities in Copenhagen (later the National Museum of Denmark). He later used artifacts and the excavation reports published or sent to him by Danish archaeologists who were doing controlled excavations. His position as curator of the museum gave him enough visibility to become highly influential on Danish archaeology. A well-known and well-liked figure, he explained his system in person to visitors at the museum, many of them professional archaeologists.
wiki wrote:In his poem, Works and Days, the ancient Greek poet Hesiod between 750 and 650 BC, defined five successive Ages of Man: 1. Golden, 2. Silver, 3. Bronze, 4. Heroic and 5. Iron.[1] Only the Bronze Age and the Iron Age are based on the use of metal:[2]
wiki wrote:The progress of Lucretius
The moral metaphor of the ages of metals continued. Lucretius, however, replaced moral degradation with the concept of progress,[4] which he conceived to be like the growth of an individual human being. The concept is evolutionary:[5]
So, who is this Lucretius?
wiki wrote:Titus Lucretius Carus (/ˈtaɪtəs lʊˈkriːʃəs/; c. 99 BC – c. 55 BC) was a Roman poet and philosopher. His only known work is the epic philosophical poem De rerum natura about the tenets and philosophy of Epicureanism, and which is usually translated into English as On the Nature of Things.
Very little is known about Lucretius's life; the only certain fact is that he was either a friend or client of Gaius Memmius, to whom the poem was addressed and dedicated.[1]
The De rerum natura was a considerable influence on the Augustan poets, particularly Virgil (in his Aeneid and Georgics, and to a lesser extent on the Satires and Eclogues) of Horace.[2] The work virtually disappeared during the Middle Ages but was rediscovered in 1417 in a monastery in Germany[3] by Poggio Bracciolini, and it played an important role both in the development of atomism (Lucretius was an important influence on Pierre Gassendi[4]) and the efforts of various figures of the Enlightenment era to construct a new Christian humanism. The book The Swerve: How the World Became Modern (2011) by Stephen Greenblatt is a narrative of the discovery of the old Lucretius manuscript by Poggio.[5]
Link
Most probably, the rediscovered thing is just a cover for the knowledge flowing in from the Muslims who were looting it from the Bhaarath and other ancient civilizations.
Anyway, coming back to three ages system:
wiki wrote:Lucretius envisioned a pre-technological man that was "far tougher than the men of today ... They lived out their lives in the fashion of wild beasts roaming at large."[7] The next stage was the use of huts, fire, clothing, language and the family. City-states, kings and citadels followed them. Lucretius supposes that the initial smelting of metal occurred accidentally in forest fires. The use of copper followed the use of stones and branches and preceded the use of iron.
wiki wrote:The three-age system of C. J. Thomsen
Thomsen explaining the Three-age System to visitors at the Museum of Northern Antiquities, then at the Christiansborg Palace, in Copenhagen, 1846. Drawing by Magnus Petersen, Thomsen's illustrator.[16]
An important step in the development of the Three-age System came when the Danish antiquarian Christian Jürgensen Thomsen was able to use the Danish national collection of antiquities and the records of their finds as well as reports from contemporaneous excavations to provide a solid empirical basis for the system. He showed that artifacts could be classified into types and that these types varied over time in ways that correlated with the predominance of stone, bronze or iron implements and weapons. In this way he turned the Three-age System from being an evolutionary scheme based on intuition and general knowledge into a system of relative chronology supported by archaeological evidence. Initially, the three-age system as it was developed by Thomsen and his contemporaries in Scandinavia, such as Sven Nilsson and J.J.A. Worsaae, was grafted onto the traditional biblical chronology. But, during the 1830s they achieved independence from textual chronologies and relied mainly on typology and stratigraphy.[17]
In 1816 Thomsen at age 27 was appointed to succeed the retiring Rasmus Nyerup as Secretary of the Kongelige Commission for Oldsagers Opbevarung[18] ("Royal Commission for the Preservation of Antiquities"), which had been founded in 1807.[19] The post was unsalaried. Thomsen had independent means. At his appointment Bishop Münter said that he was an "amateur with a great range of accomplishments." Between 1816 and 1819 he reorganized the commission's collection of antiquities. In 1819 he opened the first Museum of Northern Antiquities, in Copenhagen, in a former monastery, to house the collections.[20] It later became the National Museum.
Like the other antiquarians Thomsen undoubtedly knew of the three-age model of prehistory through the works of Lucretius, the Dane Vedel Simonsen, Montfaucon and Mahudel. Sorting the material in the collection chronologically[21] he mapped out which kinds of artifacts co-occurred in deposits and which did not, as this arrangement would allow him to discern any trends that were exclusive to certain periods. In this way he discovered that stone tools did not co-occur with bronze or iron in the earliest deposits while subsequently bronze did not co-occur with iron - so that three periods could be defined by their available materials, stone, bronze and iron.
To Thomsen the find circumstances were the key to dating. In 1821 he wrote in a letter to fellow prehistorian Schröder:[22]
"nothing is more important than to point out that hitherto we have not paid enough attention to what was found together."
and in 1822:
"we still do not know enough about most of the antiquities either; ... only future archaeologists may be able to decide, but they will never be able to do so if they do not observe what things are found together and our collections are not brought to a greater degree of perfection."
This analysis emphasizing co-occurrence and systematic attention to archaeological context allowed Thomsen to build a chronological framework of the materials in the collection and to classify new finds in relation to the established chronology, even without much knowledge of their provenience. In this way, Thomsen's system was a true chronological system rather than an evolutionary or technological system.[23] Exactly when his chronology was reasonably well established is not clear, but by 1825 visitors to the museum were being instructed in his methods.[24] In that year also he wrote to J.G.G. Büsching:[25]
"To put artifacts in their proper context I consider it most important to pay attention to the chronological sequence, and I believe that the old idea of first stone, then copper, and finally iron, appears to be ever more firmly established as far as Scandinavia is concerned."
By 1831 Thomsen was so certain of the utility of his methods that he circulated a pamphlet, "Scandinavian Artifacts and Their Preservation, advising archaeologists to "observe the greatest care" to note the context of each artifact. The pamphlet had an immediate effect. Results reported to him confirmed the universality of the Three-age System. Thomsen also published in 1832 and 1833 articles in the Nordisk Tidsskrift for Oldkyndighed, "Scandinavian Journal of Archaeology."[26] He already had an international reputation when in 1836 the Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries published his illustrated contribution to "Guide to Scandinavian Archaeology" in which he put forth his chronology together with comments about typology and stratigraphy.
Reconstructed Iron Age home in Spain
Thomsen was the first to perceive typologies of grave goods, grave types, methods of burial, pottery and decorative motifs, and to assign these types to layers found in excavation. His published and personal advice to Danish archaeologists concerning the best methods of excavation produced immediate results that not only verified his system empirically but placed Denmark in the forefront of European archaeology for at least a generation. He became a national authority when C.C Rafn,[27] secretary of the Kongelige Nordiske Oldskriftselskab ("Royal Society of Northern Antiquaries"), published his principal manuscript[21] in Ledetraad til Nordisk Oldkyndighed ("Guide to Scandinavian Archaeology")[28] in 1836. The system has since been expanded by further subdivision of each era, and refined through further archaeological and anthropological finds.
Link
In 1816, at the age of 27, Christian Jürgensen Thomsen created a system called three-age system which is followed religiously by the archeologists till today. Strictly speaking, it was not a completely new system. Some kind of devolution or evolution theories were already afloat. The pre-Islamic ideologies espouse devolution theories because they rely on being the ancient systems. The post-Islamic ideologies espouse evolution theories because they are based on the concept of jahilya which practically means that latest is best and best is latest.
Ok. But, there is a basic doubt: how did the archeologists determine the dates in 1816?
Apparently, two 'sciences' are used for this purpose by Christian Jürgensen Thomsen in 1816.
They are:
Typology
Stratigraphy.
So, what are they?
They sound pretty big, but they seem to be pretty crude and silly systems.
Typology:
wiki wrote:In archaeology a typology is the result of the classification of things according to their physical characteristics. The products of the classification, i.e. the classes, are also called types. Most archaeological typologies organize artifacts into types, but typologies of larger structures, including buildings, field monuments, fortifications or roads, are equally possible. A typology helps to manage a large mass of archaeological data. According to Doran and Hodson, "this superficially straightforward task has proved one of the most time consuming and contentious aspects of archaeological research".
So, in simple terms, it means grouping ancient antiques into certain pre-defined categories by the archeologist. Anyone can see that this grouping will be based on the prejudice of the archeologist. This is not an objective method but a subjective method. Each person or ideology can come up with their own definitions and groups.
So, the basic idea itself is flawed. How can this be useful to know the chronology?
Now, the second 'science':Stratigraphy
wiki wrote:Stratigraphy is a branch of geology which studies rock layers (strata) and layering (stratification). It is primarily used in the study of sedimentary and layered volcanic rocks. Stratigraphy includes two related subfields: lithologic stratigraphy or lithostratigraphy, and biologic stratigraphy or biostratigraphy.
Ok, this sounds like a more objective method. Not perfect, but definitely far better than Typology.
So, essentially, what they are saying is:
a) we dig around
b) if we find something, then
c) the deeper it is found, the older it must be.
d) the older it is, the more primitive it must be.
e) if we don't find anything, then nothing exists.
If there are exceptions or outliers in the above system, then they are explained away in someway or the other. If the exceptions start to mount then a new law has to be invented.
I started off with a doubt:
Carbon dating was invented in 1940s. Then, how did these archeologists before that time decide on the chronology?
So, the simple answer is: we dig, and the deeper we find something, the more older it is.
Now, there are several aspects here:
- the more you dig, the more chances that you will find something. So, countries that focus on digging, are likely to find something. The less you dig, the less chances that you will find something. So, countries that don't focus on digging, are less likely to find something.
- If you dig deep regularly, then there are more chances that you will find something deeper. Countries which dig deeper regularly, are likely to find something deeper. If you don't dig deep regularly, then there are less chances that you will find something deeper. Countries which don't dig deeper regularly, are less likely to find something deeper.
- the archeologist is just a human being with his ideologies, biases, agendas and prejudices. This is not some objective fact but rather a subjective opinion.
Now, Bhaarath was under a direct colonial rule till 1947. And these 'sciences' were being developed in 1816. In 1816, there was almost no culture of digging around in Bhaarath or most of the world. Archeological Survey of India was founded by the British in 1861. That means, it was founded after these theories about three ages were already developed.
So, all findings were fitted into these ideologies of three ages. And it was called Typology. This is a circular system.
a) The ideology(three age system) is used to divide ancient artifacts into groups based on this ideology(three age system).
b) And these groups are then used to justify the system(three age system).
(a) depends on (b). And (b) depends on (a). Neither of them have any independent corroboration.
While, the Stratigraphy thingy sounds objective i.e. "we dig around, and deeper we find something, the older it must be." ideology sounds objective. But, the devil is in details.
In 1816, when this three age system was created: how much digging happened in how many places and how deep?
Was there a uniform digging in all places for uniform depths?
These theories were created by the europeans. The non-europeans did not believe in these theories. So, they would not be likely to dig around or to concentrate on what depth an artifact was found.
During colonial age, there are good chances that the colonies would be shown as lesser than the imperial europe by fudging(i.e. falsifying the records).
So, in 1816,
- there was very less digging in most of the world. So, how did they reach these grand conclusions?
- there was no carbon dating at that time.
- archeologist has prejudices like these which influence his opinions. And most of these theories seem to be opinions paraded as facts.
- in colonial age(i.e. until 1947), there are good chances that the records would be falsified by the imperial Europe(specially in colonies and dependencies).
This three age system is used as a basis for almost all nonsense which gets peddled about archeology.
Then, there is linguistics. Linguistics is a straight-forward system. And realizing this, the colonial europe has muddied the waters in this field.
Using these two fields, they have tried to construct following picture:
a) Europe is the height of civilization. At the most, they might concede that the humanity was born in Central Asia, or nordic countries or Africa. But, it attained its glory in Europe. It started off with Greece. Then, it was Rome. Then, it was European colonization. Then, its Pax Amirkhan.
b) Rest of the world begged, borrowed or stole from the Europe.
c) Genetically, Europe is superior to the non-Europeans.
d) So, everyone must bow down to the Europeans and allow them to rule.
Obviously, to construct this picture, they had to target the real ancient civilizations like Bhaarath. Linguistics and Archeology were used as fields to do this.
----
What exactly do ancient artifacts look like?
Suppose, you find a piece of this in your backyard. Are you likely to think that its an ancient artifact, or are you likely to throw it away thinking its piece of junk?
How many people must have found such items all over the world and thrown it away thinking they are junk? How can the archeologists claim that only those artifacts that they found are valuable without realizing all the artifacts which might not be coming into their view ever? The point I am making is that they are trying to reach their conclusions based on incomplete data even if their methods were correct. The methods itself seem to be based on prejudices.
So, its incomplete data coupled with prejudices. How can this be an objective science?
This raises a fundamental point:
How long does an object survive? For example, any object will have a manufacture date and an expiry date.
Now, there are three types of expiry dates:
a) date before which the object will perform at its optimum.
b) date after which the object will not be useful.
c) date after which the object will perish i.e. it will not be recognizable anymore.
The (c) is important. So, what is the date after which an object will perish, when it is not maintained in anyway?
How long will iron objects survive?
How long will bronze objects survive?
How long will golden objects survive?
How long will silver objects survive?
How long will steel objects survive?
How long will stone objects survive?
...etc.
If iron objects cannot survive after say 6000 yrs, then obviously one won't find any iron object which is older than 6000 yrs. Simple. That means all theories about three ages would have to first find out how long an object will survive(and be recognizable) when it is disposed into the earth.
This leads to the next point:
if there are objects which are able to survive. Then, it is likely that those objects will be recycled by the people in someway. If people recycle these objects, then one is not likely to find them in the earth by digging around.