The Bronze Age Collapse

The Bronze Age Collapse

2019, History  -   11 Comments
7.03
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Ratings: 7.03/10 from 68 users.

What led to the fall of the Bronze Age and who was ultimately responsible? Generations of archeologists have debated every recorded account of this 3,000 year old event. The informative documentary The Bronze Age Collapse relies on the latest research findings in an attempt to discern fact from folklore.

The Bronze Age occurred during the period of 3000 BC to 1200 BC. It was marked by great innovations that promoted the advancement of civilization, and promoted a thriving economic and cultural landscape. Its demise has often been credited to the barbaric actions of the Sea Peoples, an alliance that went to war with Egypt and surrounding regions. The Sea Peoples ultimately lost the battle, but their vigor and destruction so weakened the regions that they would ultimately fall into decline as a result.

The film picks up cues from modern-day researchers who have long questioned this official narrative. Did the Sea Peoples really posses the level of brawn and influence necessary to ensure Egypt's decline? Or did the source of their demise come from within? The reasons for the collapse are much more complex, the film contends, and require a keen understanding of the interconnections between each of the nations involved.

In order to speculate on the chief culprits behind the collapse, the film dives well into the 13th century BC and beyond to outline the key conflicts between Greece, Assyria, the Hittite Empire and Egyptian new Kingdom. It's a story of strenuous conflicts over trade routes, delicate power struggles between nations, natural disaster that set the stage for man-made calamity, and growing civil unrest. Much of these insights are drawn from the acclaimed historical work 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapse by author Eric H. Cline.

The Bronze Age Collapse features nearly an hour of deeply informed narration, and a series of sourced footage and illustrations that illuminate each morsel of history that is explored throughout. The film evokes a vivid sense of place and time, the lives of the people, and the struggles they faced. It approaches long-accepted history with a fresh perspective, and uncovers details which might prove revelatory to even the most devoted historians.

Directed by: Charles Snart

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Abu Ha'Emet
Abu Ha'Emet
3 years ago

Improper usage of the diction that "palestine" e er existed. It didn't and, even better, it won't.

Cris
Cris
4 years ago

Ohhhhhh, so Palestine preceded Israel. Who paid their welfare checks back then?

CC
CC
4 years ago

Listening to the narrator was so painful I had to stop watching after 5 minutes. He states everything as if it is a question rather than a statement. It may be a good doc, but I was unable to continue listening to him.

neil wilson
neil wilson
4 years ago

No mention of Israel

Norris
Norris
4 years ago

Most interesting, with the inclusion of natural disasters.