Ages (historic periods of time): Difference between revisions
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=== Iron Age === | === Iron Age === | ||
== Three-Age System == | |||
* When putting together a chronological presentation of ancient artifacts, early 19th century archeologist C. J. Thomsen found that the objects stood out in the three groups of '''stone''', '''bronze''' and '''iron'''. | |||
* the ancient writers Hesiod (Greek) and Lucretius (Roman) grouped human history into "progressive" periods, i.e. either degrading or advancing from one to the other: | |||
** Hesiod's [[Ages of Man]] is a degradation: Golden, Silver, Bronze, Heroic and Iron. | |||
** Lucretius' is a progression: "Everything must pass through successive phases. Nothing remains forever what it was. Everything is on the move. Everything is transformed by nature and forced into new paths..." | |||
* | |||
[[Category:World History]] | [[Category:World History]] | ||
[[Category:Timelines]] | [[Category:Timelines]] | ||
[[Category:Time]] | [[Category:Time]] |
Revision as of 19:40, 1 January 2024
Known as "periodization", the categorization of periods of time according to general technological characteristics
See also Turning Points
Periodization[edit | edit source]
- categories help to characterize periods of time for easy reference
- however, these categories are helpful in the general and not the specific applications
- i.e., a period of time may fall into one category, but that does not mean that every population or civilization follows that particular characterization
- ex.
Paleolithic | Nelolithic | Bronze Age | Iron Age | |
---|---|---|---|---|
<12,000 BC | ✓+ | |||
12,000 BC | ✓+ | ✓- | ||
4,000 BC | ✓ | ✓ | ✓- | |
1000 BC | ✓- | ✓+ | ✓ | ✓- |
1 AD | ✓- | ✓- | ✓- | ✓+ |
- the idea is that while farming may have developed in some places, hunting and gathering continued in most other places, until farming spread everywhere.
- so each of these "Ages" or "Periods" existed coincidentally
- additionally, social and political organization existed coincidentally within and across each of these periods
- for an historic example of a person who lived in three periods at once see Otzi the Iceman
Major periods of human history[edit | edit source]
Neolithic[edit | edit source]
Paleolithic[edit | edit source]
Copper Age[edit | edit source]
Bronze Age[edit | edit source]
Iron Age[edit | edit source]
Three-Age System[edit | edit source]
- When putting together a chronological presentation of ancient artifacts, early 19th century archeologist C. J. Thomsen found that the objects stood out in the three groups of stone, bronze and iron.
- the ancient writers Hesiod (Greek) and Lucretius (Roman) grouped human history into "progressive" periods, i.e. either degrading or advancing from one to the other:
- Hesiod's Ages of Man is a degradation: Golden, Silver, Bronze, Heroic and Iron.
- Lucretius' is a progression: "Everything must pass through successive phases. Nothing remains forever what it was. Everything is on the move. Everything is transformed by nature and forced into new paths..."