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4 results for "civilizational-collapse"

E_2_23 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_23 — Bronze Age Collapse Synthesis: Multi-Causal Analysis c. 1200 BCE

The Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational discontinuities: within approximately 50 years, the interconnected palace economies of the Mycenaean kingdoms, the

bronze-age-collapse 1200-bce sea-peoples systems-collapse mycenaean-fall hittite-collapse

Archaic_Knowledge_Continuity

This cross-section synthesis document traces how specific technical, cosmological, and medical knowledge traditions survived, transformed, or were independently rediscovered across major civilizational transitions. It ma

knowledge-transmission archaic-continuity oral-tradition textual-survival translation-chains independent-rediscovery
E_2_24 Verified Cataclysms & Chronology

E_2_24 — The Bronze Age Collapse: Multi-Causal Catastrophe of 1177 BCE

The Late Bronze Age Collapse (~1200–1150 BCE) represents one of history's most dramatic civilizational disruptions, witnessing the destruction or severe decline of virtually every major eastern Mediterranean civilization

bronze-age-collapse 1177-bce sea-peoples late-bronze-age systems-collapse mycenaean-fall
J_3_17 Credible Ancient Technology

J_3_17 — Technological Regression: Civilizational Knowledge Loss and Recovery

Technological regression — the loss of previously achieved technical capabilities within a civilization or across civilizational transitions — is a well-documented phenomenon in the historical record, challenging linear

technological regression knowledge loss civilizational collapse dark age library destruction de-industrialization