- History of Eurasia
The history of
Eurasia is the collective history of several distinct peripheral coastal regions: theMiddle East ,South Asia ,East Asia ,Southeast Asia , andEurope , linked by the interior mass of the Eurasiansteppe ofCentral Asia andEastern Europe . While geographically on a separate continent,North Africa has historically been integrated into Eurasian history. Perhaps beginning with earlySilk Road trade, the Eurasian view of history seeks establishing genetic, cultural, and linguistic links between European, African, Middle-Eastern, and Asian cultures of antiquity.Prehistory
Lower Paleolithic
Fossilized remains of
Homo georgicus ,Homo ergaster andHomo erectus between 1.8 and 1.0 million years old have been found in Europe (Georgia (Dmanisi ), Spain), Indonesia (e.g., Sangiran and Trinil), Vietnam, and China (e.g., Shaanxi). (see also:Multiregional hypothesis ). The first remains are ofOlduwan culture, later ofAcheulean andClactonian culture. Finds of later fossils, such asHomo cepranensis , are local in nature, so the extent of human residence in eurasia during 1000000 - 300000 bp remains a mystery.Middle Paleolithic
Geologic temperature record s indicate two intense ice ages dated around 650000 ybp and 450000 ybp, these would have presented any humans outsidetropic s unprecedented difficulties. Indeed, fossils from this period are very few, and little can be said of human habitats in eurasia during this period. The few finds are ofHomo antecessor andHomo heidelbergensis .Lantian Man in China.Homo neanderthalensis , with hisMousterian technology emerged, in areas from Europe to western Asia, after this and continued to be the dominant group of humans in Europe and Middle East up until 70000-40000 ybp.Peking man has also been dated to this period. DuringEemian interglacial humans probably (see f.e.Wolf Cave ) spread where ever their technology and skills allowed, Sahara dried up forming a difficult area for peoples to cross.The birth of first modern humans (
Homo sapiens idaltu ) has been dated to be between 200000-130000 BP (see:Mitochondrial Eve ,Single-origin hypothesis ), to the coldest phase ofRiss glaciation . Remains ofAterian culture appear on the archaeological evidence.Population bottleneck
In the beginning of the last ice age a supervolcano erupted in Indonesia sometime between 75000 - 70000 BP. Theory states the effects of the eruption caused global climatic changes for many years, effectively obliterating most of the earlier cultures.
Y-chromosomal Adam (90000 - 60000 BP) has been dated here.Neanderthal s survived this abrupt change in the environment, so it's possible for other human groups too. According to the theory humans survived in Africa, and began to resettle areas north, as the effects of the eruption slowly vanished. Upper Paleolithic revolution began after this extreme event, the earliest finds are dated c.50000 BCE.A divergence in genetical evidence occurs during the early phase of the glaciation. Descendants of female
haplogroup s M, N and male CR are the ones found among Eurasian peoples today.Upper Paleolithic, the dispersal of modern humans
While it has been estimated (by
molecular clock ) that modern humans migrated to Eurasia during the early phases of the last glaciation, the findings are very few. Most remains are of neanderthals. It has been suggested that the earliest migrations (through Middle East (Cro magnon in Levant c. 60000 BC)) have happened along coasts of southern Asia.Neanderthal interaction with Cro-Magnons remains a vigorous topic of discussion. Eurasian Upper Paleolithic is traditionally dated to start with the earliest finds (circa 45000 BC) of more developed stone tools gradually replacing the Mousterian (Neanderthal) culture as seen f.e. inSantimamiñe . Asian finds are few. They've been tributed toOrdos culture . Cultural periods in the ice age includeChâtelperronian culture,Aurignacian culture,Gravettian culture,Solutrean culture andMagdalenian culture.see also:Pre-history of the Southern Levant Migrations
Tracing back minute differences in the
genome s of modern humans by methods ofgenetic genealogy , can and have been used to produce models ofhistorical migration . Though these give indications of the routes taken by ancestral humans, the dating of the various genetic markers is not very accurate. The earliest migrations (dated c. 75.000 BP) from theRed Sea shores have been most likely along southern coast of Asia. After this, tracking and timing genetical markers gets increasingly difficult. What is known, is that on areas, of what is now Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and Afganistan, genetic markers diversify (from about 60000 BCE), and subsequent migrations emerge to all directions (even backwards toLevant ) from here. Northeastbound were likely the ancestors of Samoyeds and Indigenous Americans (dated 50000 - 40000 BCE), northbound the ancestors of Uralic peoples, eastbound (maybe along Ganges) likely went the ancestors of Chinese. It is still largely unclear what routes different groups ofIndo-European ancestors took to Europe (this likely happened later though). Evidence suggests three - four separate migrations (1.Illyrians - Greeks 2.Celts - Italics, (3.Balts, if separately), 4.Goths - Slavs, - not necessarily in this order). Influences from northern Africa via Gibraltar and Sicilia cannot be readily discounted. Many other questions remain open, too (f.e. Neanderthals were still present at this time). More genetical data is being gathered by various research programs.Early Holocene
:"See:
Mesolithic ":"See also:Synoptic table of the principal old world prehistoric cultures "As the ice age ended, major environmental changes happened, such as
sea level rise (est. 120m), some animal species.Neolithic cultures in Eurasia are many, and best discussed in separate articles. Some of the articles on this subject include:
Natufian culture ,Jomon culture,List of Neolithic cultures of China andMehrgarh . European sites are many, they are discussed f.e. inPrehistoric Europe . The finding ofÖtzi the Iceman (dated 3300 BC) provides an important insight toChalcolithic period in Europe.Proto-language s of various peoples have been forming in this period, though no literal evidence can (by definition) be found. Later migrations further complicate the study of migrations in this period.Writing, the civilizations emerge
Origins of writing are dated to fourth millennium BC. Writing may have started independently on various areas of Eurasia. It appears the skill spread relatively fast, giving people a new way of
communication .The three eastern regions of the Middle East, East Asia and South Asia developed in a similar manner with each of the three regions developing early civilizations around fertile river valleys. The civilizations in
Mesopotamia , the Indus Valley, and China (along theYellow River and the Yangtze) shared many similarities and likely exchanged technologies and ideas such as mathematics and thewheel .Ancient Egypt also shared this model. These civilizations were most likely in more or less regular contact with each other by the early versions of thesilk road .Europe was different, however. It was somewhat further north and contained no river systems to support agriculture. Thus Europe remained comparatively undeveloped, with only the southern tips of the region (
Greece andItaly ) being able to fully borrow crops, technologies, and ideas from the Middle East and North Africa. Similarly, civilization didn't arise inSoutheast Asia until contact was made with ancient India, which gave rise toIndianized kingdom s inIndochina and theMalay archipelago . The steppe region had long been inhabited by mounted nomads, and from the central steppes they could reach all areas of the Asian continent. The northern part of the silk road traversed this region.One such central expansion out of the steppe is that of the
Proto-Indo-Europeans which spread their languages into the Middle East, India, Europe, and to the borders of China (with theTocharians ). Throughout their history, up to the development ofgunpowder , all the areas of Eurasia would be repeatedly menaced by the Indo-Iranian, Turkic and Mongol nomads from the steppe.A difference between Europe and most of the regions of Eurasia is that each of the latter regions has few obstructions internally even though it is ringed by mountains and deserts. This meant that it was easier to establish unified control over the entire region, and this did occur with massive empires consistently dominating the Middle East, China, and at times, much of India. Europe, however, is riddled with internal mountain ranges: The Carpathians, the
Alps , thePyrenees and many others. Throughout its history, Europe has thus usually been divided into many small states, much like theMiddle East andIndian subcontinent for much of their history.The
Iron Age made large stands of timber essential to a nation's success because smelting iron required so much fuel, and the pinnacles of human civilizations gradually moved as forests were destroyed. In Europe the Mediterranean region was supplanted by the German and Frankish lands. In the Middle East the main power center becameAnatolia with the once dominant Mesopotamia its vassal. In China, the economical, agricultural, and industrial center moved from the northern Yellow River to the southern Yangtze, though the political center remained in the north. In part this is linked to technological developments, such as the mouldboardplough , that made life in once undeveloped areas more bearable.The civilizations in China, India, and Mediterranean, connected by the silk road, became the principal civilizations in Eurasia in early CE times. Later development of Eurasian history of mankind is told in other articles.
History of Eurasia continues in
*
History of West Eurasia
*History of Asia
*History of Europe
*History of the Middle East
*History of South Asia
*History of East Asia
*History of Southeast Asia
*History of Central Asia ee also
*
History of the World
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