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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper briefly lists some of the specifics of various early societies. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVErlyCv.rtf
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the specifics of various early societies. Discussion First of all, this paper is very short and there are many civilizations to discuss, which makes it impossible to do any
in-depth discussion of any of them; instead, this paper has to be nothing more than a of various specifics. Also, although the request has included information on technological advances,
salient points, important people, etc., some of these civilizations are prehistoric, and without written language. We start with the Bronze Age. Bronze Age: The Bronze Age gets its
name because men starting working with bronze at this time; its part of "the three-age system for prehistoric societies" (Bronze Age, 2005). There is no one time at which
the Bronze Age began, because it varies from culture to culture (Bronze Age, 2005). In the Near East, the Bronze Age is considered to have begun around 3300
BC and is usually divided into three phases, Early, Middle and Late (Bronze Age, 2005). In Central Asia the Bronze Age is considered to have begun around 2000 BC
while in Thailand, it dates from 2100 BC (Bronze Age, 2005). In the Aegean, the Bronze Age was distinguished by a "far-ranging trade network ... [that] imported tin and charcoal
to Cyprus, where copper was mined and alloyed with the tin to produce bronze" (Bronze Age, 2005). The tin, upon analysis, was revealed to have come from "as far
away as Great Britain" (Bronze Age, 2005). The Minoan empire rose at this time and "appears to have coordinated and defended the bronze-age trade"; it was followed by the
Mycenaean empire (Bronze Age, 2005). In Great Britain, the Bronze Age "is considered to have been the period from 2200 to 700 BC" (Bronze Age, 2005). Some of
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