Tag Archives: rome

The Rise and Fall of Palmyra: Part Two—The Fall

At the end of my last post, the Roman empire was in crisis. A third of the empire was in open rebellion, while the emperor himself had been captured by the Persians. His replacement, Claudius II, also died of sickness within two years.

And don't forget the other third of the Empire in open rebellion in the north. I wasn't kidding when I said they were tough times.
And don’t forget the other third of the Empire in open rebellion in the north. I wasn’t kidding when I said they were tough times.
Credit: historicair CC BY-SA 2.5

Meanwhile, in spite of the recent assassination of the king of Palmyra and his heir, the city found itself wealthy and the major power in the region after a series of military victories. Into this setting entered Zenobia.

Although Zenobia was Odenathus’s second wife, with the king and his first born son slain, Zenobia’s son, Vaballathus, became heir to the throne. Zenobia is still famed for her beauty, being commemorated in Chaucer’s Monk’s Tale as:

Of Kynges blood of Perce1 is she descended.
I seye nat that she hadde moost fairnesse,
But of hir shap she myghte nat been amended.

While the cheek of the quote is admirable, it is coming almost a thousand years after Zenobia lived. In fact, the sole contemporary image we have of Zenobia is a coin minted during her reign. In it, rather than immense beauty, she looks rather “prim and dowdy” according to Winsbury (p. 33), though definitely strong.

Honestly, to me, the way the hair is styled makes her look like Medusa.
Honestly, to me, the way the hair is styled makes her look like Medusa.
Credit: CNG CC BY-SA 2.5

Either way, more important than whether she had the countenance for a Hollywood movie, Zenobia appears to have been a savvy political operator. In the early stages of her reign, Zenobia appears to have gone out of her way to get along with the local Roman governors. This did not seem to last, however, as she soon seems to come into conflict with Rome.

It is unclear who launched the campaign, either Claudius II shortly before his death or Aurelian, but shortly after Zenobia took the throne, there appears to have been some sort of conflict with Rome. The best hypothesis put forward by Southern is that it was a campaign launched by the Romans, ostensibly to finish Odenathus’s offensive against the Persians; however, the Palmyrans seemed to think the encroaching Roman forces were for them, and fought the army off. Whatever the case may be, Zenobia seems to have found herself having to protect the border against Persia, while receiving no help from a suspicious Rome. Consequently, she took matters into her own hands.

Upon the death of Claudius II, there was a brief moment of instability when it was unclear whether the general Aurelian or Claudius’s brother, Quintillus, would take over. Zenobia saw this as her opportunity and launched an invasion of Arabia and Egypt under general Zabdas. Arabia seems to have fallen first, although there are only sketchy accounts.

This is a Roman theatre in Bosra, Syria. Seriously, wherever they went, the Romans left something behind
This is a Roman theatre in Bosra, Syria. Seriously, wherever they went, the Romans left something behind
Credit: Alessandra Kocman CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

The campaign in Egypt was a back and forth affair. Zabdas initially defeated the 50,000 strong Roman garrison, with his own forces of 70,000. Leaving behind 5,000 of his men, Zabdas returned to Syria. Probus, the Roman prefect in Egypt, had been away fighting pirates and, upon hearing of the invasion, returned to Alexandria and swept aside the Palmyran defenders. This forced Zabdas to return to Egypt. Nevertheless, Probus assembled an army of Egyptians and Africans and drove the Palmyrans clear out of Egypt. However, once out of Egypt, the advantage returned to the Palmyrans, with their knowledge of the local terrain. In a decisive battle, Zabdas was able to sneak 2,000 of his men up a hidden winding path to a local peak. From there they launched a surprise attack on the Romans, catching them unaware and vanquishing them. As a good Roman, Probus committed suicide to maintain his honour.

With this, Zenobia effectively came to control the eastern third of the Roman Empire. This “struck not so much at the heart, but at the stomach of Rome itself” (p. 160), as Egypt provided roughly a third of the grain Rome required. Africa provided the other two thirds—Rome itself had long since stopped being self-sufficient. Nevertheless, Zenobia did not seem to seek full independence from Rome. She continued to allow grain shipments to reach the capital. Similarly, although the coins minted at this time bore the profile of her son on one side, they bore no claim of Imperial titles, and still portrayed Aurelian as the emperor of Rome on the reverse. Although disputed, it seems that Zenobia’s move was an attempt to renegotiate the position of Palmyra within the Empire.

Despite having only a couple of years of peace, it appears Zenobia ruled well. The Palmyran Empire proved to be a tolerant and pluralistic society, with Zenobia offering sanctuary to excommunicated Christians. The new emperor, Aurelian, could not let this stand, of course. With the troubles in Rome, it took roughly two years for Aurelian to amass his forces for a campaign against Zenobia. But by the end of 271, Aurelian began to move his forces toward Palmyra.

Either Aurelian had a neck the size of a tree trunk, or this coin casts doubt on the likeness of Zenobia's coin above...
Either Aurelian had a neck the size of a tree trunk, or this coin casts doubt on the likeness of Zenobia’s coin above…

The Roman Emperor made his way largely unopposed through Asia Minor until he came to the city of Tyana. He apparently was incensed by the city’s refusal to bow to him and swore that he wouldn’t leave a dog alive. The Romans prepared for a siege, but at the last moment Tyana had a change of heart and begged for clemency, which Aurelian granted them. This was a dangerous thing to do, as previous emperors had been killed by their own troops for depriving them of the plunder. However, when his hypocrisy was pointed out, Aurelian ordered all the dogs in the city slaughtered. Apparently “the soldiers saw the joke” (p. 135).2

The first battle in the war for the East took place at Immae, just outside of Antioch. Palmyra did not possess a standing army like Rome, but its forces were impressive. In particular, being Arabian, the Palmyran cavalry were especially fearsome. They were heavily armoured, possibly even armouring their horses, and carried a variety of weapons, including bow and arrow. They were known as clibinarii—oven-pot men—for wearing heavy steel armour under the sweltering desert sun.3

This is the closest thing we have to an image of a
This is the closest thing we have to an image of a clibinarius. Admittedly, it’s Persian and from three hundred years later…

Zabdas picked an open plain as the field of battle, where he could use his superior cavalry to great effect. Aurelian was either informed of this, or predicted his opponent’s movements and manoeuvred his forces to block the Palmyrans’ retreat. Seeing this, Zabdas began to move his own army to counter, forcing Aurelian’s hand. The Emperor finally launched the attack, sending his light cavalry forth to meet the Palmyran clibinarii. It was and easy victory for the oven-pot men, with the Romans quickly breaking and running from their heavily armed foes. Nevertheless, the nickname for the clibinarii soon proved apt as they tired themselves out under the sweltering conditions. At this point, the Romans revealed their ruse and rallied. Turning again to face the Palmyrans, they quickly dispatched their opponents, chasing down the oven-pot men on their poor, tired mounts.

Zabdas retreated to the city of Antioch, but decided not to hold it, especially in light of how quickly Tyana had lost its resolve. Instead, in order to maintain the loyalty of the city until he could get away, Zabdas paraded a look-alike of Aurelian in chains through the streets, proclaiming a great victory. He then slipped away during the night, so stealthily that the Romans actually arrived the next day to lay siege. Instead, Aurelian again offered the city clemency.

If only they'd remembered the Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch...

Although a severe blow to the Palmyrans, Immae was not the end of their hopes. After retreating to Emesa, Zabdas gathered his still considerable forces and awaited the Romans. Again the Palmyrans arrayed themselves on a plain so as to advantage their cavalry, and again Aurelian sent his cavalry to clash with the superior clibinarii. This time however, his plan did not work, and when the Roman cavalry broke, they broke in earnest and were “slaughtered wholesale” (p.139). However, in their victorious pursuit, the Palmyrans broke their line, allowing themselves to be flanked by the Romans. Aurelian’s infantry saw their chance a surged forth, shattering the Palmyran lines. Palestinian clubmen in particular distinguished themselves, wreaking havoc and sowing fear amongst the heavily armoured clibinarii. Supposedly with their clubs and cudgels they “were able to literally knock the iron cooking-pots off the shelf” (p. 123). This turned into a rout for the Palmyrans, with many being killed by their own side, trampled in their desperation to flee.

Zenobia and her generals fled to Palmyra where they assumedly did their best to prepare for a siege; although, not being a walled city, Palmyra was largely indefensible. Instead, they relied on the great expanse of desert between them and Emesa, hoping that it would take its toll on the Romans. Unfortunately for them, in an impressive feat of logistics, Aurelian managed to keep his army supplied during their 150 mile desert march, all the while being harassed by bandits and allies of Zenobia. Realising the situation was largely hopeless, under the cover of darkness Zenobia made a desperate flight for Persia to request aid. She was, however, captured trying to cross a river.Without Zenobia, the resistance fell apart. Some wanted to fight on for honour, but word of Aurelian’s clemency soon got out, and the odd defector soon became a steady stream.

There is no real consensus over Zenobia’s fate. Little exists of contemporary reports. Ancient records vary, with the Syrian queen either dying on route back to Rome or living on peacefully in Italy. It seems certain that at some point she would have been subject to public humiliation, either in Antioch or possibly being paraded through the streets of Rome in golden chains. Nevertheless, there is some evidence of her descendants living on in Rome, so it seems there may be something to the accounts of her being pardoned by Aurelian and given a house in Tivoli.

Tivoli in Italy. If this were the punishment for failed rebellion, I think I'd give it a shot.
If this were the punishment for failed rebellion, I think I’d give it a shot.
Credit: LPLT CC BY-SA 3.0

The story of Palmyra does not quite end there, however. It seems that within a year, Palmyra made another ill-fated attempt at rebellion. This time Aurelian returned with a vengeance. The extent to which the city was sacked is unclear; but whether the subsequent decline was sudden or slow, it appears this marked the end for Palmyra as a power in the ancient world. The Silk Road moved elsewhere and its wealth along with it, until its “inhabitants squatted uneasily or uncomprehendingly among the monuments of its former greatness” (p. 189). Though a sad ending for such an incredible city, perhaps the saddest words are the unintentional ones of Southern when he writes of “these magnificent buildings, still visible today…” (p. 154).

Blah
Credit: Bernard Gagnon CC BY-SA 3.0

Academic Sources

Smith II, AM 2013, Roman Palmyra: identity, community and state formation, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Southern, P 2008, Empress Zenobia: Palmyra’s Rebel Queen, Continuum, London.

Stoneman, R 1994, Palmyra and Its Empire: Zenobia’s revolt against Rome, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.

Winsbury, R 2010, Zenobia of Palmyra: History, Myth and the Neo-Classical Imagination, Bloomsbury Academic, London.

  1. Persia.
  2. This was somewhat genteel humour, by Roman standards.
  3. Incidentally, why is it that the regions that appear to have produced the fiercest, most heavily armoured cavalry were those least suited to it?

The Rise and Fall of Palmyra: Part One—The Rise

By now, I am sure you’re aware of the destruction that ISIS wrought upon Palmyra. And as if the city hasn’t experienced enough, it seems that after being recaptured, Syrian troops might be looting the city for their own share of the booty. I generally try to keep this light-hearted, but the stealing of a people’s history is unforgivable.

A hero.
A hero.
Credit: Marc Deville/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images. Sourced: The Telegraph
Khaled al-Asaad would likely agree with me. He was the 82-year-old scholar who was beheaded for failing to lead ISIS militants to valuable historic artefacts. Nevertheless, even he would have to acknowledge that the ruins of Palmyra are hardly the first to be destroyed by depraved fanatics, nor are they liable to be the last. There’s a reason they’re “ruins” after all.

Fortunately, it appears only about 20% of the ruins were seriously damaged. And with the city’s recapture, UNESCO is already discussing restoration works; although there are doubts as to how successful they will be. Also, in a spectacular show of defiance, the Russian Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra has played a concert in the Roman amphitheatre where ISIS held its executions.

We'll just conveniently ignore that this seems to be a concert almost exclusively for President Assad's troops...

Nevertheless, the question that ought to be asked is “What is this history that Khaled al-Asaad deemed to be worth dying for?”

The Rise of Palmyra

Credit:
Credit: Yvonnefm CC BY-SA 3.0
Palmyra is a literal oasis town, or rather was a literal oasis town until its main spring dried up in the 19th century. The establishment of the city is lost in time, but likely involved the settling down of nomadic tribes around the oasis. The town remained small for a long time, and might have forever remained a footnote in history if it weren’t for the Romans’ need for fancy things. Although, as pointed out by Winsbury, you should avoid having too romantic an image of the city. Although desert caravans stretching off into the dunes loaded with spice and incense makes for a beautiful mental scene; inscriptions from the time speak of taxes to be paid on slaves and prostitutes, “which casts a rather more lurid light on Palmyrene trade” (p. 27).

Exactly how trade began in Palmyra us up for contention. Certainly its location directly between Rome and Persia gave the city a prime position to control Roman trade not just with Arabia and Mesopotamia, but also with India and China. Still, Palmyra’s sudden transition from agricultural oasis town to mercantile oligopoly is difficult to explain. One theory is that the Palmyrenes were desert nomads and bandits who set about getting square, changing from bandits to guards to merchants. Apart from offering an explanation of how Palmyrene trade could spring from nowhere, it also offers an explanation for Palmyra’s surprising martial prowess for a trading city.

Sorry, for an image title "Palmyran Trade Routes", the actual word "Palmyra" is tiny...Credit: Shizhao CC BY-SA3.0
Sorry, for an image title “Palmyran Trade Routes”, the actual word “Palmyra” is tiny…
Credit: Shizhao CC BY-SA3.0

Palmyra had a strong militia; however, it was used for far more than just protecting caravans. Being wedged between the Romans and the Persians made for a precarious position. As the Romans expanded into the Middle-East, Palmyra came further and further under their sway, eventually becoming a Roman city; although they did retain special privileges, such as the right to maintain security forces. In this way, Palmyra became responsible for not just guaranteeing trade, but also the Eastern border of the empire.

This became crucially important in the third century AD when things were starting to look pretty grim for Rome. There were separatist movements in Britain, Hispania and Gaul (France) in the west; and in the east, the relatively peaceful Parthians were replaced by the aggressive Sassanians as the pre-eminent power in Persia. Sass wasn’t only in their name, but in their nature. Not entirely enthused about Rome’s recent meddling in the region, the Sassanians were keen to kick them out. More than this, they wanted to restore the empire of Darius and Xerxes (of 300 fame).

The Roman emperor, Valerian, was not going to stand for this in any way, and headed east to deal with this upstart dynasty. Unfortunately for him, however, he was resoundingly defeated, and even captured by the Sassanian king, Shapur.

You always have to wonder how it must feel to have a failure so grand, it still stands thousands of years later, commemorated in stone.
You always have to wonder how it must feel to have a failure so grand, it still stands thousands of years later, commemorated in stone.
Credit: Fabienkhan CC BY-SA 2.5

It is here that the Palmyrans truly started to make a name for themselves. Odenathus, the Palmyran king, stepped into the breach. Gathering an army of Palmyrans, Syrian peasants and whatever Roman forces would rally to his cause, he pursued the withdrawing Persian forces, catching them on the banks of the Euphrates. There he dealt Shapur an embarrassing defeat, failing to free Valerian, but supposedly managing to capture Shapur’s harem. In the following years, Odenathus launched a second campaign against the Persians and, despite an unsuccessful siege against their capital, by 267AD had restored all of the perviously Roman lands. The historian Winsbury describes this as “the Empire Strikes back” (p. 68). Odenathus, even found time to crush a rebellion against Rome in the meantime. For his deeds, Odenathus was granted the title corrector totius orientis or “Restorer of the East.”

We're not 100% certain if this is Odenathus, but it's the best guess we have of an image of the man.
We’re not 100% certain if this is Odenathus, but it’s the best guess we have of an image of the man.
Credit: Marco Prins CC BY-SA 4.0
What is remarkable about Odenathus, beyond his military successes, was that at a time of rebellion, he stayed loyal to Rome. He took Arabic titles, such as “King of Kings”, but appeared content with the Roman titles he was granted (and the Romans couldn’t care less what other titles he took). Of course, there are other interpretations of his actions. Winsbury, for instance, prefers to see Odenathus as a ruler that worked more for Palmyran interests. He makes much of a tale in which Odenathus gave a number of gifts to Shapur to improve relations, but the Persian king simply threw them in a river. Furthermore, in their attack on Rome, the Persians had destroyed Palmyran trading posts all along their advance. In this light, Odenathus’s military campaigns can be seen as opportunistic reprisals as much as valiant conquests for Rome.

Whatever the truth of the matter, Odenathus definitely upset somebody, as both he and the son he bore to his first wife were assassinated in roughly 267AD. To this day, the motives and perpetrators are up for contention, with everyone from wary Roman emperors to his wife who would succeed him, Zenobia, being accused at some point. Either way, the assassination of Odenathus would irrevocably change Palmyran history.

As we’ll see next week, these actions would indirectly spark the sudden expansion of Palmyra’s sphere of influence. Within five years, Palmyra would have become a proper empire, comprising of roughly the eastern third of Rome. However, as fast as it would flare into existence, the Palmyran Empire would be extinguished, and within ten years the city would be sacked, and never again be a world power. All of this would occur at the hands of the beautiful Queen Zenobia, Odenathus’s second wife, who we will learn about next week.

We'll learn more about this incredible Queen next post (NB: Though beautiful, this isn't a contemporary image).
We’ll learn more about this incredible Queen next post (NB: Though beautiful, this isn’t a contemporary image).
Credit: QuartierLatin1968 CC BY-SA 3.0

Academic Sources

Smith II, AM 2013, Roman Palmyra: identity, community and state formation, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Southern, P 2008, Empress Zenobia: Palmyra’s Rebel Queen, Continuum, London.

Stoneman, R 1994, Palmyra and Its Empire: Zenobia’s revolt against Rome, University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.

Winsbury, R 2010, Zenobia of Palmyra: History, Myth and the Neo-Classical Imagination, Bloomsbury Academic, London.

Atlas shrugged while Rome burned

CFA Fire Station Nathalia
When you consider all of human history (and a bit too much recent history), this is actually a rarity.
Credit: Mattinbgn CC3.0
We’re in bushfire season again. I’m sure you noticed. With huge bushfires raging along the Great Ocean Road, quite a number of locals had what I imagine was a less-than-merry Christmas. Nevertheless, when they’re not leaving adorable notes, the CFA and fire-fighters around Australia are doing a pretty amazing job of saving lives and property on behalf of anyone and everyone. We take this for granted; however, public fire brigades actually haven’t existed for the majority of history.

Ayn Rand fans will be thrilled to know that the first serious fire brigade seems to have been a private affair. It was established in Ancient Rome by a charming gentleman named Crassus.1 He established a force of some 500 slaves. At the first sound of alarm they would race directly to the blaze and, once they had arrived, do absolutely nothing. Whilst they waited, Crassus would seek out the owners of the property, and possibly nearby properties, and buy them up cheaply. After all, what was a building worth if it was about to be burnt down? After purchasing the property at a steal, Crassus would have the fire put out and the enterprising capitalist would be left with a property whose value was far more than what he paid. Although not really an appropriate historical source, I think this is best summed up by Wilson and Wilson:

You're telling me you wouldn't trust this face?
You’re telling me you wouldn’t trust this face?

Crassus had collected his fortune by inventing both the fire brigade and, simultaneously, a legal extortion racket.

Surprisingly, this was too overtly rapacious even for the Romans, and a few different ways of organising fire response seem to have been tried. In 6AD Augustus got fed up with this and established the vigiles urbani. This was one of the most extensive fire brigades ever established. It began with 3,500 men and was later doubled to 7,000. By way of comparison, the current London Fire Brigade consists of just over 5,000 personnel.2 In fact, it seems that the vigiles had more fire fighters per square acre than any other fire brigade in history.3

These numbers aren’t entirely surprising. As is pointed out repeatedly by Rainbird, if you don’t have modern technology to deliver water, you have to make up for it with man power. According to the previous source cited, bucket chains can deliver about 180 litres of water per minute, pushing up to over 500 in the initial burst. Additionally, the Romans had actual pumps at their disposal and even ballistas. If you’re wondering what this last item was for, until the invention of modern pumps, the only way to fight any real conflagration was to simply demolish anything in its path. I imagine local home-owners would have been thrilled.

Someone once looked at this and thought, "I can fight fire with that!"
Someone once looked at this and thought, “I can fight fire with that!”
Nevertheless, what seems to be the primary reason for the large numbers is the need for a quick response. When your only strategy for dealing with a large fire is demolishing large swathes of the city, it is fairly understandable that the priority is catching fires early. To this end, the vigiles kept regular night patrols and enforced fire safety regulations.

Yes, the Romans had fire safety regulations. The primary ones seem to have been ensuring your fire is not being kept negligently, and to keep supplies of water upstairs. There may have been other regulations around maintaining other fire fighting equipment on the premises. These men were not to be trifled with. If you were found to be negligent in your duty, the vigiles had the authority to beat you. This is something I’m sure all fire fighters will have wished for at some stage.

Whilst there were several disastrous fires under the watch of the vigiles (they operated under Nero, for example) Rome seemed to have suffered fewer fires than other major ancient cities, and the fact they were maintained for over four-hundred years is likely good evidence of their effectiveness. Score one, publicly funded services.

Of course, the fiddle hadn't been invented in Nero's day, which rather ruins the whole saying.
Of course, the fiddle hadn’t been invented in Nero’s day, which rather ruins the whole saying.
Nevertheless, proving the need for this blog, no one seems to have learned from this experience. There was no formal fire fighting service in London prior to the Great Fire. So after 1666, what form of fire fighting service was introduced? Private fire insurance companies, of course. I suppose this is so that instead of one large, publicly funded, inefficient mistake from the past, they could all have a series of smaller, efficiently allocated, private mistakes.

Academic Sources

Dickson, PGM 1960, The Sun Insurance Office, 1710-1960: the history of two and a half centuries of British insurance, Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Plutarch 1st century AD, “The Life of Crassus”, Parallel Lives, sourced from: http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Plutarch/Lives/Crassus*.html, accessed 4 January 2016.

Rainbird, JS 1976, , doctoral thesis, Durham University, sourced from: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7455/, accessed 4 January 2016.

Robinson, OF 2003, Ancient Rome: city planning and administration, Routeledge, London.

Wilson, C & Wilson, D 2015, An end to murder: humans beings have always been cruel, savage and murderous. Is that all about to change?, Hachette, London.

  1. Sorry, I promise this blog isn’t going to all be about Rome, but I keep picking topics, and Rome keeps cropping up as the oldest antecedent.
  2. Referencing Wikipedia. I know, I feel dirty.
  3. Yes, I know that’s a doctoral thesis. But you should read it. It’s genuinely a fascinating read and a crime it wasn’t picked up to make a book.

Why did we even need the Paris Climate Change Conference?

So apparently the disparate forces of democracy have come together at the Paris Climate Change Conference and saved us all from our own damn smog-filled mess. Or maybe not. But here’s the question: “Why did we even need the conference?” I’m sure you understand the science of what’s going on, but how did we let it come to this? We can’t really ignore the fact that we’re stuck on this planet, so treating it like a tip makes little logical sense. And we can’t claim we didn’t know this was coming, the hypothesis and the science have been around for a long time now.

I was around in 1995, I know what the future holds!

Of course, Paris is just the most recent iteration of a theme that has run alongside the human race forever and a day. It’s obvious that many ancient cultures have had strong relationships with their surroundings. Indigenous Australians are often cited as an example. You always have to be a little wary of such claims (strangely enough, cultures do change over the course of 40,000 years), but they do make a fair point in that early “environmentalism” was extremely spiritual; perhaps not so surprising when you think of the hippie movement. Though perhaps being an environmentalist was easier when you could only have a fairly limited impact on the environment. Although academic debate around the extinction of nearly all the megafauna in Australia does show that you don’t need petrochemicals to ruin your backyard.

Diprotodon—a large extinct marsupial
Apparently we could have had this walking around today. Though I’m not sure that’s a thing we want…
Credit: Dmitry Bogdanov CC3.0.

But if they’re so important, then how did we become so detached from our surroundings? In his book, An Environmental History of the World, Johnson Hughes sets out to show off all the cool things he’s done, from a hot air balloon ride over the Massai Mara National Reserve in Kenya to watching wildlife off the river Napo in Peru. In passing, he also offers a fairly solid history of how humanity has interacted with the environment. Hughes traces our modern attitudes towards the environment back to ancient times, locating the distant origins of our destructive tendencies mostly in two key developments: cities and empires.

The argument behind the first is pretty straight forward. As we began to live in cities, we slowly became divorced from the natural environment which sustained us. People stopped feeling a part of their surroundings and instead felt they needed to impose their will on a hostile environment. This sounds a little “hippie” to my ear, but Hughes does make a fairly convincing argument, particularly in his analysis of the mythologies of ancient Mesopotamia. He notes how culture and civilisation became all that was good and nature and the wild became that which was evil and feared and needing to be controlled.

Lion tearing throat out of a man
THIS. Specifically, this is what they were afraid of.
Credit: CC3.0.
He also describes how this “struggle between nature and culture” (p. 35) was also highly gendered and related to the increasing separation of labour between men and women, because if writing an insightful history of the interaction between humans and their environment is too easy, why not tackle the origins of the modern patriarchy?

Either way, what you’re left with is a view of the environment that is entirely instrumental. It exists to serve people and little more. Not a particularly nice sentiment, but it becomes a real problem when combined with empire. With empire, you’re suddenly organising people on a never before seen scale. So what do you do with all that manpower? If you’re an ancient Sumerian, you attempt to overcome the erratic forces of nature and cut channels for irrigation in excess of 300km in length.

Nature's Round Up.
Nature’s Round Up.
Credit: FreeImages.com/ettina82.
Of course, this plays havoc with the water table and creates salinisation so terrible that parts of ancient Mesopotamia still haven’t recovered. In essence, cities increased our willingness to destroy the local environment, and empires gave us the ability to do it properly (keep in mind I’m using a fairly broad definition of “empire” here, pretty much any large-scale organisation of people will do).

What’s really difficult to understand is that it’s not like the ancients didn’t know what they were doing. Rome’s deforestation was so intense that the subsequent soil erosion moves an entire town miles inland. And because nothing is ever new, the Romans continued to do this in full knowledge of the fact what they were doing was screwing over their own empire. Seriously, you have all the great thinkers of the age complaining about how deforestation was leading to all these problems, including poorer water supplies, soil erosion, silting of rivers and the degradation of farmland… And an (almost) utter failure to do anything about it.

Hmm… All talk on the environment, but no action… Now why does that sound familiar?

...
Ancient Ostia: and you complained when your parents rented a campsite ten minutes from the beach.
Credit: 0x010C CC3.0.

Academic Sources

Hughes, J D 2004 An environmental history of the world: humankind’s changing role in the community of life, 2nd ed., Taylor and Francis, London.

Hughes, J D & Thirgood, J V 1982, “Deforestation, erosion and forest management in Ancient Greece and Rome”, Journal of Forest History, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 60-75.

Jacobsen, T & Adams, R M 1958, “Salt and silt in ancient Mesopotamian agriculture”, Science, vol. 128, no. 3334, pp. 1251-1258.

Montgomery, D R 2012, Dirt: the erosion of civilisations, 2nd ed., University of California Press, Berkeley.