The Oldest Gold Treasure and Jewellery

The Varna Necropolis is a large burial site about 4 km from the city centre of Varna, Bulgaria.

The site was accidentally discovered in October 1972. According to radiocarbon dating, the artefacts found in this cemetery are 6,500 years old.

So far, 294 graves have been found in the necropolis, but not all the graves were buried with treasure. This is the first evidence of social hierarchies in history.

Some graves have no skeletal remains but contain the richest grave gifts (cenotaphs).

The grave of a man, Grave 43, revealed more gold than has been found in the entire rest of the world for this millennium (5000-4000 BC), from all over the world. This includes Mesopotamia and Egypt.(Slavchev 2010).

Laying on his back, the man's skeleton was decked out with bangles, necklaces of gold beads, gold pendants, and golden disks. 

The high-status male, buried with large amounts of gold, also held a war axe or mace and wore a gold penis sheath.

Referred to as the “Varna gold”, the find includes 3000 gold artefacts, with a weight of approximately 6 kilograms. Also, found were about 600 pieces of pottery, including some painted with gold, high-quality flint and obsidian blades, beads, and shells.

The male-dominated Varna culture had sophisticated religious beliefs about the afterlife and developed hierarchical status differences. But the settlement appears to have been abandoned.

Settlements and cultures that flourished during the Copper Age in modern-day Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Serbia, Macedonia, and Ukraine, disappeared or were suddenly abandoned about 4000 b.c.

These were the first cultures to invent metallurgy in Europe. They were mining, working with kilns and trading with distant lands.

For the following six centuries, the region seems deserted after large-scale population shifts. 

Theories about the rapid changes include migrations/invasions from the Eurasian steppes and climate change.

The artefacts can be seen at the Varna Archaeological Museum and at the National Historical Museum in Sofia, Bulgaria.
Reconstruction of elite burial at the Varna necropolis (detail) Zde
Example of the Varna Treasures
Varna Treasure, Varna Archaeological Museum




The Worst Year For Humanity?

The medieval scholar Michael McCormick has said that 536 was likely "the worst year to be alive".

The volcanic winter of 536, caused by an eruption, was a severe episode of climatic cooling.

Sulfate aerosols and ash released into the atmosphere blocked the sun's rays from reaching the Earth's surface. 

Temperatures dropped and crops failed. 

Roman statesman Cassiodorus wrote in a letter in 538:

The sun's rays were weak, and it appeared a "bluish" colour.

At noon, no shadows from people were visible on the ground.

The heat from the sun was feeble.

The moon, even when full, was "empty of splendour"

"A winter without storms, a spring without mildness, and a summer without heat"

The seasons "seem to be all jumbled up together"

The Irish Annals recorded: 

A failure of bread in the year 536 AD" – the Annals of Ulster

"A failure of bread from the years 536–539 AD" – the Annals of Inisfallen

Snow reportedly fell in the summer in China, along with crop failures.
The 536 volcanic winter coincided with the Plague of Justinian, which began in 541. One of the deadliest pandemics in history. An estimated 15–100 million people died during two centuries of recurrence.

The disease afflicted the entire Mediterranean Basin, Europe, and the Near East.

The climatic cooling led to famine and conflict, perhaps leading to the migrations of the Lombards and the Slavs into Roman territory. The Barbarian Invasions (according to the Roman and Greeks) contributed to the breakdown of central power and the conquest of Rome by the Lombards in 568.

Lower temperatures in Arabia, however, increased the supply of crops and may have contributed to the expansion, invasions and Islamic conquests.
St Sebastian pleading for the life of a gravedigger afflicted with plague during the 7th-century Plague of Pavia.


The Oldest Story Written

The Epic of Gilgamesh is the first known story from the First Civilisation.

The oldest existing versions of this epic poem date to c 2000 BC, written in Sumerian cuneiform.  

The first "complete" version, which includes the flood myth (a great flood, usually sent by a deity or deities, destroys civilisation), dates to c. 1300-1000 BC.

Sumer was the site of the earliest known civilisation founded in the Mesopotamia region of the Fertile Crescent.

A civilisation is a complex society with urban development, social stratification, a form of government, and systems of communication beyond spoken language (such as writing).

Some of the best copies of the Epic of Gilgamesh were discovered in the library ruins of the 7th-century BC Assyrian king Ashurbanipal.

The story begins with a legendary king, Gilgamesh, ruling over the city of Uruk as a tyrant. The Mesopotamian deities create a companion for Gilgamesh, the hairy wild man Enkidu.

The adventures of Gilgamesh explores relationships, feelings, loneliness, friendship, loss, love, revenge and the fear of death. 

Two enemies become best friends after an “earth-shaking” fight and go on a dangerous adventure to the ends of the world. There are battles, deities and monsters. 

The story explores what is life and how to deal with our own mortality and inevitable loss. 

Gilgamesh starts out as a godlike cruel despot who seeks fame and immortality. However, he develops a deep friendship and discovers the limits of human life and the importance of community.
This cuneiform text is the 11th Tablet of the Epic of Gilgamesh and tells a story similar to Noah’s Ark. British Museum  
The 6th tablet of the Epic of Gilgamesh. In this tablet, the goddess of love and war, Ishtar, attempts to seduce Gilgamesh who rejects her. When Ishtar’s father, the god Anu, sends the Bull of Heaven down to punish Gilgamesh for spurning her, Enkidu kills the creature.

Ancient Greek Device to Predict Astronomical Phenomena

Built over 2,000 years ago, the Antikythera mechanism has been described as the oldest example of an analogue computer used to predict the movement of the sun, moon and occurrence of eclipses decades in advance.

Found by sponge divers in a shipwreck off the coast of the Greek island Antikythera in 1901, the Antikythera mechanism is believed to have been designed and constructed by Greek scientists over 2000 years ago.

According to research (1.), the mechanism could accurately predict the motions of planets and stars, even when they would appear to move backwards across the sky.

Researchers have said:
“It challenges all our preconceptions about the technological capabilities of the ancient Greeks.”

No other instrument of such complexity dating back that far has ever been found.

X-rays have revealed inscriptions describing the motions of the Sun, Moon and all five planets known in antiquity.

Consisting of 82 fragments, only a third of the original mechanism now survives, including 30 corroded bronze gearwheels.

The remains of this ancient “computer” is on display in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.
 The Antikythera mechanism on display in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.
The Antikythera mechanism on display in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.
Researchers have used X-ray scanning equipment and imaging technology to read text engraved on the Antikythera Mechanism.

The Evictions in the Scottish Highlands and Islands

In the 1600s, Scotland had two distinct cultures: The Lowlands and the Highlands. 

The Lowlands were fertile with growing urban centres and economic developments. The Highlands, however, were defined by tribal Clans led by powerful men and tenant-based agriculture. Clan leaders controlled who received the agricultural land.

The Statutes of Iona, passed in Scotland in 1609, required that Highland Scottish clan chiefs send their heirs to Lowland Scotland to be educated at English, Protestant schools. 

Some Clans began to adopt the new religion and speak English rather than the Gaelic language. 

There was a growing cultural clash, indicated by James VI, describing the Highlanders as "utterly barbarous".

Many clan chiefs increased their wealth and became detached from their kinsmen.

The defeat of the Highland Jacobite Clans at Culloden in 1745 resulted in the banning of Highland dress, playing of bagpipes and the carrying of weapons, further eroding the clan system and warrior culture within a few generations. 

Between 1750 to 1860 (mostly), about 70,000 Highlanders and Islanders were evicted from clan territory  -the land where their families had lived for generations. 

These Highland Clearances (Scottish Gaelic: Fuadaichean nan Gàidheal) were a great blow to the Highland Clan system.

Overcrowding and small plots of overused land led to the desperate poverty of the tenants.

Changing farming methods, excessive lifestyles and changing farming and economic methods, led to the actions of the chief landlords.
The potato famine of 1846 was the final blow, leading to evictions and forced or coerced emigrations.

"Fermtouns" or "farm settlements" disappeared, landscapes changed, and many became landless.
The Last of the Clan, 1865, Thomas Faed
Many people relocated to the lowlands or immigrated to places like Australia, Canada and the United States.

Göbekli Tepe, Turkey: Probably the World's Oldest Temple

Located in Southeastern Anatolia, Turkey, Göbekli Tepe (translates to "potbelly hill" in Turkish) is a Neolithic archaeological site built about 11,000 to 12,000 years ago. Some parts seem to be even older.

Gobekli Tepe is the oldest man-made temple of worship yet discovered and it pre-dates pottery in the Middle East.

German archaeologist Klaus Schmidt discovered the more than 20 circular stone enclosures in 1994.

Evidence indicates that the inhabitants of the area were hunter-gatherers, as there were no signs of domesticated grain. The people, however, may have lived in villages for at least part of the year.

The huge piles of animal bones seem to indicate that many people of the area came together to indulge in huge feasts.

Laura Dietrich, of the German Archaeological Institute in Berlin, also discovered that vat-fulls of porridge and stew, made from grain, were eaten. 

In the "garden" area, there were more than 10,000 grinding stones, close to 650 carved stone platters and vessels, some of which could hold 200 litres of liquid.

The climate of the area was warmer and wetter at the time that Göbekli Tepe was occupied, with open steppe grassland, with wild cereals growing in the area.

As of 2021, less than 5% of the site has been excavated.
 Göbekli Tepe, Turkey
Göbekli Tepe, Turkey
Göbekli Tepe, Turkey

World Population Growth Timeline

70,000 BC: Evidence suggests a human population bottleneck and a population of only between 1,000 and 10,000 people, caused by a global volcanic winter of six to ten years.

10,000 BC: Estimates range between 1 million and 5 million people on Earth.

After humans changed from hunter-gatherer lifestyle to agriculture, the world population started to increase steadily and doubled approximately every 1000 years until 1000 BC. (Children were probably economic liabilities in hunter-gatherer societies and this might have led to infanticide).

1 AD: The world population was approximately 300 million people.

541–549 AD: The plague of Justinian killed perhaps a 100 million people. This was about half the world's population at that time. The plague spread across Asia, North Africa, Arabia, and Europe.

1200s CE: Mongol campaigns resulted in the probable deaths of 40 million people, approximately 11.1% of the total world population.

1650 CE: The world's population was at 500 million.

1800 CE: The world's population over 1 billion. 

1914-1918: The total number of military and civilian casualties in World War I was about 40 million.

1930: 2 billion people.

1939-1945: Deaths directly caused by World WarII (including military and civilian fatalities) are estimated at 50–56 million, with an additional estimated 19–28 million deaths from war-related disease and famine.

1950: 2.5 billion people.

1975: 4 billion people.

Between 1950 and 1987, world population doubled from 2.5 to 5 billion people.

2007: 6.6 billion people on Earth.

2020: 7.2 billion people.

2022: 7.9 billion on Earth.

Around 108 billion people have ever lived on our planet.

World Largest populations

1. China (1.44 billion)

2. India (1.39 billion)

3. United States (333 million)

4. Indonesia (276 million)

5. Pakistan (220 million)

6. Brazil (214 million)7. Nigeria (206 million)

8. Bangladesh (172 million)

9. Russia (146 million)

10. Mexico (127 million)

The Slavs of Eastern Europe and The Word Slave

The word slave has its origins in the word slav. The term originates from the Middle Greek word slavos/sklavenos (Slav).

Slaves were people without personal rights. 

Slavery operated from the beginning of civilisations (such as Sumer in Mesopotamia).

The Romans accepted slavery as the norm. Sources of slaves might be captives from war or piracy, or by birth. Roman slaves were mostly Greek captives of war. 

After Julius Caesar’s conquest of Gaul (modern-day France and parts of Belgium, western Germany, and northern Italy) in the 50s B.C.E, about 500,000 Gauls were enslaved.

The Slavic people of Eastern Europe were once a major source of slaves.

During the 9th century AD, people living in "scattered settlements" of Eastern Europe and the Baltic areas were trafficked as slaves to Byzantium and the Islamic world.

Africans, before the 16th century, were mostly shipped from East Africa to the Arabian peninsula and enslaved. 

Massachusetts legalised slavery in 1641.

Slavery was legal in the United States of America upon its founding in 1776.  Ninety-five percent of black people lived in America's South, comprising one third of the population.

Between 1777 and 1804, every Northern state of the United States provided for the immediate or gradual abolition of slavery. 

In the 1840s, King Gezo of Dahomey (part of present day Benin) said: "The slave trade is the ruling principle of my people. It is the source and the glory of their wealth...the mother lulls the child to sleep with notes of triumph over an enemy reduced to slavery."

In the 1800s, as many as 50,000 enslaved people passed through the city of Zanzibar each year.
Underground room of the Slave market Zanzibarthar, where slaves were kept, before being taken to the market for auctioning.ZoomViewer
The Confederacy (seven slave states) seceded from the United States, resulting in the American Civil War of 1861-1865. The central cause was slavery.

The Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (1865) abolished slavery and involuntary servitude, except as punishment for a crime.
Matilda McCrear died in Selma, Alabama, January 1940, at the age of eighty-three. (c. 1857 – January 1940). She was the last known living survivor in the United States of the transatlantic slave trade and the ship Clotilda. McCrear was captured as a young child in West Africa with her mother and sister by the army of the Kingdom of Dahomey and taken to Mobile County, Alabama, at the age of two with her mother and older sister. She and her sister were sold away from their mother and never reunited. Matilda was granted freedom and American citizenship by the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863.
Much later, during WWII, the Nazis planned to kill between ten and twenty million Slavs and to deport millions of other slavic people out of Eastern Europe.

Based on the German concept of Lebensraum (living space), the Nazi government planned to repopulate Eastern Europe with Germanic colonists.

The use of slave labour greatly increased throughout the war. Prisoners of war and "undesirables" were transported from occupied territories, including millions of Jewish and Slavic people, to work as slave labourers.

The use of slave and forced labour in Nazi Germany operated on an unprecedented scale. During World War II, the Nazis conducted several different categories of Arbeitslager (labour camps). 

In 1999, the Middle East Quarterly reported that slavery is endemic in Sudan.

In 2015, Islamic State used the Koran to reinstate sex slavery.

About 40.3 million individuals today are slaves, with 71% of those being female, and 1 in 4 being children.

Chinchorro Mummies: 7020 BCE (oldest one named Acha Man)

The Chinchorro mummies are the oldest examples of artificially mummified human remains, from up to two thousand years before the Egyptians began mummification.

The American Chinchorro culture, found in what is now northern Chile, were a people who lived as sedentary fishers and hunter-gatherers.

Interestingly, Chinchorro tradition performed mummification on all members of their society, not just elites. However, 29% of the known Chinchorro mummies were mummified naturally. 

The earliest Chinchorro mummy is the Acha man, recovered from the Acha valley, which dates to 7020 BCE (radiocarbon dating). 

About 282 Chinchorro mummies have been found by archaeologists.

The German Archaeologist Max Uhle, first documented some of the preserved Chinchorro mummies in 1917, after finding some on a beach.

According to Anthropologist Bernardo Arriaza, the Chinchorro practised intentional mummification as a way to keep the memories of the dead alive. 

Mummification involved making small incisions and removing body organs. Then stuffing the cavity with vegetable fibres or animal hair. Sometimes, the skin would be removed and sewn back on.

Hair was often attached to the mummy, along with a clay mask with slits for the eyes and mouth. 

Red or black paints, made from various minerals, ochre, manganese and iron oxide, were added last.
Some of these mummies can be seen at the San Miguel de Azapa Archaeological Museum.
The oldest known mummy in the world, about 7000 years. Child of 6 years, Chinchorro culture, Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino
Chinchorro mummy, Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino
Chinchorro mummy, Museo Chileno de Arte Precolombino

Ġgantija, Malta: Megalithic Temple Complex

The Ġgantija (Giantess) temples are located on the Mediterranean island of Gozo, Malta.

Older than the pyramids of Egypt, the two temples are more than 5500 years old, dating from the Neolithic period (c. 3600–2500 BC). This was a time before the invention of the wheel and metal tools.

Facing toward the south-east, and sitting at the edge of the Xagħra plateau, the Ġgantija temples comprise two temples and only the facade of a third.

The oldest of the two temples dates back to 3,600BC, while the second temple was built around four hundred years later.

Some of the megaliths of the Ġgantija Temples exceed five metres in length and weigh over fifty tons. Myths arose that giants constructed these temples in prehistoric times, and that is origin of the name.

Animal bones found on the site hint at the possibility that animal sacrifice occurred here.

The Ġgantija, along with the other megalithic temples around Malta, are 𝗨𝗡𝗘𝗦𝗖𝗢 World Heritage Sites. The World Heritage Sites committee described these sites as "unique architectural masterpieces."

There are five other megalithic temples located across the islands of Malta and Gozo.
Ggantia North Temple entrance, Malta
The Megalithic Temples of Malta are some of the most ancient religious sites on Earth, described by the World Heritage Sites committee as “unique architectural masterpieces". Ggantia, Malta.

Ġgantija is a megalithic temple complex from the Neolithic on the Mediterranean island of Gozo in Malta
Ġgantija is a megalithic temple complex from the Neolithic on the Mediterranean island of Gozo in Malta

The First People of Britain

For almost a million years, various species of humans have occupied Great Britain at different times.

At Happisburgh on the Norfolk coast, evidence of human occupation dates to around 900,000 years ago, where stone tools and footprints were probably made by an archaic human species, Homo antecessor.
The earliest evidence of human footprints outside of Africa, on the Norfolk Coast in the East of England
The oldest human fossils found at Boxgrove in Sussex, around 500,000 years old, are by Homo heidelbergensis.

A geological ridge running between the regions of the Weald in southern England and Artois in northern France, called the Weald-Artois Anticline, existed until around 425,000 years ago, when a megaflood broke through the ridge, and Britain became an island.

Fossils dating to around 400,000 years ago, of very early Neanderthals, have been found at Swanscombe in Kent.

About 225,000 year old fossils of classic Neanderthals have been found at Pontnewydd in Wales.
A DNA analysis of 50,000-year-old Neanderthal suggests that at least some of the ancient hominids probably had pale skin and red hair
Between 180,000 and 60,000 years ago, Britain seems to have been unoccupied, as no human remains or tools have been found.

60,000 years ago, Neanderthals returned. But, by 40,000 years ago, they had become extinct.

From 22,000 years ago, much of Europe was covered in ice. However, the ice age ended about 11,500 years, and since then, Britain has been continuously occupied.

Early Mesolithic hunter-gatherers lived on an area called Doggerland, a tract of now-submerged territory, until around 5600 BC.

At Star Carr in Yorkshire in northern England, deer skull masks, that may have been headdresses used by hunter-gatherers, have been found.
Star Carr collection at Yorkshire museum - mesolithic headdress made from deer skull.
By around 4000 BC, Britain was occupied by people with a Neolithic culture.

Migrants from around today's Greece and Turkey, bringing farming methods, replaced the indigenous hunter-gatherer population. 

Farming was practiced for up to 1000 years on the continent before it came to Britain.

The Beaker People (named after the inverted-bell beaker drinking vessel) came into Britain about 2500 B.C. They were farmers and archers and probably the first inhabitants of Britain to use woven fabrics. The most famous site in Britain from this period is Stonehenge.
A distinctive pottery drinking vessel found in Great Massingham, England, part of the "Beaker Culture"
It is believed that the Celts arrived in Britain about 1,000BC. Iron Age Britain was dominated by the Celts.

In 55 BC Julius Caesar's first invasion of Britain occurred, and this was the start of recorded history.

The Celts were often in conflict with the Romans. 

The end of Roman rule in Britain occurred when Magnus Maximus withdrew troops from northern and western Britain in 383 CE.

England changed from Romano-British to Germanic. The Celtic tribes are driven out to places like Cornwall and Wales. Many Hunter-Gatherers may have died from diseases to which they had no immunity.
Bede's World, Jarrow, UK. reconstructed Anglo-Saxon dwellings and farm
Neither the Romans nor the Anglo-Saxons were able to successfully invade Ireland. Most of modern Scotland was not incorporated into the Roman Empire. The Roman Empire occupied most of Wales.

According to DNA studies, fewer than one in 30 people in England can trace their origins to Britain’s first farmers. Evidence shows that an influx of people to southern England occurred about 3,000 years ago (the Late Bronze Age), of people descending from the early European farmers.

The 25,000-year-old Venus of Willendorf and More

At almost 11 cm high, the Venus of Willendorf is an important piece of early European art, made around 25,000 years ago. 

Interestingly, the figure of the Venus is made of a rock called "oolite" which is not found in or around Willendorf, a village in the Wachau valley in Lower Austria.

Now, researchers from the University of Vienna have found that the material from which the Venus was carved appears to come from northern Italy, during Paleolithic times (Old Stone Age).

Found on August 7, 1908, by a workman named Johann Veran, the Venus of Willendorf is a sculpture of a faceless woman with plaited hair.  

Traditionally, such carvings are referred to in archaeology as "Venus figurines", as parts of the female body related to fertility and childbearing are emphasised. And so, it is believed the figures may be early fertility deities or mother goddesses.

The Venus of Willendorf is part of the permanent exhibition of the Natural History Museum of Vienna.
Venus of Willendorf

The Venus of Galgenberg

Dated to about 30,000 years ago, the Venus of Galgenberg is a Venus figurine of the Aurignacian era ( Upper Paleolithic). This figure was discovered in 1988 close to Stratzing, Austria, not far from the site of the Venus of Willendorf.

This figurine, which has a "dancing pose", measures 7.2 centimetres (2.8 in) in height and weighs 10 g. It is made from shiny green serpentine rock which is found in the immediate vicinity of where the figurine was unearthed.
Venus of Galgenberg made of green serpentine 30,000 years ago. Aiwok