History Of Ancient Civilization. Charles Seignobos

History Of Ancient Civilization - Charles Seignobos


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_0009bb15-0176-5d8c-afc8-1e99cbe125dc">ROMAN CONQUEST

       THE ROMAN ARMY

       CHAPTER XXI ToC

       THE CONQUERED PEOPLES

       THE PROVINCIALS

       CHAPTER XXII ToC

       TRANSFORMATION OF LIFE IN ROME

       CHAPTER XXIII ToC

       FALL OF THE REPUBLIC

       DECADENCE OF REPUBLICAN INSTITUTIONS

       CHAPTER XXIV ToC

       THE EMPIRE AT ITS HEIGHT

       THE TWELVE CÆSARS

       CHAPTER XXV ToC

       THE ARTS AND SCIENCES IN ROME

       LETTERS

       CHAPTER XXVI ToC

       THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION

       ORIGIN OF CHRISTIANITY

       CHAPTER XXVII ToC

       THE LATER EMPIRE

       THE REVOLUTIONS OF THE THIRD CENTURY

       APPENDIX

       REFERENCES FOR SUPPLEMENTARY READING

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Prehistoric Remains.—One often finds buried in the earth, weapons, implements, human skeletons, débris of every kind left by men of whom we have no direct knowledge. These are dug up by the thousand in all the provinces of France, in Switzerland, in England, in all Europe; they are found even in Asia and Africa. It is probable that they exist in all parts of the world.

      These remains are called prehistoric because they are more ancient than written history. For about fifty years men have been engaged in recovering and studying them. Today most museums have a hall, or at least, some cases filled with these relics. A museum at Saint-German-en-Laye, near Paris, is entirely given up to prehistoric remains. In Denmark is a collection of more than 30,000 objects. Every day adds to the discoveries as excavations are made, houses built, and cuts made for railroads.

      These objects are not found on the surface of the ground, but ordinarily buried deeply where the earth has not been disturbed. They are recovered from a stratum of gravel or clay which has been deposited gradually and has fixed them in place safe from the air, a sure proof that they have been there for a long time.

      The Four Ages.—Prehistoric remains come down to us from very diverse races of men; they have been deposited in the soil at widely different epochs since the time when the mammoth lived in western Europe, a sort of gigantic elephant with woolly hide and curved tusks. This long lapse of time may be divided into four periods, called Ages:

      1. The Rough Stone Age.

       2. The Polished Stone Age.

       3. The Bronze Age.

       4. The Iron Age.

      The periods take their names from the materials used in the manufacture of the tools—stone, bronze, iron. These epochs, however, are of very unequal length. It may be that the Rough Stone Age was ten times as long as the Age of Iron.

      THE ROUGH STONE AGE

      Gravel Débris.—The oldest remains of the Stone Age have been found in the gravels. A French scholar found between 1841 and 1853, in the valley of the Somme, certain sharp instruments made of flint. They were buried to a depth of six metres in gravel under three layers of clay, gravel, and marl which had never been broken up. In the same place they discovered bones of cattle, deer, and elephants. For a long time people made light of this discovery. They said that the chipping of the flints was due to chance. At last, in 1860, several scholars came to study the remains in the valley of the Somme and recognized that the flints had certainly been cut by men. Since then there have been found more than 5,000 similar flints in strata of the same order either in the valley of the Seine or in England, and some of them by the side of human bones. There is no longer any doubt that men were living at the epoch when the gravel strata were in process of formation. If the strata that cover these remains have always been deposited as slowly as they are today, these men whose bones and tools we unearth must have lived more than 200,000 years ago.

      The Cave Men.—Remains are also found in caverns cut in rock, often above a river. The most noted are those on the banks of the Vézère, but they exist in many other places. Sometimes they have been used as habitations and even as graves for men. Skeletons, weapons, and tools are found here together. There are axes, knives, scrapers, lance-points of flint; arrows, harpoon-points, needles of bone like those used by certain savages to this day. The soil is strewn with the bones of animals which these men, untidy like all savages, threw into a corner after they had eaten the meat; they even split the bones to extract the marrow just as savages do now. Among the animals are found not only the hare,


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