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Table of Contents

I have written several posts about world history and these posts only continue to increase. As such, I felt that it would be best if a reader could see all of my posts laid out in a table of contents. The following posts are arranged in order of release.

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At the End of the Earth: The Ancient North Siberians

Original art by Ettore Mazza Ice. It was all one could see for miles upon miles. Even the trees blended in with the white surroundings, covered in snow. Even the gray sky seemed to blend in so that all one saw at any point was a field of white and gray. However, one feature stuck out like a sore thumb. A herd of woolly mammoth was trudging its way through the snow and ice, the animal's brown hair signaling to anybody in the vicinity that they were there. While other animals had adapted to the climate with white fur, the ranging mammoth had not. They didn't need to rely on camouflage for protection. Their humongous size, sharp tusks and group-based movements were sufficient protection for the mammoth.  However, a pack of other living beings slowly approach the mammoths without their knowing. Covered in white pelts from previous victims of the hunt, these humans were prepared to take down the ultimate game. Mammoth hunting was not an every-day occurrence. Rather, it was a specia...

Sumeria — The World of Words

From Encolombia.com It has often been said that history begins at Sumer. Traditionally, historians have constrained the jurisdiction of history to an arbitrary time frame. For example, a certain number of years have to pass before an event is considered history. On the other end of the timeline, history has traditionally been defined as written history. The invention of the written word, which is usually ascribed to Sumer in around 3500 BCE, is seen as the transition mark between history and what is considered prehistory.  By now, because of some of the topics I've written about before , I'm sure you are well aware that my definition of history is much broader. To me, history is anything that happened in the past— from just a moment ago all the way to, until we can go farther, the Big Bang itself.  To me, history is not confined to 5522 years of the written record but rather 13.8 billion years.  That being said, the transition from societies without writing to societies w...

The First Japanese: The Paleolithic Period in Japan

  Original art by Teruya Yamamoto Part One: The Age of the Gods There are many retellings of the beginning of the Age of the Gods. This is one such retelling. There was a time when the Heaven and the Earth were not yet separated. Yin and Yang had not been divided. Everything existed as one in a chaotic, egg-like mass. And so, this mass chaotically yet naturally divided into two. One side contained everything pure and clear within the mass and ascended to become Heaven, forming relatively quickly. The other side contained everything heavy and impure, settling down to slowly form the Earth with some difficulty, going through a phase where the lands floated upon the Earth as if the Earth were water.  During this primordial time, a cloud-like mist existed in the Void between Heaven and Earth. Inside this mist was an abstract shape sometimes described as a reed-shoot before immediately transforming into a human shape. This was the first god, divine being or kami. While it became as...