107,99 zł
The Late Bronze Age created one of history's earliest interconnected international systems. Kingdoms exchanged copper, tin, grain, luxury goods, and diplomatic alliances across vast maritime routes linking Egypt, Anatolia, the Levant, Cyprus, and the Aegean. Prosperity depended on a network so complex that disruption in one region quickly spread across many others. This book examines the economic globalization of the Bronze Age Mediterranean and the fragile interdependence sustaining it. Palace administrations coordinated long-distance trade essential for bronze production, while diplomatic correspondence maintained political balance among major powers. Commercial exchange connected societies whose survival increasingly relied on imported resources and stable shipping corridors. The narrative also explores how systemic vulnerability intensified over time. Once ports, supply chains, and agricultural systems experienced simultaneous pressure, palace economies struggled to adapt. Political centralization that once strengthened regional coordination became a source of instability when trade disruptions accelerated faster than institutions could respond. The collapse of Bronze Age civilization appears here not as a single catastrophe, but as the failure of an interconnected world whose complexity exceeded its resilience.
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Liczba stron: 166
Rok wydania: 2026
