| The Dark Age, 1050 -
800 BC
During the late Bronze Age (1550-1200
B.C.), a confluence of events caused mainly by local factors brought
about the downfall of all the major cultures of the Near East.
Undoubtedly the earlier incidents of decay influenced the collapse
that came later to some extent, but other factors were usually the
primary causes. As it affected Greece, this phenomenon is commonly
called the Dark Age; it extended approximately from 1050 to 800 B.C.
The art of writing was largely lost after the fall of the Mycenaean
palaces, so the only documentary source for this time is the work of
the poet Homer, who wrote in the ninth century B.C. The period
generally was one of stagnation and cultural decline. The disruption
that followed the collapse of the Mycenaean palaces was great.
Groups of people migrated to different areas, and the population
declined, probably reaching its nadir in the tenth century B.C.
Archaeological records indicate that in the Dark Age most people
lived in small communities in remote areas supported by subsistence
farming. Organizationally Greece was a chiefdom society. Most trade
and contacts with cultures in the Near East and elsewhere lapsed.
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