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Around 300,000 years ago,
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our species, Homo sapiens,
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evolved in Africa.
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For generations,
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small bands of hunter-gatherers
explored the planet...
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..learning to survive.
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Many other species of human
walked the Earth alongside us,
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but one by one,
we supplanted them...
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..until only we remained.
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For most of our history, our
population was tiny and fragile.
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Every aspect of our lives
determined by the natural world.
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And yet...
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..everything would change.
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Today, there are about
eight billion of us,
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most of us living in cities,
like this one,
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able to connect in an instant
with people across the planet.
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And you might think
it was inevitable,
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{\an8}the result of progress over time,
but surely, our story so far, if it
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{\an8}teaches us anything, it's that none
of this was a foregone conclusion.
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So, how did we get here?
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How did humanity
transform from scattered
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groups of nomads into our modern,
interconnected world?
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What happened in that final
chapter of our story
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that took us on a path
to this place?
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On a remote hilltop,
in the far east of Turkey...
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..stands a prehistoric monument
steeped in mystery.
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It is so hard to stand here
and not have goose bumps.
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This is the oldest temple unearthed
anywhere on this planet.
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It was built 11,500 years
ago by hunter-gatherers.
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That's 6,000 years earlier
than Stonehenge,
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and yet somehow, our ancestors
were capable of making this.
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This is Gobekli Tepe.
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There are these incredible
T-shaped pillars,
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which would've been holding
up a huge roof.
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And then, if we look at them,
they're covered in these engravings.
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So, this is a fox,
there's vultures here, there's bear,
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there's wild boar, and here, this
one just has to be my favourite.
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It's a leopard, hunting
one of those wild boars.
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So, notice these holes here.
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This was dressed with furs
and they were also painted.
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So, you get the impression of this
place as being beautifully
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coloured and textured.
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And yet, this incredible
feat of architecture is not the most
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revolutionary
thing about this place.
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Gobekli Tepe is not simply a temple.
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It is a marker of a species
on the cusp of change.
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In many ways,
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these prehistoric builders lived
as their ancestors had for thousands
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of years, their days spent foraging
and hunting to feed their families.
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ANIMAL GRUNTS
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But they'd made one
fundamental change.
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After generations spent as nomads,
following the herds...
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..here at Gobekli Tepe, they stopped
moving and settled down.
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The evidence for which lies
not in the temple itself...
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..but in the rubble surrounding it.
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Now, this might not look like much
compared to that,
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but this small square
building is actually
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the remains of one of the first
permanent houses ever built.
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That there is a storage vessel,
this is a grinding stone for wild
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wheat, and this floor of plaster
and stone, this was somebody's home.
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This is one of the first villages.
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Archaeologists believe maybe
a few hundred people
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were living here permanently...
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..and calling it home.
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For 300,000 years,
Homo sapiens roamed freely.
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But now, they were gathering
together to put down roots.
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And so, the question is, why?
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And why now?
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This was a world of plenty...
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..warm and abundant.
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But the planet had not always
been this way.
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Only a few generations earlier,
Homo sapiens had been
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fighting for survival...
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..through the brutal peak
of the last Ice Age.
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Now that local areas could
provide plenty of food,
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people could spend
longer in one place,
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and when large groups came together
to share their bounty, a feature
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of our brain had an opportunity
to flourish like never before.
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Our almost limitless
capacity to learn.
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An ability with roots that
can be traced way back,
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right to the
beginning of the human story.
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{\an8}As the distant ancestors of our
species were gradually evolving...
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{\an8}..they had begun developing
larger brains.
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{\an8}But as their brains grew,
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{\an8}the way they were organised
was evolving too...
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{\an8}..becoming increasingly adaptable,
and more able to
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{\an8}change in response to stimulation
from the outside world...
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{\an8}..until they became us...
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{\an8}..a species brilliant at learning,
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{\an8}both from our experiences
and other people.
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The major thing that
marks our species as different isn't
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just the size of our brain,
it's also the way they're organised
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and their extraordinary flexibility.
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Now, we call this flexibility
neuroplasticity,
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because it's like our brains
are plastic.
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They adapt, they alter
and they change.
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It has some profound effects.
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Humans have a natural
affinity for observing
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and copying each other...
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..giving Homo sapiens
the ability to have a
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shared understanding of the world.
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At Gobekli Tepe, the symbols
of their shared experiences
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and beliefs are carved
into the stone.
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And these indicate a bigger
shift in our species.
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The odd thing about being human
is that we are constantly
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surrounded by a bunch of things that
are so all-encompassing, and yet we
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never really think about where they
started or where they come from.
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I'm talking here about culture.
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Ritual, custom, language,
art, stories
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and ideas that have been passed
down orally through generations,
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and have now found physical form.
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Places like Gobekli Tepe became
so rich in meaning
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that our ancestors never wanted to
leave, and culture flourished.
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Cooperating and building
connections
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are what our brains
are actually set up to do.
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{\an8}Wherever humans settled down,
an explosion in creativity
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{\an8}followed, launching
an era of extraordinary innovation.
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{\an8}We can see the results of this shift
in the archaeological record...
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{\an8}..which begins to seethe with
the debris of new technology.
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Our ancestors couldn't
have foreseen it,
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but one innovation from around this
time was to have consequences
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far greater than
they could possibly have imagined.
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We start to see the first sparks
of something that would come to
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shape the way we live today.
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{\an8}Wherever there were humans,
there was
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{\an8}a dramatic rise in the bones
of goats and sheep...
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{\an8}..far outstripping the remains
of the species they hunted.
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These changes reveal a key
point in the human story...
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..the moment we began
to farm livestock.
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The people had found a safe,
reliable way to feed themselves.
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They'd stopped chasing their food
and started rearing it...
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..providing a regular supply
of milk, cheese and yoghurt...
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..and later, textiles like wool...
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..season after season.
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The farming of animals marked
a watershed moment.
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The result of this, I don't think
could've been predicted.
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This altered relationship that they
had with animals, altered them,
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because not long after
they learnt how to do this,
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something fascinating happened.
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Their population started to boom.
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Now, we're not really sure
why this happened,
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but the strongest theory is that
people staying in one place
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and not moving as much, but also
having more food, having more
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calories, basically led to mums
having more energy for reproduction.
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As our numbers rose,
settlements began springing up...
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..scattered across an area which
we now call the Fertile Crescent.
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As their populations grew,
villages transformed into towns.
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And the largest of the towns of the
Fertile Crescent was Catalhoyuk.
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An early prototype
of urban living.
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Wow!
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Every single one of these
is a house.
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That's right.
And you have to imagine, of course,
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that each of these houses is a box,
with a roof.
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But, uh, there's no space
really between them.
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Like a beehive.
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The fact that they're all tightly
up against each other means
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that the whole thing is much
more structurally sound.
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There's literally no gap.
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The only way you can get in the
house is to move along the roofs
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and go down through
a hole into the house,
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because there's no streets.
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Each dwelling was small
and had its door in the ceiling.
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The inhabitants lived much
of their lives up on the roofs...
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..grinding grain, trading,
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and feasting in the bright
sunlight above their homes.
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In this honeycomb,
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their animals were kept in pens
right next to the living quarters.
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Here, you can see bits of animal
bone. These are the sheep bones
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from feasting and so on.
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But also,
there are lots of droppings
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and so, this is telling us that,
as well as people
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living in the village, they also
brought in domesticated animals.
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And these farmers left
behind intriguing signs
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that they were here to stay.
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What are those holes over there?
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These are the ancestors
who are buried beneath the floors.
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In some houses, there are up
to 62 people buried in them.
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I mean, Ian,
60-odd people being buried,
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that's a graveyard in a home.
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We've dug up
hundreds of burials here,
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and what's fascinating is that
people were sleeping just
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a few centimetres from the bones
of their ancestors.
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Between the dead, the living
and their animals...
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..this thriving town
was densely packed.
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At its height, some people think
there were 8,000 people
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living at Catalhoyuk,
so that's one of the largest
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settlements on the planet
at this point.
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And so, it's so easy to imagine
this straight line from this
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population boom to our own huge
population of humans on this planet.
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And yet, that straight line
was severely interrupted,
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because the formula for success
that was playing out here
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also turned out to be
a bit of a disaster.
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Our pioneering farmer ancestors
couldn't have known it...
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..but they had opened Pandora's box.
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Amongst the many
burials of Catalhoyuk...
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..were skull after skull with clear
signs of violent impact.
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And it's something not only
seen at Catalhoyuk.
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{\an8}In many early farming settlements,
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{\an8}we start to see the unmistakable
signs of violence...
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{\an8}..suggesting the two are connected.
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Choosing to live like this,
in such close proximity with your
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neighbours, with the animals
which you're breeding,
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with your rubbish...
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..in a way that has never been
seen before, leads to this cascade.
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The densely populated towns had
become exposed to new dangers.
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Living with their animals
spread disease.
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Their dependence on crops made them
vulnerable to failed harvests.
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And with ever growing competition
for the land near the settlement,
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people were no longer
just battling nature,
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they were battling each other.
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Suddenly, it must have seemed
like this perfect world
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they'd created was cursed.
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Faced with all these challenges,
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these towns didn't survive or
grow into great metropolises.
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Instead, growth was
followed by collapse and exodus.
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And as the early town dwellers
left their homes
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and farms in droves,
they faced a choice.
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To start again and risk failing,
or rejoin the vast
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majority of humans across the globe
still living nomadic lives.
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For me, this is one of
the biggest mysteries
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in the history of our species.
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Because for the very first
settlers, it was a disaster.
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They were facing disease and famine,
and yet, at the very same time,
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across the planet,
hunter-gatherers were thriving.
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00:23:02,440 --> 00:23:05,800
And that way of life we know works,
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because today, millions of people
live like that.
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They have made it to the 21st
century just like the rest of us.
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00:23:14,200 --> 00:23:17,240
And yet,
we know how this story ends.
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Most of us live in huge cities
like this.
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So, what is it that turned
a disaster into a success?
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Our early attempts to live
together in large numbers
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had ended in failure and strife.
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To make it work, our species would
have to find another way.
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An answer would lie...
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..along a great river.
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There are bits of our story where
geography just does not
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feel like a fluke. Where if it was
going to happen,
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it was always going
to happen here.
239
00:25:02,040 --> 00:25:06,480
Because beyond the thin strips
of green that cut through this
240
00:25:06,480 --> 00:25:11,440
arid landscape, there is
very little but sand and death.
241
00:25:22,080 --> 00:25:26,680
This narrow strip of habitable land
was the only place to grow food
242
00:25:26,680 --> 00:25:28,360
and rear animals.
243
00:25:29,560 --> 00:25:34,360
But to produce enough, they had to
control this natural resource.
244
00:25:35,720 --> 00:25:39,560
The people needed to direct
the water onto their fields,
245
00:25:39,560 --> 00:25:42,680
and harvest en masse, once a year.
246
00:25:44,280 --> 00:25:48,120
And so, they had no choice
but to work together.
247
00:25:51,280 --> 00:25:54,760
Put enough effort in,
and more and more of this becomes
248
00:25:54,760 --> 00:26:01,000
productive farmland, giving these
guys a massive food surplus
249
00:26:01,000 --> 00:26:05,520
that would be collected in huge
grain stores, attracting more and
250
00:26:05,520 --> 00:26:11,840
more people to come and settle here,
and join this growing revolution.
251
00:26:19,320 --> 00:26:22,800
The people flooded into the
Nile Valley, jostling for space.
252
00:26:30,480 --> 00:26:33,360
But now, instead of abandoning
their communities
253
00:26:33,360 --> 00:26:35,320
when the towns became overcrowded...
254
00:26:37,960 --> 00:26:39,360
..they restructured them.
255
00:26:46,520 --> 00:26:49,560
When you live in a small group,
you've all got to be good,
256
00:26:49,560 --> 00:26:53,400
or at least competent,
at everything to survive.
257
00:26:53,400 --> 00:26:58,640
But living in a large group,
you can suddenly specialise.
258
00:26:58,640 --> 00:27:01,160
Some of you might become really
good at a particular
259
00:27:01,160 --> 00:27:02,680
kind of textile making.
260
00:27:02,680 --> 00:27:06,520
Others might become stone makers,
butchers, bakers,
261
00:27:06,520 --> 00:27:09,400
probably not candlestick makers yet.
262
00:27:09,400 --> 00:27:11,800
All cogs in a huge machine,
263
00:27:11,800 --> 00:27:15,960
at a scale that had never
been seen before.
264
00:27:22,360 --> 00:27:26,040
The people of these busy settlements
were increasingly collaborating.
265
00:27:28,480 --> 00:27:30,880
Becoming part of a social group
266
00:27:30,880 --> 00:27:33,320
with hundreds or
thousands of strangers.
267
00:27:35,440 --> 00:27:39,760
And in the process, laying the
foundation for something brand-new.
268
00:27:49,800 --> 00:27:52,240
I know archaeologists are constantly
pointing at walls
269
00:27:52,240 --> 00:27:55,000
and trying to convince
people of how important they are,
270
00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:59,920
but this absolutely massive wall
is pretty much all that's
271
00:27:59,920 --> 00:28:02,520
left of the original city of Abydos.
272
00:28:02,520 --> 00:28:07,160
Abydos being one of the very first
cities in the whole world.
273
00:28:08,280 --> 00:28:11,640
But walls like these also indicate
a momentous shift
274
00:28:11,640 --> 00:28:14,560
in the way humans lived together,
275
00:28:14,560 --> 00:28:18,680
because to be on this
side of the wall meant protection
276
00:28:18,680 --> 00:28:21,240
and access to the grain stores,
277
00:28:21,240 --> 00:28:25,640
but to be on that side of the wall
meant to literally be without.
278
00:28:25,640 --> 00:28:29,960
Now, humans have always been tribal,
we've always been able to act
279
00:28:29,960 --> 00:28:35,720
and think as part of a group,
but what places like this prove
280
00:28:35,720 --> 00:28:40,880
is that tribalism was
scalable to the size of a city.
281
00:28:44,520 --> 00:28:50,040
{\an8}All along the great rivers of the
ancient world, huge cities began
282
00:28:50,040 --> 00:28:55,880
{\an8}to appear, as our ancestors cracked
the secret to living at scale.
283
00:29:00,160 --> 00:29:04,560
{\an8}A change which would propel us
forward at an astonishing rate.
284
00:29:10,440 --> 00:29:12,600
As these newly emerging cities grew
285
00:29:12,600 --> 00:29:15,160
and their communities became
more complex...
286
00:29:19,160 --> 00:29:20,600
..they started to change...
287
00:29:25,360 --> 00:29:29,120
..leaving evidence which can still
be seen here in Abydos.
288
00:29:30,960 --> 00:29:35,080
Not in the city of the living,
but in the city of the dead.
289
00:29:45,200 --> 00:29:51,400
This is Shunet El Zebib,
and it's so vast, clearly,
290
00:29:51,400 --> 00:29:56,160
but it was actually originally
mistaken for a fort.
291
00:29:56,160 --> 00:30:01,880
But it's a temple dedicated to
a human, a man called Khasekhemwy,
292
00:30:01,880 --> 00:30:04,400
who's actually
buried in a cemetery over there.
293
00:30:04,400 --> 00:30:10,840
Not everybody got one of these,
which means that around here,
294
00:30:10,840 --> 00:30:14,200
there were now at least
two classes of people.
295
00:30:16,040 --> 00:30:19,560
There was something about cities
that was the perfect breeding
296
00:30:19,560 --> 00:30:23,880
ground for producing not just
the haves, but the have-a-lots.
297
00:30:28,440 --> 00:30:31,400
We may never know why some people
became wealthier
298
00:30:31,400 --> 00:30:33,120
and more powerful than others.
299
00:30:35,560 --> 00:30:40,280
One theory is that those in control
of the water
300
00:30:40,280 --> 00:30:42,840
could also be in control
of the food supply.
301
00:30:44,240 --> 00:30:50,400
But so long as they shared enough to
feed the cities, the cities thrived.
302
00:30:52,800 --> 00:30:57,680
Their newly specialised
populations invented, made
303
00:30:57,680 --> 00:31:02,160
and traded an unprecedented
number of objects.
304
00:31:05,960 --> 00:31:11,480
And in the process, created a tool,
unassuming at first glance,
305
00:31:11,480 --> 00:31:14,360
that would become a powerful
instrument.
306
00:31:17,280 --> 00:31:19,960
I know they don't look like much.
307
00:31:19,960 --> 00:31:24,800
They look like just square
pieces of bone.
308
00:31:24,800 --> 00:31:29,800
They were found in Abydos,
in a tomb, thought to be that
309
00:31:29,800 --> 00:31:35,720
of a king known as The Scorpion
King, from about 5,300 years ago.
310
00:31:35,720 --> 00:31:39,480
Now, some of these
symbols are very recognisable.
311
00:31:39,480 --> 00:31:41,600
That's obviously a bird.
312
00:31:42,840 --> 00:31:45,720
This is a plant of some kind.
313
00:31:45,720 --> 00:31:47,600
And notice the holes in them.
314
00:31:47,600 --> 00:31:52,080
These are effectively labels,
or tags.
315
00:31:52,080 --> 00:31:55,720
These tags were thought to have been
attached to offerings
316
00:31:55,720 --> 00:31:59,040
buried in the tomb,
but what they reveal is something
317
00:31:59,040 --> 00:32:01,160
happening in the world
of the living.
318
00:32:02,160 --> 00:32:07,040
And these symbols represented
the provenance where the
319
00:32:07,040 --> 00:32:10,520
item that they were
attached to came from.
320
00:32:10,520 --> 00:32:13,880
Perhaps they have a quantity
as well attached to them.
321
00:32:13,880 --> 00:32:18,440
And then someone had this
absolutely revolutionary idea.
322
00:32:18,440 --> 00:32:20,480
What if they strung them together?
323
00:32:34,560 --> 00:32:39,480
With local agreement on their
meaning, symbols became words.
324
00:32:41,600 --> 00:32:47,160
Gradually, the rows of images
became more complex...
325
00:32:50,640 --> 00:32:51,720
..until...
326
00:32:54,880 --> 00:32:58,440
{\an8}..we stopped labelling
and started writing.
327
00:33:01,960 --> 00:33:06,560
Detailed knowledge
and culture that had previously been
328
00:33:06,560 --> 00:33:11,800
passed down generation to generation
to generation was now able to
329
00:33:11,800 --> 00:33:14,680
be preserved in a completely
different way.
330
00:33:14,680 --> 00:33:18,080
And the thing with writing
is that like
331
00:33:18,080 --> 00:33:22,160
so many of the giant leaps forward
that we have made as a species, I'm
332
00:33:22,160 --> 00:33:25,760
thinking here about the invention
of agriculture and metalworks
333
00:33:25,760 --> 00:33:32,320
and the wheel, writing does seem
like an idea whose time had come,
334
00:33:32,320 --> 00:33:35,680
because it doesn't just
happen in Egypt.
335
00:33:39,760 --> 00:33:42,760
Again and again across the Earth,
336
00:33:42,760 --> 00:33:45,480
we invented forms of writing.
337
00:33:51,760 --> 00:33:56,360
Giving our facts, stories
and ideas lasting form.
338
00:34:03,520 --> 00:34:07,360
And we still have no conclusive
evidence as to how or even
339
00:34:07,360 --> 00:34:11,160
whether these events
influenced each other, or
340
00:34:11,160 --> 00:34:13,200
whether they happened organically,
341
00:34:13,200 --> 00:34:16,960
as a result of needing to keep
track of things at that scale.
342
00:34:16,960 --> 00:34:20,480
But however it happened, once
writing was a thing, once it was
343
00:34:20,480 --> 00:34:25,560
out there in the world, then nothing
would be the same ever again.
344
00:34:31,160 --> 00:34:33,160
Now, laws, customs
345
00:34:33,160 --> 00:34:37,320
and beliefs could be recorded
permanently in ink.
346
00:34:44,200 --> 00:34:46,800
But with over 700 symbols,
347
00:34:46,800 --> 00:34:50,200
this technology required
years of study to master...
348
00:34:51,640 --> 00:34:56,080
..and so was the sole preserve of
those trained to use it,
349
00:34:56,080 --> 00:34:59,040
scribes working for
the ruling class.
350
00:35:04,000 --> 00:35:07,840
And the ability to send out detailed
instructions to people across the
351
00:35:07,840 --> 00:35:14,600
land gave the rulers enormous power
to influence, instruct and build.
352
00:35:19,160 --> 00:35:22,840
In 2013, a team of archaeologists
were excavating
353
00:35:22,840 --> 00:35:25,360
a cave on the Red Sea coast...
354
00:35:27,800 --> 00:35:29,720
..when, hidden inside,
355
00:35:29,720 --> 00:35:33,920
they found ancient
fragments of inscribed papyrus.
356
00:35:40,160 --> 00:35:43,280
{\an8}Preserved there for over
4,000 years.
357
00:35:46,960 --> 00:35:50,160
It's believed to be
the oldest ever found.
358
00:35:55,120 --> 00:35:58,760
And a time capsule from the reign
of an iconic ruler.
359
00:36:00,480 --> 00:36:05,160
So, this is...this is your actual
excavation notebook from the time?
360
00:36:05,160 --> 00:36:08,840
Yeah, yeah. Every day,
I was recording the papyri,
361
00:36:08,840 --> 00:36:12,680
and we were surprised to find most
of them have the name of a king.
362
00:36:12,680 --> 00:36:16,800
{\an8}And this pharaoh is Khufu,
the builder of the Great Pyramid.
363
00:36:16,800 --> 00:36:18,120
Not a small pharaoh.
364
00:36:18,120 --> 00:36:20,960
All the material is giving
information about this very
365
00:36:20,960 --> 00:36:24,800
reign, which is the very beginning
of the Egyptian state, in fact.
366
00:36:24,800 --> 00:36:25,840
Yeah.
367
00:36:27,480 --> 00:36:31,280
Khufu ruled Egypt for almost
a quarter of a century.
368
00:36:32,960 --> 00:36:36,600
And one of world's most familiar
structures was built to
369
00:36:36,600 --> 00:36:41,960
honour him - the first
of the Great Pyramids of Giza.
370
00:36:44,400 --> 00:36:47,800
We had to wait till the very
end of the excavation
371
00:36:47,800 --> 00:36:51,320
to have the best-preserved papyri.
372
00:36:51,320 --> 00:36:54,720
- We only had a small piece
left untouched. - No!
373
00:36:54,720 --> 00:36:57,120
And all the papyri were
thrown inside...
374
00:36:57,120 --> 00:36:58,880
Into that one spot that was the very
last spot
375
00:36:58,880 --> 00:37:02,120
- that you decided to look in.
- Yeah, yeah.
376
00:37:02,120 --> 00:37:06,160
The team discovered
around 1,000 pieces of papyrus,
377
00:37:06,160 --> 00:37:09,440
revealing a vastly complex
construction project.
378
00:37:10,560 --> 00:37:11,760
- Wow! - Yeah.
379
00:37:11,760 --> 00:37:14,320
It belongs to
a kind of elite at that time,
380
00:37:14,320 --> 00:37:15,920
because we don't think that more
381
00:37:15,920 --> 00:37:20,200
than 1% of the...of the population
was able to read and write.
382
00:37:20,200 --> 00:37:23,160
It's a logbook,
and I can see in the small boxes
383
00:37:23,160 --> 00:37:25,800
the number of the day of the month,
and for each day,
384
00:37:25,800 --> 00:37:29,960
this official is giving
information about what he has done.
385
00:37:29,960 --> 00:37:33,520
For example, here, on the first
day of the month, they are
386
00:37:33,520 --> 00:37:37,400
sending a boat to Heliopolis,
to fetch the food for the workers.
387
00:37:37,400 --> 00:37:39,320
And when it arrives,
it's written in red,
388
00:37:39,320 --> 00:37:43,720
because it's much more important
for them than everything else.
389
00:37:43,720 --> 00:37:48,520
About 40 days, you have a precise
record of what he is doing.
390
00:37:49,800 --> 00:37:53,720
Egyptian extracted fine
limestone blocks that were used
391
00:37:53,720 --> 00:37:57,640
for the building of the outer casing
of the pyramids.
392
00:37:57,640 --> 00:38:01,400
So, what it is all about is that
they were bringing
393
00:38:01,400 --> 00:38:06,160
stones from the Tura quarries to
the pyramid of Khufu at the end
394
00:38:06,160 --> 00:38:08,040
of the reign of this king.
395
00:38:08,040 --> 00:38:14,280
So, this is...this is telling us how
they built the pyramids, basically.
396
00:38:14,280 --> 00:38:17,240
- Yeah, basically, yeah. - This is
the administration behind it all.
397
00:38:17,240 --> 00:38:19,800
That... That's absolutely
incredible.
398
00:38:19,800 --> 00:38:24,240
So, this is a snapshot in time
399
00:38:24,240 --> 00:38:26,800
of the building of
the Great Pyramid.
400
00:38:26,800 --> 00:38:29,160
- Mm. - And you found it.
401
00:38:33,040 --> 00:38:35,160
Without all those records, I think
402
00:38:35,160 --> 00:38:37,280
the pyramid would not
have been possible.
403
00:38:45,480 --> 00:38:48,600
You can't really overstate
the significance of finding
404
00:38:48,600 --> 00:38:54,840
a document like that, one from such
a pivotal moment in history.
405
00:38:54,840 --> 00:38:58,600
And when you read the translation,
you definitely do get
406
00:38:58,600 --> 00:39:02,960
a sense of what a logistical
feat it was,
407
00:39:02,960 --> 00:39:05,640
building these things.
408
00:39:05,640 --> 00:39:11,080
But you do also get a real
sense of how mundane
409
00:39:11,080 --> 00:39:13,160
and bureaucratic it all was.
410
00:39:13,160 --> 00:39:16,920
Just kind of ordinary humans
doing ordinary human things.
411
00:39:16,920 --> 00:39:22,680
Between the invention of writing
and the building of the pyramids,
412
00:39:22,680 --> 00:39:25,560
there were no major technological
advancements
413
00:39:25,560 --> 00:39:27,080
that we know of in Egypt.
414
00:39:29,720 --> 00:39:35,960
And so, for 4,500 years, people have
looked at these and just had their
415
00:39:35,960 --> 00:39:42,720
breath taken away, and wondered
how on earth were they built.
416
00:39:42,720 --> 00:39:48,720
And perhaps the answer is just this
simple - writing built the pyramids.
417
00:39:52,760 --> 00:39:56,800
And even though they were originally
built for the elites,
418
00:39:56,800 --> 00:40:01,080
they actually became
symbols of national identity,
419
00:40:01,080 --> 00:40:05,520
which bind huge groups of people
together on an unconscious level.
420
00:40:09,520 --> 00:40:15,160
The unit of human cooperation had
grown from tribe, to village,
421
00:40:15,160 --> 00:40:17,520
to town, to city...
422
00:40:20,640 --> 00:40:22,840
..and now, to nation.
423
00:40:31,800 --> 00:40:35,720
But alongside the emergence of these
nation states
424
00:40:35,720 --> 00:40:37,760
was a more sinister development.
425
00:40:38,800 --> 00:40:44,680
{\an8}What had once been tribal skirmishes
became state warfare...
426
00:40:47,680 --> 00:40:51,000
{\an8}..recorded by the victors in art
and writing.
427
00:40:53,360 --> 00:40:56,720
{\an8}The emerging superpowers began
launching military
428
00:40:56,720 --> 00:41:03,480
campaigns against their neighbours,
for land, resources and manpower.
429
00:41:05,280 --> 00:41:08,640
Bringing thousands of captives
back as slaves.
430
00:41:15,880 --> 00:41:20,640
Many of the early civilisations
follow this pattern of growth,
431
00:41:20,640 --> 00:41:26,120
innovation, writing
and an ever more stratified society.
432
00:41:30,320 --> 00:41:34,400
By 4,000 years ago, we'd clearly
made some massive strides to the
433
00:41:34,400 --> 00:41:38,960
modern world, with the rise of these
civilisations that were supporting
434
00:41:38,960 --> 00:41:44,280
so many more people, and about 70
million of us walking this planet.
435
00:41:45,760 --> 00:41:46,800
But...
436
00:41:48,080 --> 00:41:54,160
..the disparity in the human
condition had never been so wide.
437
00:41:54,160 --> 00:41:57,720
Some people were living gods,
and they would go on to build
438
00:41:57,720 --> 00:42:02,640
monuments like these to themselves
for centuries.
439
00:42:04,560 --> 00:42:06,840
But many more were slaves,
who were forced to
440
00:42:06,840 --> 00:42:11,440
live in the shadows of the splendour
that they'd helped to create.
441
00:42:13,440 --> 00:42:17,000
And humankind's powerful new tool,
writing...
442
00:42:18,040 --> 00:42:21,760
..still remained in the hands of
just a tiny number.
443
00:42:22,960 --> 00:42:25,800
If we were going to get to the
future, the here and now as you
444
00:42:25,800 --> 00:42:31,080
and I know it, it was going to
require a spark from somewhere else.
445
00:42:50,160 --> 00:42:55,200
Almost 4,000 years ago,
a small group of our ancestors were
446
00:42:55,200 --> 00:42:59,120
forced to make a journey to
one of the most inhospitable
447
00:42:59,120 --> 00:43:01,280
places on Earth.
448
00:43:02,640 --> 00:43:06,360
Through the baking, barren waste
449
00:43:06,360 --> 00:43:08,160
of the Sinai Desert.
450
00:43:10,800 --> 00:43:13,720
But here,
in this desolate landscape,
451
00:43:13,720 --> 00:43:15,720
they would change the world.
452
00:43:20,520 --> 00:43:26,880
This place is stunning and yet,
a complete and utter deathtrap.
453
00:43:27,960 --> 00:43:31,000
It was of very little
interest to the Egyptian elites.
454
00:43:32,360 --> 00:43:36,880
That is until someone found
something in these mountains.
455
00:43:38,360 --> 00:43:40,920
Lots and lots of copper.
456
00:43:42,360 --> 00:43:44,480
And this stuff, turquoise.
457
00:43:45,880 --> 00:43:50,680
{\an8}Raw materials that could be
transformed into jewels
458
00:43:50,680 --> 00:43:52,840
{\an8}and ornaments of great value...
459
00:44:01,080 --> 00:44:04,960
..if you could prize them
from this harsh landscape.
460
00:44:08,640 --> 00:44:12,560
Far to the north was the
tiny land of Retjenu.
461
00:44:13,600 --> 00:44:17,760
When Egypt demanded labourers for
this treacherous mining mission...
462
00:44:19,800 --> 00:44:23,560
..it was the unfortunate people
of this small powerless state,
463
00:44:23,560 --> 00:44:26,480
who had no choice
but to answer the call.
464
00:44:39,800 --> 00:44:44,400
I can't imagine what it would've
been like to be dragged here
465
00:44:44,400 --> 00:44:48,840
to work in the turquoise mines,
in the blazing heat,
466
00:44:48,840 --> 00:44:50,320
in the middle of nowhere.
467
00:44:54,520 --> 00:44:56,480
It must've been like being
dropped onto
468
00:44:56,480 --> 00:44:58,240
the surface of a different planet.
469
00:45:05,960 --> 00:45:09,560
And even the Egyptians
probably wondered
470
00:45:09,560 --> 00:45:11,160
if they would make it back home.
471
00:45:19,880 --> 00:45:22,920
The Egyptians turned
to their gods for protection.
472
00:45:24,000 --> 00:45:28,000
And here,
high up on a desolate plateau,
473
00:45:28,000 --> 00:45:33,840
at the furthest edge of their world,
they built a temple to ask for it.
474
00:45:39,960 --> 00:45:42,920
A monument which has survived
remarkably
475
00:45:42,920 --> 00:45:46,520
unscathed for almost 4,000 years.
476
00:45:49,560 --> 00:45:53,240
Frozen in time
by the bone-dry desert.
477
00:46:03,800 --> 00:46:07,000
This temple is dedicated
to the goddess Hathor,
478
00:46:07,000 --> 00:46:09,560
who is the goddess of turquoise
and miners.
479
00:46:09,560 --> 00:46:12,360
And they were documenting
and celebrating their presence,
480
00:46:12,360 --> 00:46:14,640
and worshipping their gods.
481
00:46:14,640 --> 00:46:20,480
And each one of these pillars
represents one of the missions.
482
00:46:20,480 --> 00:46:21,560
And they are hierarchical.
483
00:46:21,560 --> 00:46:27,240
So, you've got the Pharaoh at the
top, and it goes through the ranks.
484
00:46:27,240 --> 00:46:30,120
You've got stonemasons,
etc, etc, etc,
485
00:46:30,120 --> 00:46:34,360
until this is the brother
of the Prince of Retjenu.
486
00:46:34,360 --> 00:46:37,720
Retjenu is where the
miners came from.
487
00:46:37,720 --> 00:46:42,840
And yet, the miners are not here
on this pillar, but they would have
488
00:46:42,840 --> 00:46:46,440
come through here, they would've
seen this grandeur, this splendour.
489
00:46:46,440 --> 00:46:50,160
Seeing these impenetrable
Egyptian hieroglyphics...
490
00:46:51,480 --> 00:46:55,960
..the foreign workers also wanted to
immortalise their presence here.
491
00:46:59,080 --> 00:47:00,560
But there was a problem.
492
00:47:00,560 --> 00:47:03,600
They weren't part of the elites
and so they couldn't write.
493
00:47:07,960 --> 00:47:11,960
So, the illiterate miners did what
we humans have always done.
494
00:47:15,000 --> 00:47:19,360
They copied what they'd seen
and made it their own.
495
00:47:32,360 --> 00:47:37,160
This is one of the turquoise mines,
and if you look, all over the walls
496
00:47:37,160 --> 00:47:42,080
there are these scratches from where
the workers' pickaxes have been.
497
00:47:43,520 --> 00:47:46,280
But here,
something else is going on.
498
00:47:46,280 --> 00:47:51,640
There are about 30 or 40 of them
all over this place.
499
00:47:51,640 --> 00:47:53,960
Some of these have been
copied from hieroglyphics,
500
00:47:53,960 --> 00:47:57,200
but some are completely new,
and here's how the system works.
501
00:47:57,200 --> 00:48:01,680
You take the symbol
and you say the name,
502
00:48:01,680 --> 00:48:06,040
but you only take the first sound,
and you discard the rest.
503
00:48:06,040 --> 00:48:08,200
So, for example, this here.
504
00:48:08,200 --> 00:48:11,880
This is an ox, you can
see the horns and the head here.
505
00:48:11,880 --> 00:48:14,840
To the miners,
this would be "aleph".
506
00:48:14,840 --> 00:48:20,080
Now, aleph, just take the first
sound, "a", discard the rest.
507
00:48:20,080 --> 00:48:22,680
This is another symbol.
This is the symbol for house.
508
00:48:22,680 --> 00:48:24,680
To them it would be "bet",
509
00:48:24,680 --> 00:48:28,120
so you just take the "be"
sound at the beginning.
510
00:48:28,120 --> 00:48:30,600
And if you put these two together,
511
00:48:30,600 --> 00:48:33,520
you start understanding what you're
actually looking at here.
512
00:48:33,520 --> 00:48:37,360
This is the birthplace
of the alphabet.
513
00:48:41,880 --> 00:48:45,960
This new script was simpler to learn
than hieroglyphics, because
514
00:48:45,960 --> 00:48:50,840
the alphabet did not represent
complete words, but spoken sounds.
515
00:48:54,080 --> 00:48:59,120
It was able to convey any thought
with only 20 to 30 symbols.
516
00:49:02,080 --> 00:49:06,280
These miners are the ones
who gave birth to this,
517
00:49:06,280 --> 00:49:09,400
and their legacy is still with us
today, and is so important.
518
00:49:15,600 --> 00:49:18,080
In the centuries
and millennia that followed...
519
00:49:21,000 --> 00:49:23,400
..nearly all the early
written languages
520
00:49:23,400 --> 00:49:27,520
fell into obscurity as those
civilisations waned.
521
00:49:30,360 --> 00:49:35,240
But the alphabet would only grow,
spreading across the planet,
522
00:49:35,240 --> 00:49:39,320
reshaping and branching into many
different forms.
523
00:49:41,880 --> 00:49:46,680
Eventually becoming the most
wildly used writing system
524
00:49:46,680 --> 00:49:48,520
in the world.
525
00:49:54,480 --> 00:49:59,360
Allowing millions, and then
billions, of ordinary humans
526
00:49:59,360 --> 00:50:04,400
to access knowledge, to communicate
and to document their thoughts,
527
00:50:04,400 --> 00:50:08,800
and their existence,
in every corner of the globe.
528
00:50:12,280 --> 00:50:17,080
For me, this is one of the most
powerful moments in the human story,
529
00:50:17,080 --> 00:50:22,640
because unbeknownst to the underdog,
they had changed the world.
530
00:50:22,640 --> 00:50:27,360
One of civilisation's most profound
and revolutionary ideas didn't
531
00:50:27,360 --> 00:50:33,560
come from an educated elite, it came
from inside these dark and miserable
532
00:50:33,560 --> 00:50:39,320
mines, through the copying and
innovating of lowly migrant workers.
533
00:51:02,480 --> 00:51:06,160
The invention of writing marks
an ending and a beginning.
534
00:51:08,320 --> 00:51:12,520
Because prehistory,
so the period before writing,
535
00:51:12,520 --> 00:51:16,760
we could only really piece together
using fragments and artefacts,
536
00:51:16,760 --> 00:51:20,520
and now recorded time,
history, had begun.
537
00:51:21,920 --> 00:51:26,200
And what we see is that
as writing spreads,
538
00:51:26,200 --> 00:51:29,920
the pace of human innovation
accelerates.
539
00:51:33,480 --> 00:51:37,360
Because that is the power
of being able to document
540
00:51:37,360 --> 00:51:38,920
and lay down knowledge.
541
00:51:49,360 --> 00:51:54,560
Generation after generation
building on the last, retaining
542
00:51:54,560 --> 00:51:56,400
and accumulating knowledge.
543
00:51:58,600 --> 00:52:02,720
Stone became bronze,
iron became silicon...
544
00:52:05,240 --> 00:52:08,160
..and gradually,
we built the future.
545
00:52:10,400 --> 00:52:15,040
This is the very final
bone of our series.
546
00:52:15,040 --> 00:52:18,960
This is actually
one of the three ear bones,
547
00:52:18,960 --> 00:52:22,760
and just like every human bone
we've encountered,
548
00:52:22,760 --> 00:52:29,040
whether Homo sapiens or otherwise,
it represents a person.
549
00:52:29,040 --> 00:52:35,120
This individual had a family,
parents, perhaps children, friends.
550
00:52:35,120 --> 00:52:38,800
But what's particularly
remarkable is how much
551
00:52:38,800 --> 00:52:42,800
we now know about these ancient
ancestors of ours,
552
00:52:42,800 --> 00:52:47,400
thanks to modern temples
of knowledge, like this one.
553
00:52:47,400 --> 00:52:51,560
The scientists here are able
to extract DNA from an individual
554
00:52:51,560 --> 00:52:54,960
who, in this case,
lived about 1,600 years ago,
555
00:52:54,960 --> 00:52:59,600
from a piece of bone that is
so tiny, delicate and precious,
556
00:52:59,600 --> 00:53:05,240
and they're able to ask questions,
like whether industrialisation and
557
00:53:05,240 --> 00:53:11,360
agriculture actually affected our
DNA, whether we're still evolving.
558
00:53:12,960 --> 00:53:18,040
And to think that our knowledge
has got to the point where we're
559
00:53:18,040 --> 00:53:23,160
even able to entertain such
huge questions
560
00:53:23,160 --> 00:53:25,560
from something so tiny...
561
00:53:27,880 --> 00:53:29,880
..for me there's a poetry in that.
562
00:53:38,360 --> 00:53:42,840
We can look back on when nature
and luck were on our side...
563
00:53:44,120 --> 00:53:46,240
..and when they weren't.
564
00:53:46,240 --> 00:53:48,120
Where we made the right decisions...
565
00:53:50,040 --> 00:53:51,680
..and where we went wrong.
566
00:53:53,920 --> 00:53:56,080
But what underpins our story
567
00:53:56,080 --> 00:54:01,880
and makes it unique is far more
than just our will to survive.
568
00:54:03,120 --> 00:54:07,280
It's our cultural drive to come
together, to learn from
569
00:54:07,280 --> 00:54:13,280
and inspire each other, to go
further than what has gone before.
570
00:54:16,040 --> 00:54:21,080
We are the very last species of
human to walk this Earth,
571
00:54:21,080 --> 00:54:26,720
and the most fascinating thing
about our 300,000-year-long story
572
00:54:26,720 --> 00:54:30,240
is that we have no idea
how much is left.
573
00:54:30,240 --> 00:54:36,560
Is this basically the whole
of our story, or are we on the first
574
00:54:36,560 --> 00:54:40,480
act, or even prologue,
with a long future ahead of us?
575
00:54:40,480 --> 00:54:42,720
We have no idea.
576
00:54:42,720 --> 00:54:46,800
But we are one species
with one future.
577
00:54:46,800 --> 00:54:50,840
Now, you could never have
predicted how we got here,
578
00:54:50,840 --> 00:54:54,680
and where we go next
is up to all of us.
579
00:55:25,360 --> 00:55:29,240
In this episode,
we filmed at Serabit el-Khadim,
580
00:55:29,240 --> 00:55:33,680
a 4,000-year-old mining
complex on the Sinai Peninsula.
581
00:55:35,360 --> 00:55:39,120
Where ancient messages were
scrolled on the walls of the mines.
582
00:55:41,080 --> 00:55:46,160
The archaeologists who discovered
this mystery script in 1905
583
00:55:46,160 --> 00:55:51,520
called it Proto-Sinaitic,
but they had no idea what it said.
584
00:55:51,520 --> 00:55:53,560
And until they could read it,
585
00:55:53,560 --> 00:55:56,080
they were ignorant of its true
significance.
586
00:55:59,560 --> 00:56:03,200
A remarkable artefact,
now in the British Museum, would be
587
00:56:03,200 --> 00:56:06,680
the vital clue to cracking
the ancient code.
588
00:56:08,160 --> 00:56:11,360
This amazing object was
discovered in the Hathor
589
00:56:11,360 --> 00:56:15,200
temple in Serabit el-Khadim,
close to the turquoise mines.
590
00:56:15,200 --> 00:56:19,600
It's a so-called sphinx and dates
roughly about 4,000 years old.
591
00:56:22,560 --> 00:56:27,520
Linguists already knew how to read
ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics.
592
00:56:27,520 --> 00:56:30,120
What the sphynx gave them
was a key to decipher
593
00:56:30,120 --> 00:56:31,920
the script they couldn't read.
594
00:56:36,440 --> 00:56:40,480
{\an8}So, if you look at the piece,
we have inscription on both sides,
595
00:56:40,480 --> 00:56:42,200
{\an8}and I'll show you this side first,
596
00:56:42,200 --> 00:56:44,760
{\an8}where we only have the
Proto-Sinaitic script.
597
00:56:46,520 --> 00:56:50,120
And then if I turn the sphynx,
this is the most important and most
598
00:56:50,120 --> 00:56:54,560
fascinating side, because here
we have then two different scripts.
599
00:56:54,560 --> 00:56:56,760
On the bottom, Proto-Sinaitic,
600
00:56:56,760 --> 00:56:59,120
and then you see the hieroglyphic
right on top.
601
00:57:01,800 --> 00:57:05,440
The message in hieroglyphics
at the top was a dedication
602
00:57:05,440 --> 00:57:07,440
to the goddess Hathor.
603
00:57:07,440 --> 00:57:11,480
Linguists deduced that the
script below in Proto-Sinaitic
604
00:57:11,480 --> 00:57:13,280
was saying the same thing.
605
00:57:15,360 --> 00:57:20,000
We can start with the hieroglyphs,
which reads "Beloved of Hathor",
606
00:57:20,000 --> 00:57:22,400
so we have now the Egyptian
goddess Hathor.
607
00:57:22,400 --> 00:57:26,320
Then we have a second part,
which allowed us to decipher
608
00:57:26,320 --> 00:57:30,120
the Proto-Sinaitic language, because
we know it was the same message.
609
00:57:30,120 --> 00:57:33,360
So, we were very lucky
we found this amazing object.
610
00:57:33,360 --> 00:57:36,920
This is the kind of
lottery win for the linguists.
611
00:57:38,080 --> 00:57:41,800
These short, corresponding phrases
were the key to decoding
612
00:57:41,800 --> 00:57:43,040
the miners' writing.
613
00:57:45,200 --> 00:57:48,640
The probably most important
aspect of Proto-Sinaitic is that
614
00:57:48,640 --> 00:57:51,840
it's an alphabetic script,
and if you look at these signs,
615
00:57:51,840 --> 00:57:56,440
you probably will not recognise any
alphabetic signs we use today,
616
00:57:56,440 --> 00:58:00,840
but the cow head that you see
here becomes our A.
617
00:58:04,520 --> 00:58:09,880
Proto-Sinaitic gave birth to the
modern alphabet, and unlocked
618
00:58:09,880 --> 00:58:14,720
the origins of the most widespread
form of writing in the world.
54986
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