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  2. The Greek Dark Ages (c. 1200800 BC), were earlier regarded as two continuous periods of Greek history: the Postpalatial Bronze Age (c. 1200–1050 BC) and the Prehistoric Iron Age or Early Iron Age (c. 1050–800 BC), which included all the ceramic phases from the Protogeometric to the Middle Geometric I and lasted until the beginning of the ...

  3. Jul 27, 2023 · The Greek Dark Age (c. 1200 to c. 800 BCE, overlapping with the Iron Age, c. 1200-550 BCE) is the modern-day term for the period in Greek history following the Bronze Age Collapse when the Mycenaean Civilization fell and the Linear B writing system was lost, giving the era the designation "dark" because no contemporary written accounts of it ...

    • Joshua J. Mark
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  4. Invasions, destruction and possible population movements during the collapse of the Bronze Age, beginning c. 1200 BC. The Late Bronze Age collapse was a time of widespread societal collapse during the 12th century BC associated with environmental change, mass migration, and the destruction of cities.

  5. It lasted from c. 1200 BC – c. 600 AD and can be subdivided into the following periods: Greek Dark Ages (or Iron Age, Homeric Age), 1100–800 BC; Archaic period, 800–490 BC; Classical period, 490–323 BC; Hellenistic period, 323–146 BC; Roman Greece, covering the period of the Roman conquest of Greece from 146 BC – 324 AD

  6. The Greek Dark Age is a period in Greek history that lasted from about 1200 BC to 750 BC. During this time, the various Greek city-states underwent major cultural, political and military shifts. The period is known as the Greek 'Dark Age' because very little written evidence survives from this time.

  7. The Problem of the Mycenaean Collapse. The collapse in Greece and the Aegean at the end of the Late Bronze Age c. 1200 bce has long been a mystery—in terms of what exactly happened, who was involved, their actions and motivations, and what the structural factors were.

  8. May 20, 2015 · In 1177 BC, you trace the social, economic, and cultural links between the civilizations of the Eastern Mediterranean and Near East — Egypt, Minoan Crete, Mycenaean Greece, the Hittite Empire, Mittani, Assyria, and Kassite Babylonia — and their cataclysmic demise during the late second millennium BC.

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