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World History Encyclopedia
World History Encyclopedia
158 episodes
1 week ago

We are a non-profit organization publishing the world's most-read history encyclopedia. Our mission is to engage people with cultural heritage and to improve history education worldwide.

Subscribe to our Podcast:

  • Spotify
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Show more...
Education
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All content for World History Encyclopedia is the property of World History Encyclopedia and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

We are a non-profit organization publishing the world's most-read history encyclopedia. Our mission is to engage people with cultural heritage and to improve history education worldwide.

Subscribe to our Podcast:

  • Spotify
  • Apple Podcasts
  • Google Podcasts
  • Soundcloud
Show more...
Education
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Agriculture in the Fertile Crescent & Mesopotamia
World History Encyclopedia
15 minutes 22 seconds
10 months ago
Agriculture in the Fertile Crescent & Mesopotamia

Explore the pivotal role of agriculture in shaping human history in our latest episode. Journey back to the ancient Near East, where the Fertile Crescent is celebrated as the birthplace of agriculture. Discover how the domestication of plants and animals in regions like Mesopotamia and the Levant led to the first large-scale cities and empires. This cradle of civilization, enriched by fertile soil and rivers like the Euphrates and Tigris, witnessed innovations such as artificial irrigation, crop rotation, and the use of plows, which transformed semi-nomadic groups into permanent agricultural societies.

Delve into how agriculture's surplus production was essential for the emergence of urban centers and complex societies. In Mesopotamia, cereal grains became a cornerstone for taxation, supporting centralized governments and enabling trade and urbanization. The podcast underscores how agriculture not only sustained growing populations but also laid the foundation for specialized trades and empires, ultimately fueling human progress and civilization's advancement across the globe.

Written and read by Jan van der Crabben. Original article: https://www.worldhistory.org/article/9/agriculture-in-the-fertile-crescent--mesopotamia/

World History Encyclopedia

We are a non-profit organization publishing the world's most-read history encyclopedia. Our mission is to engage people with cultural heritage and to improve history education worldwide.

Subscribe to our Podcast:

  • Spotify
  • Apple Podcasts
  • Google Podcasts
  • Soundcloud