Understanding Iraq
The Whole Sweep of Iraqi History, from Genghis Khan's Mongols to the Ottoman Turks to the British Mandate to the Ameri
Chapter OneAncient Iraq
Ancestors of inhabitants of today's Iraq began to emerge from
the long shadows of prehistory about twelve thousand years ago.
We cannot see them clearly, but we have some notion of how
they lived. Gathered in groups of fifty or so people, they ranged
along the slopes of the mountains that divide modern Iraq and
Syria from Turkey. They did not live in permanent villages but
sheltered under lean-tos that were covered with the skins of animals.
The men hunted wild animals while the women gathered
wild grasses from which they extracted the seed and pounded
them into digestible bits.
Using crude sickles, faced with flint chips, they scoured the
valleys to collect every edible thing, and, driven by hunger, they
ate everything they found. Where archaeologists and paleobotanists
have made studies of their campsites, they have found
more than a hundred different kinds of seed. Animals and seed
were usually plentiful, but each day brought risk. Their besetting
fear must have been famine. Although on average their lives
were reasonabl ... read full excerpt from: Understanding Iraq ebook