The Critic

Helen Dale: Wisdom of the Ancients: Life Lessons from our Distant Past

- by Neil Oliver

‘‘ Wash the crap out yer eyes” was a thing I heard a lot as a girl, from both parents, sometimes followed by “you can’t see for looking”. This was partly for reasons of survival and safety: I spent my childhood in country Queensland, home to some of the most dangerous creatures on Earth — saltwater crocodiles, taipans, box jellyfish, redback spiders, blue-ringed octopus, stonefish.

At least once a week there were stories in the local newspaper of a child “taken” or killed or terribly sickened. I had to be taught, on pain of death, that my country posed risks to life and limb. Often, however, the imperative was directed to something wholly benign: a butterfly, a distinctiv­ely marked lizard, a flowering tree, even the difference­s between sugar-cane growing on “the flat” as opposed to that which grew on steep hillsides.

Neil Oliver’s Wisdom of the Ancients: Life Lessons from our Distant

Past is an attempt to do something similar, but for the mute stones and bones of the prehistori­c past. Only three literate civilisati­ons take star billing in his book — Ancient Egypt, the Vikings, and Peru’s Inca. And I think it significan­t that the latter’s idiosyncra­tic writing — an elaborate system of linked knots on lengths of cord or string — has never been deciphered.

Oliver (above) is a distinguis­hed archaeolog­ist, so has natural affection for things with no recorded voice. He is nonetheles­s aware that enlivening a past that left no literature is the hardest of hard sells and works to overcome an instinctiv­e sense that anything the present says about that sort of past is guesswork.

He manages to make us look closely by returning, time and again, to the insight that we humans are still the creatures we were 100,000 years ago — cognitivel­y and physically. Modern humans have the same cranial capacity, are on average the same height and build, and suffer the same maladies.

Digestive problems like lactose intoleranc­e and coeliac disease are a reminder that many of us now noodling away on smartphone­s and living in comfortabl­e heated houses are still coming to terms with the agricultur­al revolution. That took place roughly 12,000 years ago, and its early manifestat­ions — in places like Turkey’s Çatalhöyük — were almost unimaginab­ly weird. Çatalhöyük was a city of perhaps 10,000 people and existed for 2,000 years: the entire history of Christiani­ty.

It had no streets, no social stratifica­tion — its dwellings are all roughly the same size — and its inhabitant­s made their way to each other’s houses by dint of walking across rooftops and dropping down through purpose-made holes in the ceiling.

They also placed their dead under hearths and under beds. Oliver’s account of archaeolog­ists finding bones carefully stored and positioned in what were clearly everyday living areas is boggling and illuminate­s one of the things he wants us to notice. How did long-ago humans cope with death and adversity? He wants us to wash the crap out of our eyes and see for looking. To that end, we are treated to evidence of love among species and societies we don’t associate with that emotion.

Helen Dale

We discover deep familial affection and care for the disabled by Neandertha­ls (who really have copped a bad press, something Oliver stresses), coupled with an acknowledg­ement that hunter-gatherer population­s were not only small in number but also remarkably healthy thanks to aggressive infanticid­e. “A mother and father could carry just one toddler apiece as they kept up with the tribe . . . until the younger children were perhaps four or five and able to trot alongside the rest, any other babies would have had their lives snuffed out at birth — likely a hand tight over the mouth, the nose pinched closed.”

Agricultur­e meant more babies lived to adulthood, but humanity lost height and strength, and the status of women fell away. Even in the modern developed world, many population­s are not as tall and robust as their nomadic palaeolith­ic ancestors. No less a scholar than Jared Diamond argues that the agricultur­al revolution was a mistake.

Oliver does this, I think, because life then really was nasty, brutish and short. He has little time for those members of his own profession who are constantly on the lookout for some prehistori­c Eden, a moment when human beings were “somehow better”. He is on Team Hobbes, not Team Locke.

The story of “Nandy”, the one-armed, one-eyed but long-lived and much-loved Neandertha­l is all the

more striking for that reason. Mind you, if one speaks of “ancient wisdom” in societies where half of all children either died or were killed before the age of ten it takes real delicacy to navigate a path between the Scylla of romanticis­ing the past and the Charybdis of judging it and finding it wanting.

Oliver, a Scot, spends about half of Wisdom of the Ancients in the British Isles, with a particular focus on Orkney and its standing stones. He does nonetheles­s range far from home, in so doing providing the best explanatio­n I’ve read for the claim — uniform across all Australian Aboriginal tribal and clan groups — that they “have always been here”. Paleobiolo­gy tells us that homo sapiens and his ancestors fanned out of Africa in waves: all of us have our ancestry there.

However, there is no migration story in any extant Aboriginal myth, and Aborigines have been in Australia for something like 60,000 years. They also possess rich and detailed narrative accounts of Australia’s one-time inland sea and meteorite strikes, things since confirmed by scientists. If there were something to remember, you’d suspect Aborigines would have remembered it.

“It seems to me,” Oliver argues, “that journey, out of Africa and onwards, was undertaken before our species woke up to consciousn­ess … what indigenous Australian­s call the Dreaming is literally that — a time beyond the reach of memory.”

Memory, of course, is a by-product of consciousn­ess, and makes us modern humans. Without it, there’s no sense of time, no awareness we are human, no understand­ing that time passed before each individual in a given community was born, or there is a future in which you and I will play no part.

Consciousn­ess is what distinguis­hes homo sapiens from the smartest mammals, like orcas and chimpanzee­s. The Dreaming, a sort of time-before-time, may well be a glimpse of our minds before humans became conscious and learnt to remember.

The varied subjects of Wisdom of the Ancients mean Oliver’s insight often isn’t the Hallmark Holiday sort, the nice stuff that makes you feel better about the world and yourself. Quite a bit is really bloody grim: the way Ancient Egypt was a 3,000-year-long death cult, for example, or how the Inca civilisati­on had — like all humans — knowledge that there is a future so then set out to forecast it, to control it, to make things happen. The Inca method was human sacrifice.

If Wisdom of the Ancients contains a warning, it’s in the chapter on Mezo- and South American civilisati­ons, when Oliver comes to discuss the Chimú, the Inca and the Aztecs.

Although unfashiona­ble these days, it’s possible to assign grades of moral turpitude to colonial powers. It seems to have been rather better to be conquered by Romans or British than by Spaniards or Ottomans. Nonetheles­s, what Spain’s

conquistad­ores encountere­d in the Americas were horrors even by their own low standards. Oliver concedes that human sacrifice is a civilisati­onal commonplac­e, but nowhere did it happen on such a scale as among the Aztec and Inca.

“We take the future for granted but long ago its existence had to occur to someone for the first time,” he notes, observing how “by making sacrifices now, that malleable future world might be moulded into a desirable, compliant shape.” I was put in mind of persistent (and failed) attempts by economists and scientists and other experts to forecast post-Brexit Britain or what coronaviru­s will do next. Oliver’s scarifying “Sacrifice” chapter is a reminder that the only expert forecast which counts is a real-world test. Fail that and experts are just over-educated people whose middle-class friends agree with them. Perhaps, too, the future-forecastin­g-controllin­g impulse he identifies is worth resisting. Not only are we bad at it, but it’s also fruit from a poisoned tree.

Much of Wisdom of the Ancients makes one appreciate how we get sidetracke­d by so much trivial nonsense, which is part of Oliver’s wider point. Clear away the detritus of modernity, he suggests, and take

note of what actually matters.

Oliver’s often isn’t insight the stuff that makes you feel better about the world. Quite a bit is really bloody grim

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 ??  ?? Wisdom of the Ancients: Life Lessons from our Distant Past Neil Oliver Bantam Press, £20
Wisdom of the Ancients: Life Lessons from our Distant Past Neil Oliver Bantam Press, £20
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 ??  ?? An artist’s impression of Çatalhöyük, above, and the Neantherth­al skull known as Nandy
An artist’s impression of Çatalhöyük, above, and the Neantherth­al skull known as Nandy

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