Michael Scott is the author of the new book Ancient Worlds: A Global History of Antiquity. His other books include Delphi, and he has presented programs for National Geographic and the BBC, among others. He teaches classics and ancient history at the University of Warwick, and he lives in London.
Q:
How did you come up with the concept for your new book, and how do you see the
interconnections among people in the ancient world?
A:
This book came about following a number of different research projects focused
in the Mediterranean world, in all of which I kept coming up against the fact
that to understand the Mediterranean properly, I had to look outside it.
I
realised that looking at “world” with such artificial geographical boundaries
simply was not helping me to understanding what really went on, how people
thought and what the experience of that world really was like.
Hence
ancient worlds was born. Interconnections were crucial to the way people lived
and defined their sense of identity, as well as to their understanding of the
world around them.
Q:
You divide the book into three sections focusing on politics, war, and
religion. How did you decide on the organization of the book?
A:
This is the most difficult step with global history – how do you make the story
manageable without creating your own artificial boundaries – either temporal or
geographical.
To
me, these three moments in time – end 6th century BC, 3-2nd century BCE and 4th
century CE – seemed to me fascinating moments when all the parts of the ancient
world was changing - sometimes independently
of one another and sometimes because of one another.
And
those moments in time seemed to me to be about different things: politics,
warfare and empire building, and religious change.
Q:
What sort of research did you need to undertake to write this book, and was
there anything that particularly surprised you?
A:
You have to be prepared to immerse yourself in worlds you are not familiar with
and take the time to understand them – both the ancient evidence, and the
modern scholarly arguments. Then you need to start building the connections as
you seem them.
What
surprised me was how generous people were with their time in helping me to
understand these worlds better. I engaged with scholars from around the world
who were specialists in their different areas to help me make sure I had
understood their individuals worlds properly and to get their reaction to my
arguments and ideas. They were all really excited about the project and [gave]
selflessly of their time.
Q:
What lessons do you see from the ancient world that apply to relations among
people and countries today?
A:
To remember quite simply that interactions between cultures – whether it be
migration, trade, war, or the movement of ideas – is nothing new. It has been
essential to our human story from its very beginning.
Q:
What are you working on now?
A:
I have just finished two new TV projects for the BBC in the UK – one a three-part
series looking at the histories of Naples, Venice and Florence in Italy and
another a two part series on the history of the island of Sicily from ancient
to present day.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
I am an honorary citizen of the town of Delphi in Greece – thanks to my earlier
work on the famous oracle and sanctuary there – it was a place where people
came to from all over the ancient world (the Mediterranean and beyond). You
could say my interest in global history started then!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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