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Owen Rees, "The Far Edges of the Known World: Life Beyond the Borders of Ancient Civilization" (Norton, 2025)

Sep 15, 2025
Owen Rees, an ancient historian and lecturer, dives into life at the boundaries of ancient civilization. He challenges the notion of borders being merely barbaric, showcasing vibrant multicultural hubs through archaeological findings. Discover tales of an enterprising sex worker in Egypt and gambling soldiers at Hadrian’s Wall. Rees reveals how trade and cultural exchanges formed complex societies and redefines history by highlighting marginalized voices. His insights transform our understanding of how diverse communities thrived beyond the perceived edges of civilization.
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INSIGHT

Center Bias Skews Ancient History

  • Ancient history research centers on elite urban sources and misses most people's lives on the periphery.
  • Owen Rees shifts focus to borderlands to reveal diverse, familiar-but-different human experiences.
ANECDOTE

Massacre And Monumental Pastoralists

  • At Lake Turkana archaeologists found 27 tied skeletons, including a pregnant woman seated and bound in a ditch.
  • Nearby pillar sites show pastoralists built repeated monumental burial sites, challenging sedentary-only monument theories.
INSIGHT

Frontiers: Power And Everyday Mixing

  • Egyptian frontier forts served both as imperial statements and as everyday multicultural communities.
  • Nubian cooking pots in Egyptian garrisons indicate intermarriage and cultural continuity despite political rhetoric.
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