

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 at Birmingham Newman University, explores the vibrant multicultural exchanges at the edges of ancient civilizations. He reveals how borderlands like Naucratis and Hadrian's Wall were not just frontiers but thriving hubs of intermarriage and cultural blending. Rees discusses the significance of sites like Megiddo in trade and the communal identities shaped by events like the Lake Turkana massacre. With fascinating insights into daily life and the unique characters of these regions, Rees redefines our understanding of the ancient world.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Center Bias Hides Everyday Lives
- Ancient history is biased toward elites and cultural centers, leaving most people unseen.
- Owen Rees argues we must shift focus to borderlands to understand everyday lives and interactions.
Massacre And Monument At Lake Turkana
- Archaeologists found 27 skeletons bound and brutally killed at Lake Turkana, including a pregnant woman.
- Rees uses this massacre to show brutal clashes but contrasts it with later pillar monuments showing pastoral communal identity.
Frontiers Hold Daily Life Not Just Ideology
- Egyptian frontier forts show both imperial ideology and everyday cultural blending.
- Nubian cooking pots and intermarriage in Egyptian forts reveal local continuity despite political change.