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The
Year Ten Hundred
The Way of Life at the Last Millennium
Written
by
Craig Ruff,
Public Sector Consultants Inc.
Mankind
stands at a crossroad. One path leads to despair and utter
hopelessness; the other, to total extinction. Let us pray
that we have the wisdom to choose correctly.
Woody
Allen, commencement speech
Americans
have been astoundingly sluggish in planning for the millennium.
Our passion seems to begin and stop at the Y2K computer problem.
Inasmuch as humans are the only species that cares a whit
about the calendar, the approach and passing of the year 2000
ought to inspire a bounty of reflection and celebration.
To begin with, let’s consider the way we will
identify time in the wake of the millennium. We call the year
preceding the millennium nineteen ninety-nine.
Past centennial years we know as fifteen hundred,
eighteen hundred, or nineteen hundred.
What then should we call the year 2000? Simply two thousand?
I think not. The word thousand is never sounded out
in the naming of years. For consistency’s sake, we should
refer to the millennial year as twenty hundred, though
most people probably will use the phrase two thousand;
similarly, when speaking of the year 1000, we should call
it ten hundred.
We call this decade the
nineties, and frequently we refer back to the
twentiesor the sixties. What shall we call
the next decade? A number of ideas are circulating, though
no consensus has emerged. New York Times columnist
William Safire suggests the aughts, which means the
zeros. In the past, the firrst decade of our century
was called similarly the aughties. Another New York
Times columnist on language, Jack Rosenthal, thinks that
this term sounds creak and old-fashioned. Rosenthal favors
the ’OOs, pronounced ohs. Soon we may be forecasting
the aught-two or oh-two gubernatorial election,
as you please. We could be prophesying the economy of the
aughts, aughties, or ohs. The choice is yours, or yores.
The millennial marking of
the year 2000 A.D. results from the Christian dating of time
from the birth of Christ. Religion contributes the marking
of time in most other major civilizations as well. As in so
many other areas, the various religions do not bother with
cross-cultural consistency. Counting from the year of creation,1
or 3761 B.C., Jews number the Christian calendar’s second
millennium as the year 5760, a number which lips to 5761 on
Rosh Hashanah. Islam’s calendar begins in 622 A.D., the year
of the hegira, or Mohammed’s migration from Mecca to
Medina; hence Islam dates the upcoming millennium as 1378
A.H. (anno hegirae). Muslims in Saudi Arabia, Yemen,
and several other areas of the Persian Gulf stick strictly
to a lunar year, celebrating 1420 A.H. in 2000 A.D. Buddhists
commemorate the year 2543. In China, each cycle of 60 lunar
years is divided among twelve animals, 2000 being the year
of the dragon. (In a rare 0t of tolerance, Chinese communists
in the late 1940s permitted use of both the lunar and Gregorian
calendars.) But for those using
the Christian-based calendar, the end of the century and the
new millennium is an appropriate point to consider how far
we have advanced as a civilization. To do so, we might examine
the state of Western civilization in the year 1000—the previous
millennium—as a means of measuring this progress. This entails
picturing a world in which words such as newspaper,
mail, concrete, fork,
spoon, sewer, clock, button,
cotton, windmill, compass,
and dictionary have no meaning. The task is not
an easy one.
I have learned much from
and been greatly entertained by several particularly excellent
writings on the period, which are listed at the end of this
essay. These sources are Eurocentric because much of what
we know in the West about civilization in 1000 A.D. is confined
to European experience. Asia, most particularly China, was
thriving culturally but isolated. Little has been written
in or translated into the English language about everyday
life there. The same holds true for the heavily populated
African continent and sparsely populated North and South American
and Australian continents.
The lack of information in
the West on everyday life in the many cultures outside Europe
in the period is particularly vexing because the Chinese,
Mayan, Aztec, Ghanaian, Byzantine, and Islamic cultures of
1000 A.D. were indisputably more advanced than the cultures
of Europe (at least of Western Europe). Many of the intellectually
and economically wealthy of the eleventh century were the
artists, artisans, politicians, inventors, scientists, scholars,
traders, and educators living in parts of the globe we now
condescendingly describe as the "third world." China’s
industrial technology surpassed Europe’s even into the fifteenth
century, and its consumer goods included things utterly foreign
to most Europeans in 1000: cast iron, fans, umbrellas, rich
clothing, lanterns, napkins, playing cards, money, and toilet
paper.
This is not to suggest that
there is an excess of information on European culture
in this period. It is not easy for scholars to research and
reconstruct a period of time in which virtually nothing was
written down. Original writings and sources from this period
are quite rare. Here and there, we have a person’s will. The
epic poem Beowulf and Icelandic sagas are useful resources,
but as Robert Lacey and Danny Danziger explain in The Year
1000, the translation of everything written between 500
and 1000 A.D. would not fill one carton, whereas the Starr
investigation produced thirty-six cartons of material.
In comparing the research
and 0ndings of various scholars, hordes of inconsistencies
arise. For example, Cordoba, Spain, was Europe’s largest city
in 1000, but its population could have been anywhere from
250,000 to 750,000, depending on the source of the information.
England’s population was 4.5 million in 1000, according to
William Manchester’s account of the period, A World Lit
Only by Fire; yet the Domesday Book, an early property
census, recorded only 275,000 heads of household in 1100,
just a century later, suggesting a total population of only
1.5 million to 2 million. Qualitative descriptions, too, are
plagued with ambiguity and dissonance. For example, scholars
debate whether most European villages had names. As historians
Will and Ariel Durant wrote, History is mostly guessing;
the rest is prejudice.
All things considered, in
the history of the planet, a millennium is a dot on the timeline.
Proportionately, 1,000 years on the continuum of geologic
time would represent far less than a mile of a trip around
the entire world. The earliest life on Earth dates back at
least 4 billion years. The earliest discovered remains of
human ancestors date back 4 million to 6 million years. The
species Homo sapiens appears to date back as far as
250,000 years. People—as we now recognize them—go back 11,000
years. The agricultural innovation of plowing was developed
just 5,000 years ago. It is sobering to think that many geologists
view these past 11,000 years as the single longest stretch
of human-compatible weather on most reaches of the planet.
Humans have overstayed the Earth’s welcome by about the same
1,000 years that we currently commemorate.
1 So
far, the dating of the earliest known living things on Earth
takes us back at least 4 billion years. If anyone strictly
adhered to the march of time, the year in which we happen
to live (counted from the years since creation) would be at
least ten digits long.
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