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{{short description|Fall of a complex human society}}
{{dablink|For a related concept in sociology, see [[Social disintegration]].}}
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'''Societal collapse''' is the large scale breakdown or long term [[decline]] of the [[culture]], civil institutions or other major characteristics of a [[society]] or a [[civilization]], temporarily or permanently. The breakdown of cultural and social institutions is perhaps the most common feature of collapse. Although societal collapse has previously been viewed as an endpoint for a civilization, the phenomenon is only a description of the processes of change in that civilization. Societal collapse is certainly not a benign social process, but societies may not end or die when they collapse. Instead, they may adapt and be born anew. Collapse may also result in a degree of empowerment for the most disenfranchised sections of the collapsing society.
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| alt1 = Destruction, from ''The Course of Empire'' by Thomas Cole (1836)
| caption1 = Destruction, from ''[[The Course of Empire (paintings)|The Course of Empire]]'' by [[Thomas Cole]] (1836)
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| alt2 = Desolation, from ''The Course of Empire'' by Thomas Cole (1836)
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'''Societal collapse''' (also known as '''civilizational collapse''' or '''systems collapse''') is the fall of a complex human [[society]] characterized by the loss of [[cultural identity]] and of [[social complexity]] as an [[Complex adaptive system|adaptive system]], the downfall of [[government]], and the rise of [[violence]].<ref name=":8" /> Possible causes of a societal collapse include natural catastrophe, [[war]], [[pandemic|pestilence]], [[famine]], [[economic collapse]], [[population decline]] or [[overshoot (population)|overshoot]], [[mass migration]], [[Competence (human resources)|incompetent]] leaders, and [[sabotage]] by rival civilizations.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Brozović |first1=Danilo |title=Societal collapse: A literature review |journal=[[Futures (journal)|Futures]] |date=2023 |volume=145 |pages=103075 |doi=10.1016/j.futures.2022.103075 |doi-access=free}}</ref> A collapsed society may revert to a more primitive state, be absorbed into a stronger society, or completely disappear.


Virtually all civilizations have suffered such a fate, regardless of their size or complexity. Most never recovered, such as the Western and Eastern Roman Empires, the [[Spanish conquest of the Maya|Maya civilization]], and the [[History of Easter Island#Destruction of society and population|Easter Island civilization]].<ref name=":8" /> However, some of them later revived and transformed, such as China, Greece, and Egypt.
The most common factors contributing to the collapse of society are environmental, social and cultural. Usually societal collapse results from the convergence of all three factors, but in many instances one factor may be the dominant cause. In many cases a natural disaster (e.g. [[tsunami]], [[earthquake]], massive fire) may wreak such havoc on a culture that it can no longer sustain itself through past social processes and it undergoes massive change. In other instances significant inequity in the social structure may result in the lower classes rising up and taking power from a smaller wealthy elite.
Societal collapse may occur over a relatively short period of time, or as a result of an event or series of events which lead to significant depopulation (e.g. [[natural disaster]], [[war]], [[genocide]], [[famine]], [[pandemic]]). The groups which comprise a society may also make a deliberate or voluntary decision to disperse or relocate which in effect amounts to the "collapse" of that society, or presents to later archaeologists or researchers as a collapse.


Anthropologists, historians, and sociologists have proposed a variety of explanations for the collapse of civilizations involving causative factors such as environmental degradation, depletion of resources, costs of rising complexity, invasion, disease, decay of social cohesion, growing [[social inequality|inequality]], [[extractive institutions]], long-term decline of [[cognitive abilities]], loss of [[creativity]], and misfortune.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":5" /><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Scheffer |first1=Marten |last2=van Nes |first2=Egbert H. |last3=Kemp |first3=Luke |last4=Kohler |first4=Timothy A. |last5=Lenton |first5=Timothy M. |last6=Xu |first6=Chi |title=The vulnerability of aging states: A survival analysis across premodern societies |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |date=28 November 2023 |volume=120 |issue=48 |pages=e2218834120 |doi=10.1073/pnas.2218834120 |pmid=37983501 |pmc=10691336 |doi-access=free|bibcode=2023PNAS..12018834S }}</ref> However, complete extinction of a culture is not inevitable, and in some cases, the new societies that arise from the ashes of the old one are evidently its offspring, despite a dramatic reduction in sophistication.<ref name=":5" /> Moreover, the influence of a collapsed society, such as the Western Roman Empire, may linger on long after its death.<ref name=":18" />
Societal collapse has recurred throughout history and is an aspect of the [[human condition]] which may await all human societies. The modern day interest in [[survivalism]] is concerned in part with preparing for the possible collapse of contemporary society.


The study of societal collapse, [[collapsology]], is a topic for specialists of [[history]], [[anthropology]], [[sociology]], and [[political science]]. More recently, they are joined by experts in [[cliodynamics]] and study of [[complex system]]s.<ref>{{cite news|last=Pasha-Robinson|first=Lucy|date=7 January 2017|title='Society could end in less than a decade,' predicts academic|newspaper=[[The Independent]]|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/society-end-western-world-apocalypse-researcher-cliodynamics-political-turmoil-a7515156.html|access-date=21 May 2019}}</ref><ref name=":5" />
==Societal dynamics==


== Concept ==
Societal collapse is often linked to a shift away from sedentarism. Sedentary social organization eventually leads to the depletion of important non-renewable or only slowly renewing resources (in most cases). Sedentarism also enables a gross expansion of population of the society and its social institutions. Long distance trade, domestication of flora and fauna, increase in task specialization as well as the stratification of society are the most salient features of a sedentary society. Sedentary societies, unlike nomadic hunter-gatherers, are not [[self limiting]] and often come to overuse and dominate that land on which they exist. As population grows [[diminishing returns]] of various foodstuffs begin to threaten social [[complexity]], and a [[Malthusian]] collapse can occur.
[[Joseph Tainter]] frames societal collapse in ''[[The Collapse of Complex Societies]]'' (1988), a seminal and founding work of the academic discipline on societal collapse.<ref name="NYTainter">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/04/magazine/societal-collapse.html|author=Ben Ehrenreich|date=4 November 2020|title=How Do You Know When Society Is About to Fall Apart?|newspaper=The New York Times|access-date=10 February 2021}}</ref> He elaborates that 'collapse' is a "broad term," but in the sense of societal collapse, he views it as "a ''political'' process."<ref name="Tainter">{{cite book|title=The Collapse of Complex Societies|author=Joseph A. Tainter|date=1988|series=New Studies in Archaeology|publisher=Cambridge University Press}} "What is collapse?
'Collapse' is a broad term that can cover many kinds of processes. It means different
things to different people. Some see collapse as a thing that could happen only to societies organized at the most complex level. To them, the notion of tribal societies or village horticulturalists collapsing will seem odd. Others view collapse in terms of
economic disintegration, of which the predicted end of industrial society is the
ultimate expression. Still others question the very utility of the concept, pointing out that art styles and literary traditions often survive political decentralization.
Collapse, as viewed in the present work, is a political process. It may, and often
does, have consequences in such areas as economics, art, and literature, but it is
fundamentally a matter of the sociopolitical sphere. A society has collapsed when it
displays a rapid, significant loss of an established level of sociopolitical complexity. The
term 'established level' is important. To qualify as an instance of collapse a society
must have been at, or developing toward, a level of complexity for more than one or
two generations. The demise of the Carolingian Empire, thus, is not a case of collapse
- merely an unsuccessful attempt at empire building. The collapse, in turn, must be
rapid - taking no more than a few decades - and must entail a substantial loss of
sociopolitical structure. Losses that are less severe, or take longer to occur, are to be
considered cases of weakness and decline. [...] The fall of the Roman Empire is, in the West, the most widely known instance of
collapse, the one which comes most readily to popular thought." (Pages 4-5)</ref> He further narrows societal collapse as a rapid process (within "few decades") of "substantial loss of sociopolitical structure," giving the [[fall of the Western Roman Empire]] as "the most widely known instance of collapse" in the Western world.<ref name="Tainter"/>


Others, particularly in response to the popular ''[[Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed|Collapse]]'' (2005) by [[Jared Diamond]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Questioning Collapse: Human Resilience, Ecological Vulnerability, and the Aftermath of Empire|editor1=Patricia A. McAnany|editor2=Norman Yoffee|date=2009}}</ref> and more recently, have argued that societies discussed as cases of collapse are better understood through [[Resilience (organizational)|resilience]] and [[societal transformation]],<ref>{{cite book|title=Beyond Collapse: Archaeological Perspectives on Resilience, Revitalization, and Transformation in Complex Societies|editor=Ronald K. Faulseit|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|series=Occasional Paper|number=42|date=2016}}</ref> or "reorganization", especially if collapse is understood as a "complete end" of political systems, which according to [[Shmuel Eisenstadt]] has not taken place at any point.<ref name="Eisenstadt"/> Eisenstadt also points out that a clear differentiation between total or partial decline and "possibilities of regeneration" is crucial for the preventive purpose of the study of societal collapse.<ref name="Eisenstadt">{{cite book|chapter=Beyond Collapse|date=1991|author=Shmuel Eisenstadt|editor1=Norman Yoffee|editor2=George L. Cowgill|title=The Collapse of Ancient States and Civilizations|page=242}}</ref> This frame of reference often rejects the term collapse and critiques the notion that cultures simply vanish when the political structures that organize labor for large archaeologically prominent projects do. For example, while the [[Maya civilization|Ancient Maya]] are often touted as a prime example of collapse, in reality this reorganization was simply the result of the removal of the political system of Divine Kingship largely in the eastern lowlands as many cities in the western highlands of [[Mesoamerica]] maintained this system of divine kingship into the 16th century. The Maya continue to maintain cultural and linguistic continuity into the present day.
Thomas Homer-Dixon<ref>Homer-Dixon, Thomas (2007), "The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity and the Renewal of Civilization" (Knopf, Canada)</ref> has recently suggested that societal collapse occurs as a result of a reduction in the Energy Return on Energy Invested or [[EROEI]]. This is the measure of the amount of energy needed to secure a source of energy. Societal collapse occurs whenever the EROEI approaches 1:1. If it falls below 1:1, those attempting to harvest the energy source have insufficient energy to maintain themselves, and famine results. An EROEI of more than 1 is necessary to provide sufficient energy for socially important tasks, such as constructing buildings, maintaining infrastructure, and supporting the social elite upon which a society depends. The EROEI figure also determines the ratio between the number of people engaged in energy extraction compared to the total population. For example in the pre-modern world, it was often the case that 80% of the population was employed in agriculture to feed a population of 100%. In modern times, the use of fossil fuels with an exceedingly high EROEI has enabled 100% of the population to be fed with only 4% of the population employed in agriculture. Diminishing returns of an unsustainable EROEI, Homer Dixon proposes, leads to societal collapse.


== Societal longevity ==
==Manifestations of societal collapse==
{{Main|Societal transformation|Community resilience}}
The social scientist Luke Kemp analyzed dozens of civilizations, which he defined as "a society with agriculture, multiple cities, military dominance in its geographical region and a continuous political structure," from 3000 BC to 600 AD and calculated that the average life span of a civilization is close to 340 years.<ref name=":8" /> Of them, the most durable were the [[Kingdom of Kush|Kushite Kingdom]] in Northeast Africa (1,150 years), the [[Kingdom of Aksum|Aksumite Empire]] in East Africa (1,100 years), and the [[Vedic period|Vedic civilization]] in South Asia and the [[Olmecs]] in Mesoamerica (both 1,000 years), and the shortest-lived were the [[Nanda Empire]] in India (24) and the [[Qin dynasty]] in China (14).<ref>{{Cite web|last=Kemp|first=Luke|date=19 February 2019|title=The lifespans of ancient civilisations|url=https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190218-the-lifespans-of-ancient-civilisations-compared|access-date=6 September 2020|website=BBC Future}}</ref>


A statistical analysis of empires by complex systems specialist Samuel Arbesman suggests that collapse is generally a random event and does not depend on age. That is analogous to what evolutionary biologists call the [[Red Queen hypothesis]], which asserts that for a species in a harsh ecology, extinction is a persistent possibility.<ref name=":8" />
Societal collapse occurs in one of two ways:


Contemporary discussions about societal collapse are seeking resilience by suggesting societal transformation.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1073/pnas.1207552109|date=24 July 2012|author1=Leonie J. Pearson|author2=Craig J. Pearson|title=Societal collapse or transformation, and resilience|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume=109|issue=30|pages=E2030–E2031|publisher=[[National Academy of Sciences]]|pmid=22730464|pmc=3409784|bibcode=2012PNAS..109E2030P|doi-access=free}}</ref>
Its [[adaptive capacity]] is reduced by a sharp increase in population or social complexity, leading to a destabilization of social institutions and eventual massive shifts in population and social dynamics. In nearly all cases civilizations revert to less complex, less centralized and a more simple technological or socio-political forms, characteristic of a [[Dark Ages in history|Dark Age]]. Examples of such societal collapse are: the [[Hittite Empire]], the [[Mycenaean civilization]], the [[Western Roman Empire]], the [[Mauryan]] and [[Gupta Empire|Gupta]] states of India, the [[Mayas]], the [[Angkor]] in Cambodia, and the [[Han Dynasty|Han]] and [[Tang Dynasty|Tang]] dynasties in China.


== Causes of collapse ==
Alternately, it may be gradually incorporated into a more dynamic, more complex inter-regional social structure. This happened in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Levantine cultures, the Eastern Roman Empire, the Mughal and Delhi Sultanates in India, Sung China, the Aztec culture in Mesoamerica, the Inca culture in South America, and the modern civilizations of China, Japan, and India as well as many modern states in the Middle East and Africa.
Because human societies are complex systems, common factors may contribute to their decline that are economical, environmental, demographic, social and cultural, and they may [[domino effect|cascade into another]] and build up to the point that could overwhelm any mechanisms that would otherwise maintain stability. Unexpected and abrupt changes, which experts call [[Nonlinear system|nonlinearities]], are some of the warning signs.<ref name=":10" /> In some cases, a natural disaster (such as a tsunami, earthquake, [[pandemic]], massive fire or climate change) may precipitate a collapse. Other factors such as a [[Malthusian catastrophe]], [[Human overpopulation|overpopulation]], or [[resource depletion]] might be contributory factors of collapse, but studies of past societies seem to suggest that those factors did not cause the collapse alone.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Joseph A. Tainter|title=Archaeology of Overshoot and Collapse|doi=10.1146/annurev.anthro.35.081705.123136|journal=Annual Review of Anthropology|pages=59–74|volume=35|year=2006}}</ref> Significant inequity and exposed corruption may combine with lack of loyalty to established political institutions and result in an oppressed lower class rising up and seizing power from a smaller wealthy elite in a [[revolution]]. The diversity of forms that societies evolve corresponds to diversity in their failures. [[Jared Diamond]] suggests that societies have also collapsed through [[deforestation]], loss of soil fertility, restrictions of trade and/or rising endemic violence.<ref name=":2" />


In the case of the Western Roman Empire, some argued that it did not collapse but merely [[Historiography of the fall of the Western Roman Empire#Transformation|transformed]].<ref>{{cite web|author=Mark Damen|date=28 January 2017|title=The Myth of the "Fall" of Rome|url=https://brewminate.com/the-myth-of-the-fall-of-rome/|access-date=9 February 2021}}</ref>
Societal collapse manifests itself in various ways:


=== Natural disasters and climate change ===
* Complex societies stratified on the basis of class, gender, race or some other salient factor become much more homogeneous or horizontally structured. In many cases past social stratification slowly becomes irrelevant following collapse and societies become more egalitarian.
[[File:Indus Valley Civilization, Mature Phase (2600-1900 BCE).png|thumb|upright=1.7|The Indus Valley Civilization likely de-urbanized and shifted because of changes in crop patterns.<ref name="Pillalamarri 2016"/>]]
{{Main article|Climate change and civilizational collapse}}
Archeologists have identified signs of a megadrought which lasted for a millennium between 5,000 and 4,000 years ago in Africa and Asia. The drying of the [[African humid period|Green Sahara]] not only turned it into a desert but also disrupted the monsoon seasons in South and Southeast Asia and caused flooding in East Asia, which prevented successful harvests and the development of complex culture. It coincided with and may have caused the decline and the fall of the [[Akkadian Empire]] in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley Civilization.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Choi|first=Charles|date=24 August 2020|title=Ancient megadrought may explain civilization's 'missing millennia' in Southeast Asia|work=Science Magazine|url=https://www.science.org/content/article/ancient-megadrought-may-explain-civilization-s-missing-millennia-southeast-asia|access-date=31 August 2020}}</ref> The dramatic shift in climate is known as the [[4.2-kiloyear event]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Collapse of civilizations worldwide defines youngest unit of the Geologic Time Scale|url=http://www.stratigraphy.org/index.php/ics-news-and-meetings/119-collapse-of-civilizations-worldwide-defines-youngest-unit-of-the-geologic-time-scale|access-date=15 July 2018|series=News and Meetings|publisher=International Commission on Stratigraphy}}</ref>


The highly advanced [[Indus Valley civilisation|Indus Valley Civilization]] took root around 3000 BC in what is now northwestern India and Pakistan and collapsed around 1700 BC. Since the [[Indus script]] has yet to be deciphered, the causes of its de-urbanization<ref name="Pillalamarri 2016">{{cite web | last=Pillalamarri | first=Akhilesh | title=Revealed: The Truth Behind the Indus Valley Civilization's 'Collapse' | website=The Diplomat – The Diplomat is a current-affairs magazine for the Asia-Pacific, with news and analysis on politics, security, business, technology and life across the region. | date=2 June 2016 | url=https://thediplomat.com/2016/06/revealed-the-truth-behind-the-indus-valley-civilizations-collapse/ | access-date=10 April 2022}}</ref> remain a mystery, but there is some evidence pointing to natural disasters.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=48-49}} Signs of a gradual decline began to emerge in 1900 BC, and two centuries later, most of the cities had been abandoned. Archeological evidence suggests an increase in interpersonal violence and in infectious diseases like [[leprosy]] and [[tuberculosis]].<ref>{{cite journal|author1=Robbins-Schug, G.|author2=Gray, K.M.|author3=Mushrif, V.|author4=Sankhyan, A.R.|date=November 2012|title=A Peaceful Realm? Trauma and Social Differentiation at Harappa|journal=International Journal of Paleopathology|volume=2|issue=2–3|pages=136–147|doi=10.1016/j.ijpp.2012.09.012|pmid=29539378|s2cid=3933522|url=http://libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/f/G_Robbins_Schug_Peaceful_2012.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author1=Robbins-Schug, G.|author2=Blevins, K. Elaine|author3=Cox, Brett|author4=Gray, Kelsey|author5=Mushrif-Tripathy, Veena|date=December 2013|title=Infection, Disease, and Biosocial Process at the End of the Indus Civilization|journal=PLOS ONE|volume=0084814|issue=12|page=e84814|bibcode=2013PLoSO...884814R|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0084814|pmc=3866234|pmid=24358372|doi-access=free}}</ref> Historians and archeologists believe that severe and long-lasting drought and a decline in trade with Egypt and Mesopotamia caused the collapse.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lawler|first1=A.|date=6 June 2008|title=Indus Collapse: The End or the Beginning of an Asian Culture?|journal=Science Magazine|volume=320|issue=5881|pages=1282–1283|doi=10.1126/science.320.5881.1281|pmid=18535222|s2cid=206580637}}</ref> Evidence for earthquakes has also been discovered. Sea level changes are also found at two possible seaport sites along the Makran coast which are now inland. Earthquakes may have contributed to decline of several sites by direct shaking damage or by changes in sea level or in water supply.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Grijalva|first1=K.A.|last2=Kovach|first2=L.R.|last3=Nur|first3=A.M.|date=1 December 2006|title=Evidence for Tectonic Activity During the Mature Harappan Civilization, 2600-1800&nbsp;BCE|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/253829072|journal=AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts|volume=2006|pages=T51D–1553|bibcode=2006AGUFM.T51D1553G}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Prasad|first1=Manika|last2=Nur|first2=Amos|date=1 December 2001|title=Tectonic Activity during the Harappan Civilization|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/253859373|journal=AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts|volume=2001|pages=U52B–07|bibcode=2001AGUFM.U52B..07P}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Kovach|first1=Robert L.|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283831911|title=Earthquakes and civilizations of the Indus Valley: A challenge for archaeoseismology|last2=Grijalva|first2=Kelly|last3=Nur|first3=Amos|date=1 October 2010|isbn=978-0-8137-2471-3|series=Geological Society of America Special Papers|volume=471|pages=119–127|doi=10.1130/2010.2471(11)}}</ref>
* One of the most characteristic features of complex civilizations (and in many cases the yardstick to measure complexity) is a high level of job specialization. The most complex societies are characterized by artisans and tradespeople who specialize intensely in a given task. Indeed, the rulers of many past societies were hyper-specialized priests or priestesses who were completely supported by the work of the lower classes. During societal collapse the social institutions supporting such specialization are removed and people tend to become more generalized in their work and daily habits.


Volcanic eruptions can abruptly influence the climate. During a large eruption, [[sulfur dioxide]] (SO<sub>2</sub>) is expelled into the [[stratosphere]], where it could stay for years and gradually get oxidized into sulfate aerosols. Being highly reflective, sulfate aerosols reduce the incident sunlight and cool the Earth's surface. By drilling into glaciers and ice sheets, scientists can access the archives of the history of atmospheric composition. A team of multidisciplinary researchers led by Joseph McConnell of the Desert Research Institute in Reno, Nevada deduced that a volcanic eruption occurred in 43 BC, a year after the [[assassination of Julius Caesar]] on the Ides of March (15 March) in 44 BC, which left a power vacuum and led to bloody civil wars. According to historical accounts, it was also a period of poor weather, crop failure, widespread famine, and disease. Analyses of tree rings and cave stalagmites from different parts of the globe provided complementary data. The Northern Hemisphere got drier, but the Southern Hemisphere became wetter. Indeed, the Greek historian [[Appian]] recorded that there was a lack of flooding in Egypt, which also faced famine and pestilence. Rome's interest in Egypt as a source of food intensified, and the aforementioned problems and civil unrest weakened Egypt's ability to resist. Egypt came under Roman rule after [[Cleopatra]] committed suicide in 30 BC. While it is difficult to say for certain whether Egypt would have become a Roman province if [[Mount Okmok|Okmok volcano]] (in modern-day Alaska) had not erupted, the eruption likely hastened the process.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Wilson|first=R. Mark|date=1 September 2020|title=An Alaskan volcano, climate change, and the history of ancient Rome|journal=Physics Today|volume=73|issue=9|pages=17–20|doi=10.1063/PT.3.4563|bibcode=2020PhT....73i..17W|doi-access=free}}</ref>
* As power becomes decentralized people tend to be more self-regimented and have many more personal freedoms. In many instances of collapse there is a slackening of social rules and etiquette. Geographically speaking, communities become more parochial or isolated. For example, following the collapse of the Mayan civilization many Maya returned to their traditional hamlets, moving away from the large cities that had been the centers of the empire.
[[File:2000+_year_global_temperature_including_Medieval_Warm_Period_and_Little_Ice_Age_-_Ed_Hawkins.svg|alt=|thumb|upright=1.25|Global average temperatures show that the Little Ice Age was not a distinct global time period but the end of a long temperature decline, which preceded the recent [[global warming]].<ref name="Hawkins_20200130">{{cite web|last1=Hawkins|first1=Ed|date=30 January 2020|title=2019 years|url=https://www.climate-lab-book.ac.uk/2020/2019-years/|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200202220240/https://www.climate-lab-book.ac.uk/2020/2019-years/|archive-date=2 February 2020|website=climate-lab-book.ac.uk}} ("The data show that the modern period is very different to what occurred in the past. The often quoted Medieval Warm Period and Little Ice Age are real phenomena, but small compared to the recent changes.")</ref>]]
More generally, recent research pointed to climate change as a key player in the decline and fall of historical societies in China, the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas. In fact, [[paleoclimatology|paleoclimatogical]] temperature reconstruction suggests that historical periods of social unrest, societal collapse, and population crash and significant climate change often occurred simultaneously. A team of researchers from Mainland China and Hong Kong were able to establish a causal connection between climate change and large-scale human crises in pre-industrial times. Short-term crises may be caused by social problems, but climate change was the ultimate cause of major crises, starting with economic depressions.<ref name=":13">{{Cite journal|last1=Zhang|first1=David D.|last2=Lee|first2=Harry F.|last3=Wang|first3=Cong|last4=Li|first4=Baosheng|last5=Pei|first5=Qing|last6=Zhang|first6=Jane|last7=An|first7=Yulun|date=18 October 2011|title=The causality analysis of climate change and large-scale human crisis|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|volume=108|issue=42|pages=17296–17301|doi=10.1073/pnas.1104268108|pmid=21969578|pmc=3198350|s2cid=33451915|doi-access=free}}</ref> Moreover, since agriculture is highly dependent on climate, any changes to the regional climate from the optimum can induce crop failures.<ref name=":27">{{Cite journal|last1=Zhang|first1=David D.|last2=Brecke|first2=Peter|last3=Lee|first3=Harry F.|last4=He|first4=Yuan-Qing|last5=Zhang|first5=Jane|date=4 December 2007|editor-last=Ehrlich|editor-first=Paul R.|title=Global climate change, war, and population decline in recent human history|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|volume=104|issue=49|pages=19214–19219|doi=10.1073/pnas.0703073104|pmid=18048343|pmc=2148270|bibcode=2007PNAS..10419214Z|doi-access=free}}</ref>


After around 1130, North America had significant climatic change in the form of a 300-year period of aridity called the [[Droughts in the United States#Pre-1800|Great Drought]].<ref>{{citation |last=Diamond |first=Jared |title=Collapse: How societies choose to fail or succeed|publisher=Viking Penguin |location=London |year=2005 |page=152 |isbn=978-0-1431-1700-1}}</ref> The [[Mississippian culture]] collapsed during this period. The [[Ancestral Puebloans]] left their established homes in the 12th and 13th centuries. Current scholarly consensus is that Ancestral Puebloans responded to pressure from [[Numic]]-speaking peoples moving onto the Colorado Plateau, as well as climate change that resulted in agricultural failures.
* Epiphenomena, institutions, processes, and artifacts are all manifest in the archaeological record in abundance in large civilizations. After collapse, types of artifacts left or evidence of epiphenomena and institutions changes dramatically as people are forced to adopt more self-sufficient lifestyles.


The Mongol conquests corresponded to a period of cooling in the Northern Hemisphere between the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, when the [[Medieval Warm Period]] was giving way to the Little Ice Age, which caused ecological stress. In Europe, the cooling climate did not directly facilitate the [[Black Death]], but it caused wars, mass migration, and famine, which helped diseases spread.<ref name=":27" />
* Societal collapse is almost always associated with a decline in [[population]] [[population density|densities]]. In extreme cases, the collapse in population is so severe that the society disappears entirely, such as happened with the [[History of Greenland|Greenland Vikings]], or a number of [[Polynesia]]n islands. In less extreme cases, populations are reduced until a [[demography|demographic balance]] is re-established between human societies and the depleted [[natural environment]]. A classic example is the case of [[Ancient Rome]] which had a population of about 1.5 million during the reign of [[Trajan]], but had only 15,000 inhabitants by the 9th century.
[[File:Bautzen-nach1620-Merian.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.2|The [[Thirty Years' War]] devastated much of Europe and was one of the many political upheavals during the General Crisis of the Seventeenth Century, which is causally linked to the Little Ice Age.]]


A more recent example is the [[The General Crisis|General Crisis of the Seventeenth Century]] in Europe, which was a period of inclement weather, crop failure, economic hardship, extreme intergroup violence, and high mortality because of the [[Little Ice Age]]. The [[Maunder Minimum]] involved [[sunspots]] being exceedingly rare. Episodes of social instability track the cooling with a time lap of up to 15 years, and many developed into armed conflicts, such as the [[Thirty Years' War]] (1618–1648),<ref name=":13" /> which started as a war of succession to the Bohemian throne. Animosity between Protestants and Catholics in the [[Holy Roman Empire]] (in modern-day Germany) added fuel to the fire. Soon, it escalated to a huge conflict that involved all major European powers and devastated much of Germany. When the war had ended, some regions of the empire had seen their populations drop by as much as 70%.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=190-191}}<ref group="note">See the end of the section '[[#Demographic dynamics|Demographic dynamics]]' for a chart of the death rate (per 100,000) of the Thirty Years' War compared to other armed conflicts between 1400 and 2000.</ref> However, not all societies faced crises during this period. Tropical countries with high carrying capacities and trading economies did not suffer much because the changing climate did not induce an economic depression in those places.<ref name=":13" />
==Models of societal response==
According to [[Joseph Tainter]], in his book ''The Collapse of Complex Societies'' (1990), societies that inevitably collapse adhere to one or more of the following three models in the face of collapse:


===Foreign invasions and mass migration===
1. '''The Dinosaur''': The best example is a large scale society in which resources are being depleted at an exponential rate and yet nothing is done to rectify the problem because the ruling elite are unwilling or unable to adapt to said changes. In such examples rulers tend to oppose any solutions that diverge from their present course of action. They will favor intensification and commit an increasing number of resources to their present plans, projects and social institutions.
{{See also|Bond event|Pre-modern human migration}}
Between ca. 4000 and 3000 BCE, [[Neolithic decline|neolithic populations in western Eurasia declined]], probably due to the plague and other viral hemorrhagic fevers.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rascovan |first1=N |last2=Sjögren |first2=KG |last3=Kristiansen |first3=K |title=Emergence and Spread of Basal Lineages of ''Yersinia pestis'' during the Neolithic Decline |doi=10.1016/j.cell.2018.11.005 |pmid=30528431 |journal=Cell |volume=176 |issue=1 |pages=295–305.e10 |year=2019|doi-access=free }}</ref> This decline was followed by the [[Indo-European migrations]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Steppe migrant thugs pacified by Stone Age farming women |url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/04/170404084429.htm |work=[[ScienceDaily]] |publisher=Faculty of Science - University of Copenhagen |date=4 April 2017}}</ref> Around 3,000 BC, people of the pastoralist [[Yamnaya culture]] from the [[Pontic–Caspian steppe]], who had high levels of [[Western Steppe Herders|WSH]] ancestry, embarked on a massive expansion throughout Eurasia, which is considered to be associated with the dispersal of the [[Indo-European languages]] by most contemporary linguists, archaeologists, and geneticists. The expansion of WSHs resulted in the virtual disappearance of the Y-DNA of [[Early European Farmers]] (EEFs) from the European gene pool, significantly altering the cultural and genetic landscape of Europe. EEF mtDNA however remained frequent, suggesting admixture between WSH males and EEF females.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Haak|first1=Wolfgang|last2=Lazaridis|first2=Iosif|last3=Patterson|first3=Nick|last4=Rohland|first4=Nadin|last5=Mallick|first5=Swapan|last6=Llamas|first6=Bastien|last7=Brandt|first7=Guido|last8=Nordenfelt|first8=Susanne|last9=Harney|first9=Eadaoin|last10=Stewardson|first10=Kristin|last11=Fu|first11=Qiaomei|date=11 June 2015|title=Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in Europe|journal=Nature|volume=522|issue=7555|pages=207–211|doi=10.1038/nature14317|issn=0028-0836|pmc=5048219|pmid=25731166|bibcode=2015Natur.522..207H|arxiv=1502.02783}}</ref>


A mysterious loose confederation of fierce maritime marauders known as the [[Sea Peoples]] was identified as one of the main causes of the [[Late Bronze Age Collapse]] in the Eastern Mediterranean.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Mark|first=Joshua J.|date=September 2, 2009|title=Sea Peoples|url=https://www.worldhistory.org/Sea_Peoples/|access-date=October 1, 2020|website=[[World History Encyclopedia]]}}</ref> It is possible that the Sea Peoples were themselves victims of the environmental changes that led to widespread famine and precipitated the Collapse.<ref name=":17" />
2. '''Runaway Train''': An example would be a society that only functions when growth is present. Societies based almost exclusively on acquisition, including pillage or exploitation, cannot be sustained indefinitely. The societies of the [[Assyrians]] and the [[Mongol Empire|Mongols]], for example, both fractured and collapsed when no new conquests were forthcoming. Tainter argues that [[Capitalism]] can be seen as an example of the Runaway Train model as it requires whole economies, individual sectors, and companies to constantly grow on a three month basis. Current methods of resource extraction and food production may be unsustainable, however, the philosophy of [[consumerism]] and [[planned obsolescence]] encourage the purchase of an ever increasing number of goods and services to sustain the economy.


[[File:Invasions of the Roman Empire 1.png|thumb|upright=1.4|[[Migration Period|Barbarian invasions]] played an important role in the fall of the Western Roman Empire.]]In the third century BC, a Eurasian nomadic people, the [[Xiongnu]], began threatening China's frontiers, but by the first century BC, they had been completely expelled. They then turned their attention westward and displaced various other tribes in Eastern and Central Europe, which led to a cascade of events. [[Attila]] rose to power as leader of the [[Huns]] and initiated a campaign of invasions and looting and went as far as [[Gaul]] (modern-day France). Attila's Huns were clashing with the Roman Empire, which had already been divided into two-halves for ease of administration: the [[Eastern Roman Empire]] and the [[Western Roman Empire]]. Despite managing to stop Attila at the [[Battle of the Catalaunian Plains|Battle of Chalons]] in 451 AD, the Romans were unable to prevent Attila from attacking [[Roman Italy]] the next year. Northern Italian cities like [[Milan]] were ravaged. The Huns never again posed a threat to the Romans after Attila's death, but the rise of the Huns also forced the [[Germanic peoples]] out of their territories and made those groups press their way into parts of France, Spain, Italy, and even as far south as North Africa. The city of Rome itself came under attack by the [[Visigoths]] in [[Sack of Rome (410)|410]] and was plundered by the [[Vandals]] in [[Sack of Rome (455)|455]].<ref group="note">The Vandals thus made themselves the origin of the modern English word '[[vandalism]]'.</ref>{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=94-97}}{{Better source needed|reason=A genuine scholarly source would be necessary for many of these specific claims.|date=June 2024}} A combination of internal strife, economic weakness, and relentless invasions by the Germanic peoples pushed the Western Roman Empire into [[Fall of the Western Roman Empire|terminal decline]]. The last Western Roman Emperor, [[Romulus Augustulus]], was [[Deposition of Romulus Augustus|dethroned in 476]] by the German [[Odoacer]], who declared himself [[King of Italy]].{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=82-83}}{{Better source needed|reason=A genuine scholarly source would be necessary for many of these specific claims.|date=June 2024}}
3. '''House of Cards''': In this aspect of Tainter's model societies that grow to be so large and include so many complex social institutions that they are inherently unstable and prone to collapse.


In the eleventh century AD, [[North Africa]]'s populous and flourishing civilization collapsed after it had exhausted its resources in internal fighting and suffering devastation from the invasion of the [[Bedouin]] tribes of [[Banu Sulaym]] and [[Banu Hilal]].<ref>[http://www.muslimheritage.com/topics/default.cfm?ArticleID=461 The Great Mosque of Tlemcen], MuslimHeritage.com</ref> [[Ibn Khaldun]] noted that all of the lands ravaged by Banu Hilal invaders had become arid desert.<ref>[http://www.galtoninstitute.org.uk/Newsletters/GINL9603/PopCrises3.htm Populations Crises and Population Cycles] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130527170154/http://www.galtoninstitute.org.uk/Newsletters/GINL9603/PopCrises3.htm |date=27 May 2013}}, Claire Russell and W.M.S. Russell</ref>
===An example of Tainter's model===
[[File:Expansion of the Mongol Empire.svg|thumb|280px|left|Expansion of the [[Mongol Empire]] from 1206 to 1294]]
These things do not necessarily act independently. Usually they are interconnected occurrences that reinforce each other. For example, leaders on [[Easter Island]] saw a rapid decline of trees but ruled out change (i.e. The Dinosaur). Timber was used as rollers to transport and erect large statues called ''[[moai]]'' as a form of religious reverence to their ancestors. Reverence was believed to result in a more prosperous future. It gave the people an impetus to intensify ''moai'' production (i.e. Runaway Train). Easter Island also has a fragile ecosystem because of its isolated location (i.e. House of Cards). Deforestation led to soil erosion and insufficient resources to build boats for fishing or tools for hunting. Competition for dwindling resources resulted in warfare and many casualties. Together these events led to the collapse of the civilization.
In 1206, a warlord achieved dominance over all Mongols with the title [[Genghis Khan]] and began his campaign of territorial expansion. The Mongols' highly flexible and mobile cavalry enabled them to conquer their enemies with efficiency and swiftness.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=166-167}}{{Better source needed|date=June 2024}} In the brutal pillaging that followed [[Mongol invasions]] during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the invaders decimated the populations of China, Russia, the Middle East, and [[Islam in Central Asia|Islamic Central Asia]]. Later Mongol leaders, such as [[Timur]], destroyed many cities, slaughtered thousands of people, and irreparably damaged the ancient irrigation systems of [[Mesopotamia]]. The invasions transformed a settled society to a nomadic one.<ref>[http://www.sfusd.k12.ca.us/schwww/sch618/Ibn_Battuta/Battuta's_Trip_Three.html Ibn Battuta's Trip: Part Three - Persia and Iraq (1326 - 1327)] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080423014420/http://www.sfusd.k12.ca.us/schwww/sch618/Ibn_Battuta/Battuta%27s_Trip_Three.html |date=23 April 2008}}</ref> In China, for example, a combination of war, famine, and pestilence during the Mongol conquests halved the population, a decline of around 55 million people.<ref name=":27" /> The Mongols also displaced large numbers of people and created power vacuums. The [[Khmer Empire]] went into decline and was replaced by the Thais, who were pushed southward by the Mongols. The Vietnamese, who succeeded in defeating the Mongols, also turned their attention to the south and by 1471 began to subjugate the [[Champa|Chams]].{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=176-177}}{{Better source needed|date=June 2024}} When Vietnam's [[Later Lê dynasty]] went into decline in the late 1700s, a [[Trịnh–Nguyễn War|bloody civil war]] erupted between the Trịnh family in the north and the Nguyễn family in the south.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=244-245}}<ref group="note">North and South here are with respect to the [[Gianh River]], which is close to the [[Bến Hải River]], or approximately the [[Vietnamese Demilitarized Zone|17th Parallel]], used for the [[1954 Geneva Conference|Partition of Vietnam]] after the [[First Indochina War|First Indochinese War]] and before the Second Indochinese War, commonly known as the [[Vietnam War]].</ref> More Cham provinces were seized by the Nguyễn warlords.<ref name="BridgmanWillaims1847">{{cite book|author1=Elijah Coleman Bridgman|url=https://archive.org/details/chinesereposito06willgoog|title=The Chinese Repository|author2=Samuel Wells Willaims|publisher=proprietors.|year=1847|pages=[https://archive.org/details/chinesereposito06willgoog/page/n592 584]–}}</ref> Finally, Nguyễn Ánh emerged victorious and declared himself Emperor of Vietnam (changing the name from Annam) with the title [[Gia Long]] and established the Nguyễn dynasty.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=244-245}} The last remaining principality of Champa, Panduranga (modern-day [[Phan Rang–Tháp Chàm|Phan Rang]], Vietnam), survived until 1832,<ref>Weber, N. (2012). The destruction and assimilation of Campā (1832-35) as seen from Cam sources. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 43(1), 158-180. Retrieved 3 June 2020, from www.jstor.org/stable/41490300</ref> when Emperor [[Minh Mạng]] (Nguyễn Phúc Đảm) conquered it after centuries of [[History of the Cham–Vietnamese wars|Cham–Vietnamese wars]]. Vietnam's policy of assimilation involved the forcefeeding of pork to Muslims and beef to Hindus, which fueled resentment. An [[Katip Sumat uprising|uprising followed]], the first and only war between Vietnam and the jihadists, until it was crushed.<ref name="Hubert2012">{{cite book|author=Jean-François Hubert|url={{GBurl|id=3oMqrqSp1W4C|pg=PA25}}|title=The Art of Champa|date=8 May 2012|publisher=Parkstone International|isbn=978-1-78042-964-9|pages=25–}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last1=Dharma|first1=Po|title=The Uprisings of Katip Sumat and Ja Thak Wa (1833-1835)|url=http://www.chamtoday.com/index.php/history-l-ch-s/78-the-uprisings-of-katip-sumat-and-ja-thak-wa-1833-1835|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150626122653/http://www.chamtoday.com/index.php/history-l-ch-s/78-the-uprisings-of-katip-sumat-and-ja-thak-wa-1833-1835|archive-date=26 June 2015|access-date=25 June 2015|website=Cham Today}}</ref><ref name="Wook20042">{{cite book|author=Choi Byung Wook|url={{GBurl|id=foZAdRgB-nwC|pg=PA141}}|title=Southern Vietnam Under the Reign of Minh Mạng (1820-1841): Central Policies and Local Response|publisher=SEAP Publications|year=2004|isbn=0-87727-138-0|pages=141–}}</ref>
{{Clear}}


=== Famine, economic depression, and internal strife ===
It is worth noting that mainstream interpretations of the history of [[Easter Island]] also include the slave raiders who abducted a large proportion of the population, and epidemics that killed most of the survivors, see [[Easter Island History#Destruction of society and population]].
{{See also|List of famines|List of revolutions and rebellions}}
[[File:Invasions, destructions and possible population movements during the Bronze Age Collapse, ca. 1200 BC.png|thumb|280px|Map of the [[Late Bronze Age collapse|Late Bronze Age Collapse]] (c. 1200 BC) in the Eastern Mediterranean]]
Around 1210 BC, the [[New Kingdom of Egypt]] shipped large amounts of grain to the disintegrating Hittite Empire. Thus, there had been a food shortage in Anatolia but not the Nile Valley.<ref name=":17" /> However, that soon changed. Although Egypt managed to deliver a decisive and final defeat to the [[Sea Peoples]] at the [[Battle of the Delta|Battle of Xois]], Egypt itself went into steep decline. The [[Late Bronze Age collapse|collapse]] of all other societies in the Eastern Mediterranean disrupted established trade routes and caused widespread economic depression. Government workers became underpaid, which resulted in the first labor strike in recorded history and undermined royal authority.<ref name=":22">{{Cite web|last=Mark|first=Joshua J.|date=2 September 2009|title=Sea Peoples|url=https://www.worldhistory.org/Sea_Peoples/|access-date=1 October 2020|website=[[World History Encyclopedia]]}}</ref> There was also political infighting between different factions of government. Bad harvest from the reduced flooding at the Nile led to a major famine. Food prices rose to eight times their normal values and occasionally even reached twenty-four times. Runaway [[inflation]] followed. Attacks by the Libyans and Nubians made things even worse. Throughout the [[Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt|Twentieth Dynasty]] (~1187–1064 BC), Egypt devolved from a major power in the Mediterranean to a deeply divided and weakened state, which later came to be ruled by the Libyans and the Nubians.<ref name=":17" />


Between 481 BC and 221 BC, the [[Warring States period|Period of the Warring States]] in China ended by King Zheng of the Qin dynasty succeeding in [[Qin's wars of unification|defeating six competing factions]] and thus becoming the first Chinese emperor, titled [[Qin Shi Huang]]. A ruthless but efficient ruler, he raised a disciplined and professional army and introduced a significant number of reforms, such as unifying the language and creating a single currency and system of measurement. In addition, he funded dam constructions and began building the first segment of what was to become the [[Great Wall of China]] to defend his realm against northern nomads. Nevertheless, internal feuds and rebellions made his empire fall apart after his death in 210 B.C.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=100-103}}
==Toynbee’s theory of decay==
[[File:No-nb bldsa 6a043.jpg|thumb|The [[Russian famine of 1921–1922]] occurred as a result of [[Droughts and famines in Russia and the Soviet Union|drought]] and the ongoing [[Russian Civil War]]]]
In the early fourteenth century AD, Britain suffered repeated rounds of crop failures from unusually heavy rainfall and flooding. Much livestock either starved or drowned. Food prices skyrocketed, and King Edward II attempted to rectify the situation by imposing price controls, but vendors simply refused to sell at such low prices. In any case, the act was abolished by the Lincoln Parliament in 1316. Soon, people from commoners to nobles were finding themselves short of food. Many resorted to begging, crime, and eating animals they otherwise would not eat. People in northern England had to deal with raids from Scotland. There were even reports of [[Human cannibalism|cannibalism]].


In Continental Europe, things were at least just as bad. The [[Great Famine of 1315–1317]] coincided with the end of the [[Medieval Warm Period]] and the start of the Little Ice Age. Some historians suspect that the change in climate was due to [[Mount Tarawera]] in New Zealand erupting in 1314.<ref name=":20">{{Cite web|last=Johnson|first=Ben|title=The Great Flood and Great Famine of 1314|url=https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofEngland/The-Great-Flood-Great-Famine-of-1314/|access-date=1 October 2020|website=Historic UK}}</ref> The Great Famine was, however, only one of the calamities striking Europe that century, as the Hundred Years' War and Black Death would soon follow.<ref name=":20" /><ref name=":21">{{Cite news|last=Fritts|first=Rachel|date=13 December 2019|title=One of Europe's worst famines likely caused by devastating floods|work=Phys.org|department=Earth Sciences|url=https://phys.org/news/2019-12-europe-worst-famines-devastating.html|access-date=1 October 2020}}</ref> (Also see the [[Crisis of the Late Middle Ages]].) Recent analysis of [[tree ring]]s complement historical records and show that the summers of 1314–1316 were some of the wettest on record over a period of 700 years.<ref name=":21" />
The [[United Kingdom|British]] [[historian]] [[Arnold J. Toynbee]], in his 12-volume [[magnum opus]] ''[[A Study of History]]'', theorized that all civilizations pass through several distinct stages: genesis, growth, time of troubles, universal state, and disintegration.


===Disease outbreaks===
Toynbee argues that the breakdown of civilizations is not caused by loss of control over the environment, over the human environment, or attacks from outside. Rather, it comes from the deterioration of the "Creative Minority," which eventually ceases to be creative and degenerates into merely a "Dominant Minority" (who forces the majority to obey without meriting obedience). He argues that creative minorities deteriorate due to a worship of their "former self," by which they become prideful, and fail to adequately address the next challenge they face.
{{See also|List of epidemics and pandemics}}
[[File:The angel of death striking a door during the plague of Rome Wellcome L0004061.jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|The angel of death striking a door during the plague of Rome; engraving by Levasseur after Jules-Elie Delaunay (1828–1891).]]
Historically, the dawn of agriculture led to the rise of contagious diseases.<ref name=":16">{{Cite book|last1=Cochran|first1=Gregory|title=The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution|last2=Harpending|first2=Henry|publisher=Basic Books|year=2009|isbn=978-0-465-02042-3|location=United States of America|chapter=Chapter 4: Consequences of Agriculture}}</ref> Compared to their hunting-gathering counterparts, agrarian societies tended to be sedentary, have higher population densities, be in frequent contact with livestock, and be more exposed to contaminated water supplies and higher concentrations of garbage. Poor sanitation, a lack of medical knowledge, superstitions, and sometimes a combination of disasters exacerbated the problem.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":16" /><ref name=":15" /> The journalist Michael Rosenwald wrote that "history shows that past pandemics have reshaped societies in profound ways. Hundreds of millions of people have died. Empires have fallen. Governments have cracked. Generations have been annihilated."<ref name=":25">{{Cite news|last=Rosenwald|first=Michael S.|date=7 April 2020|title=History's deadliest pandemics, from ancient Rome to modern America|newspaper=The Washington Post|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2020/local/retropolis/coronavirus-deadliest-pandemics/|access-date=1 October 2020}}</ref>


From the description of symptoms by the Greek physician [[Galen]], which included coughing, fever, (blackish) diarrhea, swollen throat, and thirst, modern experts identified the probable culprits of the [[Antonine Plague]] (165–180 AD) to have been [[smallpox]] or [[measles]].<ref name=":25" /><ref name=":26" /> The disease likely started in China and spread to the West via the [[Silk Road]]. Roman troops first contracted the disease in the East before they returned home. Striking a virgin population, the Antonine Plague had dreadful mortality rates; between one third to half of the population, 60 to 70 million people, perished. Roman cities suffered from a combination of overcrowding, poor hygiene, and unhealthy diets. They quickly became epicenters. Soon, the disease reached as far as Gaul and mauled Roman defenses along the Rhine. The ranks of the previously formidable Roman army had to be filled with freed slaves, German mercenaries, criminals, and gladiators. That ultimately failed to prevent the Germanic tribes from crossing the Rhine. On the civilian side, the Antonine Plague created drastic shortages of businessmen, which disrupted trade, and farmers, which led to a food crisis. An economic depression followed and government revenue fell. Some accused Emperor [[Marcus Aurelius]] and Co-Emperor [[Lucius Verus]], both of whom victims of the disease, of affronting the [[List of Roman deities|gods]], but others blamed Christians. However, the Antonine Plague strengthened the position of the monotheistic religion of [[Christianity]] in the formerly-polytheistic society, as Christians won public admiration for their good works. Ultimately the Roman army, the Roman cities, the size of the empire and its trade routes, which were required for Roman power and influence to exist, facilitated the spread of the disease. The Antonine Plague is considered by some historians as a useful starting point for understanding the decline and fall of the Western Roman Empire. It was followed by the [[Plague of Cyprian]] (249–262 AD) and the Plague of Justinian (541-542). Together, they cracked the foundations of the Roman Empire.<ref name=":26">{{Cite web|last=Horgan|first=John|date=2 May 2019|title=Antonine Plague|url=https://www.worldhistory.org/Antonine_Plague/|access-date=1 October 2020|website=[[World History Encyclopedia]]}}</ref>
He argues that the ultimate sign a civilization has broken down is when the dominant minority forms a "Universal State," which stifles political creativity. He states:
[[File:Chevalier Roze à la Tourette - 1720.PNG|thumb|[[List of epidemics and pandemics|Plague epidemics]] in the Middle Ages and [[Second plague pandemic|early modern period]] often killed a high percentage of the population in the affected cities]]
In the sixth century AD, while the Western Roman Empire had already succumbed to attacks by the Germanic tribes, the Eastern Roman Empire stood its ground. In fact, a peace treaty with the Persians allowed Emperor [[Justinian I|Justinian the Great]] to concentrate on recapturing territories belonging to the Western Empire. His generals, [[Belisarius]] and [[Narses]], achieved a number of important victories against the Ostrogoths and the Vandals.{{sfn|National Geographic|2007|pp=84-85}} However, their hope of keeping the Western Empire was dashed by the arrival of what became known as the [[Plague of Justinian]] (541-542). According to the Byzantine historian [[Procopius|Procopius of Caesarea]], the epidemic originated in China and Northeastern India and reached the Eastern Roman Empire via trade routes terminating in the Mediterranean. Modern scholarship has deduced that the epidemic was caused by the bacterium ''[[Yersinia pestis]]'', the same one that would later bring the Black Death, the single deadliest pandemic in human history, but how many actually died from it remains uncertain. Current estimates put the figure between thirty and fifty million people,<ref name=":15" /> a significant portion of the human population at that time.<ref name=":19">{{Cite web|last=Walsh|first=Bryan|date=25 March 2020|title=Covid-19: The history of pandemics|url=https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200325-covid-19-the-history-of-pandemics|access-date=19 September 2020|website=BBC Future}}</ref> The Plague arguably cemented the fate of Rome.<ref name=":15">{{Cite web|last=LePan|first=Nicholas|date=14 March 2020|title=Visualizing the History of Pandemics|url=https://www.visualcapitalist.com/history-of-pandemics-deadliest/|access-date=11 September 2020|website=The Visual Capitalist}}</ref>


The epidemic also devastated the [[Sasanian Empire]] in Persia. Caliph [[Abu Bakr]] seized the opportunity to launch military campaigns that [[Muslim conquest of Persia|overran the Sassanians]] and captured Roman-held territories in the Caucasus, the Levant, Egypt, and elsewhere in North Africa. Before the Justinian Plague, the Mediterranean world had been commercially and culturally stable. After the Plague, it fractured into a trio of civilizations battling for power: the Islamic Civilization, the Byzantine Empire, and what later became known as Medieval Europe. With so many people dead, the supply of workers, many of whom were slaves, was critically short. Landowners had no choice but to lend pieces of land to serfs to work the land in exchange for military protection and other privileges. That sowed the seeds of [[feudalism]].<ref name=":24">{{Cite web|last=Latham|first=Andrew|date=1 October 2020|title=How three prior pandemics triggered massive societal shifts|url=https://theconversation.com/how-three-prior-pandemics-triggered-massive-societal-shifts-146467|access-date=1 October 2020|website=The Conversation}}</ref>
{{cquote|First the Dominant Minority attempts to hold by force—against all right and reason—a position of inherited privilege which it has ceased to merit; and then the [[Proletariat]] repays injustice with resentment, fear with hate, and violence with violence when it executes its acts of secession. Yet the whole movement ends in positive acts of creation—and this on the part of all the actors in the tragedy of disintegration. The Dominant Minority creates a universal state, the Internal Proletariat a universal church, and the External Proletariat a bevy of barbarian war-bands.}}
[[File:Bubonic plague-en.svg|thumb|upright=2|Spread of the Bubonic plague through Europe]]


There is evidence that the Mongol expeditions may have spread the [[bubonic plague]] across much of Eurasia, which helped to spark the [[Black Death]] of the early fourteenth century.<ref>Robert Tignor et al. ''Worlds Together, Worlds Apart A History of the World: From the Beginnings of Humankind to the Present'' (2nd ed. 2008) ch. 11 pp. 472–75 and map pp. 476–77</ref><ref name=":4" /><ref>Andrew G. Robertson, and Laura J. Robertson. "From asps to allegations: biological warfare in history," ''Military medicine'' (1995) 160#8 pp. 369–73.</ref><ref>Rakibul Hasan, "Biological Weapons: covert threats to Global Health Security." ''Asian Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies'' (2014) 2#9 p. 38. [http://www.ajms.co.in/sites/ajms/index.php/ajms/article/viewFile/559/488 online] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141217124035/http://www.ajms.co.in/sites/ajms/index.php/ajms/article/viewFile/559/488|date=17 December 2014}}</ref> The Italian historian [[Gabriel de Mussis|Gabriele de’ Mussi]] wrote that the Mongols catapulted the corpses of those who contracted the plague into Caffa (now [[Feodossia]], Crimea) during [[Siege of Caffa|the siege of that city]] and that soldiers who were transported from there brought the plague to Mediterranean ports. However, that account of the origin of the Black Death in Europe remains controversial, though plausible, because of the complex epidemiology of the plague. Modern epidemiologists do not believe that the Black Death had a single source of spreading into Europe. Research into the past on this topic is further complicated by politics and the passage of time. It is difficult to distinguish between natural epidemics and biological warfare, both of which are common throughout human history.<ref name=":4" /> Biological weapons are economical because they turn an enemy casualty into a delivery system and so were favored in armed conflicts of the past. Furthermore, more soldiers died of disease than in combat until recently.<ref group="note">For example, during the [[Napoleonic Wars]], for every British soldier who got killed in action, eight died of disease. During the [[American Civil War]], two-thirds of the almost 700,000 dead were victims of smallpox, dysentery, typhoid, malaria, and pneumonia, collectively referred to as the "Third Army."</ref><ref name=":19" /> In any case, by the 1340s, Black Death killed 200 million people.<ref name=":15" /> The widening trade routes in the Late Middle Ages helped the plague spread rapidly.<ref name=":25" /> It took the European population more than two centuries to return to its level before the pandemic.<ref name=":15" /> Consequently, it destabilized most of society and likely undermined feudalism and the authority of the Church.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/middle_ages/black_impact_01.shtml|title=BBC - History - British History in depth: Black Death: The lasting impact|publisher=BBC}}</ref>
He argues that, as civilizations decay, they form an "Internal Proletariat" and an "External Proletariat." The Internal proletariat is held in subjugation by the dominant minority inside the civilization, and grows bitter; the external proletariat exists outside the civilization in poverty and chaos, and grows envious. He argues that as civilizations decay, there is a "schism in the body social," whereby:
* ''abandon'' and ''self-control'' together replace [[creativity]], and
* ''truancy'' and ''martyrdom'' together replace [[disciple]]ship by the creative minority.


With labor in short supply, workers' bargaining power increased dramatically. Various inventions that reduced the cost of labor, saved time, and raised productivity, such as the three-field crop rotation system, the iron plow, the use of manure to fertilize the soil, and the water pumps, were widely adopted. Many former serfs, now free from feudal obligations, relocated to the cities and changed profession to crafts and trades. The more successful ones became the new middle class. Trade flourished as demands for a myriad of consumer goods rose. Society became wealthier and could afford to fund the arts and the sciences.<ref name=":24" />
He argues that in this environment, people resort to [[archaism]] (idealization of the past), [[Futures studies|futurism]] (idealization of the future), detachment (removal of oneself from the realities of a decaying world), and [[transcendence (philosophy)|transcendence]] (meeting the challenges of the decaying civilization with new insight, as a Prophet). He argues that those who Transcend during a period of social decay give birth to a new Church with new and stronger spiritual insights, around which a subsequent civilization may begin to form after the old has died.


[[File:Florentinoviruela.JPG|thumb|Aztec victims of smallpox, from the Florentine Codex (1540–85)|alt=|left]]
Toynbee's use of the word 'church' refers to the collective spiritual bond of a common worship, or the same unity found in some kind of social order.
Encounters between European explorers and Native Americans exposed the latter to a variety of diseases of extraordinary virulence. Having migrated from Northeastern Asia 15,000 years ago, Native Americans had not been introduced to the plethora of contagious diseases that emerged after the rise of agriculture in the Old World. As such, they had immune systems that were ill-equipped to handle the diseases to which their counterparts in Eurasia had become resistant. When the Europeans arrived in the Americas, in short order, the indigenous populations of the Americas found themselves facing smallpox, [[measles]], [[whooping cough]], and the bubonic plague, among others. In tropical areas, malaria, [[yellow fever]], [[dengue fever]], [[Onchocerciasis|river blindness]], and others appeared. Most of these tropical diseases were traced to Africa.<ref name=":3" /> Smallpox ravaged Mexico in the 1520s and killed 150,000 in [[Tenochtitlán]] alone, including the emperor, and Peru in the 1530s, which aided the European conquerors.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/empire_seapower/smallpox_01.shtml|title=BBC - History - British History in depth: Smallpox: Eradicating the Scourge|publisher=BBC}}</ref> A combination of Spanish military attacks and evolutionarily novel diseases finished off the Aztec Empire in the sixteenth century.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":3" /> It is commonly believed that the death of as much as 90% or 95% of the [[Population history of indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native American population]] of the [[New World]] was caused by [[Old World]] diseases,<ref name=":3" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pbs.org/gunsgermssteel/variables/smallpox.html|title=Guns Germs & Steel: Variables. Smallpox |publisher=PBS}}</ref> though new research suggests [[tuberculosis]] from seals and sea lions played a significant part.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Bos|first1=Kirsten I.|last2=Harkins|first2=Kelly M.|last3=Herbig|first3=Alexander|last4=Coscolla|first4=Mireia|last5=Weber|first5=Nico|last6=Comas|first6=Iñaki|last7=Forrest|first7=Stephen A.|last8=Bryant|first8=Josephine M.|last9=Harris|first9=Simon R.|date=23 October 2014|title=Pre-Columbian mycobacterial genomes reveal seals as a source of New World human tuberculosis|journal=Nature|language=en|volume=514|issue=7523|pages=494–497|doi=10.1038/nature13591|issn=0028-0836|pmc=4550673|pmid=25141181|bibcode=2014Natur.514..494B}}</ref>


Similar events took place in Oceania and Madagascar.<ref name=":3" /> Smallpox was externally brought to Australia. The first recorded outbreak, in 1789, devastated the [[indigenous Australians|Aboriginal]] population. The extent of the outbreak is disputed, but some sources claim that it killed about 50% of coastal Aboriginal populations on the east coast.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|title=Smallpox Through History |url=http://encarta.msn.com/media_701508643/Smallpox_Through_History.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091029184350/http://encarta.msn.com/media_701508643/Smallpox_Through_History.html |archive-date=29 October 2009 |url-status=dead}}</ref> There is an ongoing historical debate concerning two rival and irreconcilable theories about how the disease first entered the continent (see [[History of smallpox]]). Smallpox continued to be a deadly disease and killed an estimated 300 million people in the twentieth century alone, but a vaccine, the first of any kind, had been available since 1796.<ref name=":19" />
==Examples of civilizations and societies which have collapsed==


As humans spread around the globe, human societies flourish and become more dependent on trade, and because urbanization means that people leave sparsely-populated rural areas for densely-populated neighborhoods, infectious diseases spread much more easily. Outbreaks are frequent, even in the modern era, but medical advances have been able to alleviate their impacts.<ref name=":15" /> In fact, the human population grew tremendously in the twentieth century, as did the population of farm animals, from which diseases could [[Zoonosis|jump to humans]], but in the developed world and increasingly also in the developing world, people are less likely to fall victim to infectious diseases than ever before. For instance, the advent of antibiotics, starting with [[penicillin]] in 1928, has resulted in the saving of the lives of hundreds of millions of people suffering from bacterial infections. However, there is no guarantee that would continue because bacteria are becoming increasingly [[Antimicrobial resistance|resistant to antibiotics]], and doctors and public health experts such as former Chief Medical Officer for England [[Sally Davies (doctor)|Sally Davies]] have even warned of an incoming "antibiotic apocalypse." The World Health Organization warned in 2019 that the spread of vaccine scepticism has been accompanied by the resurrection of long-conquered diseases like measles. This lead the WHO to name the antivaccination movement one of the world's top 10 public-health threats.<ref name=":19" />
'''By the first method'''
*[[Sumer]]
*[[Hittites|Hittite]] Empire
*[[Mycenaean Greece]]
*[[Assyria|The Neo-Assyrian Empire]]
*[[Indus Valley Civilization]]
*[[Mauryan]] and [[Gupta Empire|Gupta]] states
*[[Angkor Wat|Angkor civilisation]] of the [[Khmer Empire]]
*[[Han Dynasty|Han]] and [[Tang Dynasty]] of [[Chinese History|China]]
*[[Anasazi]]
*[[Etruscan civilization|Etruscans]]
*[[Western Roman Empire#Conquest of Rome and fall of the Western Roman Empire|Western Roman Empire]]
*[[Izapa]]
*[[Maya civilization|Maya]]
*[[Munhumutapa Empire]]
*[[Olmec]]


{{Clear}}
'''By the second method'''
*[[Ancient Egypt]]
*[[Babylonia|Ancient Babylonia]]
*[[Levant|Ancient Levant]]
*[[Classical Greece]]
*[[Eastern Roman Empire]] ([[Medieval Greek]]) of the [[Byzantines]]
*[[Korea|Modern North East Asian civilisations]], [[Hindu]] and [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] [[Indian History|India]]
*[[Chin]], [[Sung]], [[Mongol]] and [[Manchu]] [[Chinese history|China]]
*[[Tokugawa Shogunate]] of Japan
*[[Aztecs]] and [[Incas]]


=== Institutional unemployment ===
==Sites which are believed to represent "societal collapse"==
{{See also|Technological unemployment|Economics of slavery}}
*[[Cahokia]]
{{unsourced|section|date=April 2024}}
*[[Easter Island]]
During the Roman Empire, citizen employment was vastly being replaced by slave labor. Slaves were replacing many of the jobs citizens were doing. Slaves were receiving apprenticeships and education and were even learning to replace the jobs of skilled craftsman.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Duncan |first=Mike |title=The Storm Before The Storm |publisher=PublicAffairs |year=2017 |isbn=9781610397216 |pages=29}}</ref>
*[[Norsemen|Norse]] colony on [[Greenland]]

*[[Pitcairn Island]]
Since slaves do not pay taxes and were replacing most jobs from citizens, this reduced the revenue the state could accrue from their citizens.
*[[Malden Island]]

This high level of unemployment also led to high levels of poverty, which reduced demand for businesses relying on slave labor.

As taxes fell, so did government revenue. To compensate for this economic slowdown and mitigate the high levels of poverty, the Roman government implemented a form of welfare called the [[cura annonae|dole]], providing citizens free money and free grain.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Welfare State: The History Behind It – Government Policy: The Pros and (E)cons |url=https://sites.psu.edu/prosandecons/2018/02/02/wealth-redistribution/ |access-date=2024-08-04 |website=sites.psu.edu}}</ref>

Paying for the dole required high levels of government spending, exacerbating the Roman debt and also producing inflation. With slavery replacing most labor, tax revenues also plummeted, further exacerbating the government's debt.

To pay off the enormous debt, the Romans began to devalue the currency and produce more coinage. Eventually, this overwhelmed the Roman Empire and partially contributed to its collapse. <ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-01-05 |title=Rome's Runaway Inflation: Currency Devaluation in the Fourth and Fifth Centuries {{!}} Mises Institute |url=https://mises.org/mises-wire/romes-runaway-inflation-currency-devaluation-fourth-and-fifth-centuries |access-date=2024-08-04 |website=mises.org |language=en}}</ref>

=== Demographic dynamics ===
{{Main article|Sub-replacement fertility}}Several key features of human societal collapse can be related to population dynamics.<ref>[http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozideas/poprus.htm Population crises and cycles in history] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110405081151/http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozideas/poprus.htm|date=5 April 2011}}, A review of the book ''Population Crises and Population cycles'' by Claire Russell and W M S Russell.</ref> For example, the native population of Cusco, Peru at the time of the Spanish conquest was stressed by an imbalanced [[Human sex ratio#Gender imbalance|sex ratio]].<ref>[http://pages.wustl.edu/files/pages/imce/gchilds/covey.childs.kippen_inca_demography.pdf Dynamics of Indigenous Demographic Fluctuations: Lessons from Sixteenth-Century Cusco, Peru] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210625162903/http://pages.wustl.edu/files/pages/imce/gchilds/covey.childs.kippen_inca_demography.pdf |date=25 June 2021 }} R. Alan Covey, Geoff Childs, Rebecca Kippen Source: Current Anthropology, Vol. 52, No. 3 (June 2011), pp. 335-360: The University of Chicago Press</ref>

There is strong evidence that humans also display [[population cycle]]s.<ref>{{Cite web|date=5 April 2011|title=Population crises and cycles in history - OzIdeas|url=http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozideas/poprus.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110405081151/http://home.vicnet.net.au/~ozideas/poprus.htm|archive-date=5 April 2011}}</ref> Societies as diverse as those of England and France during the Roman, medieval, and early modern eras, of Egypt during Greco-Roman and Ottoman rule, and of various dynasties in China all showed similar patterns of political instability and violence becoming considerably more common after times of relative peace, prosperity, and sustained population growth. Quantitatively, periods of unrest included many times more events of instability per decade and occurred when the population was declining, rather than increasing. Pre-industrial agrarian societies typically faced instability after one or two centuries of stability. However, a population approaching its [[carrying capacity]] alone is not enough to trigger general decline if the people remained united and the ruling class strong. Other factors had to be involved, such as having more aspirants for positions of the elite than the society could realistically support ([[elite overproduction]]), which led to social strife, and chronic inflation, which caused incomes to fall and threatened the fiscal health of the state.<ref name=":6" /> In particular, an excess in especially young adult male population predictably led to social unrest and violence, as the third and higher-order parity sons had trouble realizing their economic desires and became more open to extreme ideas and actions.<ref name=":7" /> Adults in their 20s are especially prone to radicalization.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Turchin|first=Peter|year=2013|title=Modeling Social Pressures Toward Political Instability|url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/6qp8x28p|journal=Cliodynamics|language=en|volume=4|issue=2|doi=10.21237/C7clio4221333|doi-access=free}}</ref> Most historical periods of social unrest lacking in external triggers, such as natural calamities, and most genocides can be readily explained as a result of a built-up youth bulge.<ref name=":7" /> As those trends intensified, they jeopardized the social fabric, which facilitated the decline.<ref name=":6" />
[[File:Wars-Long-Run-military-civilian-fatalities.png|thumb|600x600px|Military and civilian fatalities|center]]
{{clear}}
<!--- ==Changes occurring with collapse==
{{unreferenced section|date=December 2016}}
There are three main types of collapse:

'''Reversion/Simplification''': A society's [[adaptive capacity]] may be reduced by a rapid change in population or societal complexity, both of which destabilize its institutions and cause massive shifts in population and other social dynamics. In cases of collapse, civilizations tend to revert to less complex, less centralized socio-political forms using simpler technology. These are characteristics of a [[Dark Ages in history|Dark Age]]. Examples of such societal collapse are: the [[Hittite Empire]], the [[Mycenaean civilization]], the [[Western Roman Empire]], the [[Mauryan]] and [[Gupta Empire|Gupta]] Empires in India, the [[Mayas]], the [[Angkor]] in Cambodia, the [[Han dynasty|Han]] and [[Tang dynasty|Tang]] dynasties in China and the [[Mali Empire]].

'''Incorporation/Absorption''': Alternately, a society may be gradually incorporated into a more dynamic, more complex inter-regional social structure. This happened in [[Ancient Egypt]] and [[Mesopotamia]], the [[Eastern Roman Empire]] and [[Levant|Levantine cultures]], the [[Mughal Empire|Mughal]] and [[Delhi Sultanate]]s in India, [[Song dynasty|Song China]], the [[Aztec]] culture in Mesoamerica, the [[Inca]] culture in South America, and the modern civilizations of China, Japan, and India, as well as many modern states in the Middle East and Africa.

'''Obliteration''': Vast numbers of people in the society die, or the birth rate plunges to a level that causes a dramatic depopulation.

Other changes that may accompany a collapse:

*'''Destratification''': Complex societies stratified on the basis of class, gender, race or some other salient factor become much more homogeneous or horizontally structured. In many cases, past social stratification slowly becomes irrelevant after collapse, and societies become more egalitarian.
*'''Despecialization''': One of the most characteristic features of complex civilizations (and, in many cases, the yardstick to measure complexity) is a high level of [[division of labor|job specialization]]. The most complex societies are characterized by artisans and tradespeople, who specialize intensely in a given task. Indeed, the rulers of many past societies were hyperspecialized priests or priestesses, who were completely supported by the work of the lower classes. During societal collapse, the social institutions supporting such specialization are removed and people tend to become more generalized in their work and daily habits.
*'''Decentralization''': As power becomes decentralized, people tend to be more self-regimented and have many more personal freedoms. In many instances of collapse, there is a slackening of social rules and etiquette. Geographically speaking, communities become more parochial or isolated. For example, after the [[Classic Maya collapse|collapse of the Maya civilization]], many Maya returned to their traditional hamlets and moved away from the large cities, which had dominated the political landscape.
*'''Destructuralization''': Institutions, processes, and artifacts are all manifest in the archaeological record in abundance in large civilizations. After collapse, the evidence of epiphenomena, institutions, and types of artifacts change dramatically since people are forced to adopt more self-sufficient lifestyles.
*'''Depopulation''': Societal collapse is almost always associated with a [[population decline]]. In extreme cases, the collapse in population is so severe that the society disappears entirely, which happened with the [[History of Greenland|Greenland Vikings]] and a number of [[Polynesia]]n islands. In less extreme cases, populations are reduced until a [[demography|demographic balance]] is re-established between human societies and the depleted [[natural environment]]. A classic example is the city of [[History of Rome|Rome]], which had a population of about 1.5&nbsp;million at the peak of the [[Roman Empire]] during the reign of [[Trajan]] in the early 2nd century AD, but during the [[Early Middle Ages]], its population declined to only around 15,000 inhabitants by the 9th century.
*'''Decadence''': Sir [[John Bagot Glubb]] (1897-1987), a British military officer and historian, in his essay ''Fate of Empires'', wrote that most empires tend to experience an age of [[decadence]] before they collapse.<ref>http://www.rexresearch.com/glubb/glubb-empire.pdf {{Bare URL PDF|date=March 2022}}</ref>

--->

==Theories==
[[File:Île de Pâques - Moaïs au pied de la carrière 3775a.jpg|thumb|[[Jared Diamond]] suggested that [[Easter Island]]'s society so [[History of Easter Island#Destruction of society and population|destroyed their environment]] that by around 1600, their society had fallen into a downward spiral of warfare, cannibalism, and population decline.]]
Historical theories have evolved from being purely social and ethical, to ideological and ethnocentric, and finally to multidisciplinary studies. They have become much more sophisticated.<ref name=":17">{{Cite journal|last=Butzer|first=Karl W.|date=6 March 2012|title=Collapse, environment, and society|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|volume=109|issue=10|pages=3632–3639|doi=10.1073/pnas.1114845109|pmid=22371579|pmc=3309741|doi-access=free}}</ref>

=== Cognitive decline and loss of creativity ===
The anthropologist [[Joseph Tainter]] theorized that collapsed societies essentially exhausted their own designs and were unable to adapt to natural [[diminishing returns]] for what they knew as their method of survival.<ref name=":1" /> The philosopher [[Oswald Spengler]] argued that a civilization in its "winter" would see a disinclination for abstract thinking.<ref name=":17" /> The psychologists David Rand and Jonathan Cohen theorized that people switch between two broad modes of thinking. The first is fast and automatic but rigid, and the second is slow and analytical but more flexible. Rand and Cohen believe that explains why people continue with self-destructive behaviors when logical reasoning would have alerted them of the dangers ahead. People switch from the second to the first mode of thinking after the introduction of an invention that dramatically increases the standards of living. Rand and Cohen pointed to the recent examples of the antibiotic overuse leading to resistant bacteria and failure to save for retirement. Tainter noted that according to behavioral economics, the human decision-making process tends to be more irrational than rational and that as the rate of innovation declines, as measured by the number of inventions relative to the amount of money spent on [[research and development]], it becomes progressively harder for there to be a technological solution to the problem of societal collapse.<ref name=":18">{{Cite journal|last=Spinney|first=Laura|date=17 January 2018|title=End of days: Is Western civilisation on the brink of collapse?|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23731610-300-end-of-days-is-western-civilisation-on-the-brink-of-collapse/|journal=[[New Scientist]]}}</ref>

=== Social and environmental dynamics ===
[[File:Temple of the Great Jaguar.jpg|thumb|During the 9th century AD, the central [[Maya civilization|Maya]] region suffered major [[Classic Maya collapse|political collapse]], marked by the abandonment of cities.]]
What produces modern sedentary life, unlike nomadic [[hunter-gatherer]]s, is extraordinary modern economic productivity. Tainter argues that exceptional productivity is actually more the sign of hidden weakness because of a society's dependence on it and its potential to undermine its own basis for success by not being [[self-limiting (biology)|self limiting]], as demonstrated in Western culture's ideal of perpetual growth.<ref name=":1" />

As a population grows and technology makes it easier to exploit depleting resources, the environment's diminishing returns are hidden from view. Societal [[complexity]] is then potentially threatened if it develops beyond what is actually sustainable, and a disorderly reorganization were to follow. The scissors model of [[Malthusian]] collapse, in which the population grows without limit but not resources, is the idea of great opposing environmental forces cutting into each other.

The complete breakdown of economic, cultural, and social institutions with ecological relationships is perhaps the most common feature of collapse. In his book ''[[Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed]]'', Jared Diamond proposes five interconnected causes of collapse that may reinforce each other: non-sustainable exploitation of resources, climate changes, diminishing support from friendly societies, hostile neighbors, and inappropriate attitudes for change.<ref name=":2">[[Jared Diamond]], ''[[Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed]]'', [[Penguin Books]], 2005 and 2011 ({{ISBN|978-0-241-95868-1}}).</ref><ref>[http://www.ted.com/talks/jared_diamond_on_why_societies_collapse.html Jared Diamond on why societies collapse] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140213014615/http://www.ted.com/talks/jared_diamond_on_why_societies_collapse.html |date=13 February 2014 }} TED talk, Feb 2003</ref>

=== Energy return on investment ===
Energy has played a crucial role throughout human history. Energy is linked to the birth, growth, and decline of each and every society. Energy surplus is required for the division of labor and the growth of cities. Massive energy surplus is needed for widespread wealth and cultural amenities. Economic prospects fluctuate in tandem with a society's access to cheap and abundant energy.<ref name=":23">{{Cite journal|last1=Hall|first1=Charles A.S.|last2=Lambert|first2=Jessica G.|last3=Balogh|first3=Stephen B.|date=January 2014|title=EROI of Different Fuels and the Implications for Society|journal=Energy Policy|volume=64|pages=141–152|doi=10.1016/j.enpol.2013.05.049|doi-access=free|bibcode=2014EnPol..64..141H }}</ref>

Political scientist [[Thomas Homer-Dixon]] and ecologist [[Charles A. S. Hall|Charles Hall]] proposed an economic model called [[energy return on investment]] (EROI), which measures the amount of surplus energy a society gets from using energy to obtain energy.<ref>Homer-Dixon, Thomas (2007), "The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity and the Renewal of Civilization" (Knopf, Canada)</ref><ref name=":0" /> Energy shortages drive up prices and as such provide an incentive to explore and extract previously uneconomical sources, which may still be plentiful, but more energy would be required, and the EROI is then not as high as initially thought.<ref name=":23" />

There would be no surplus if EROI approaches 1:1. Hall showed that the real cutoff is well above that and estimated that 3:1 to sustain the essential overhead energy costs of a modern society. The EROI of the most preferred energy source, [[petroleum]], has fallen in the past century from 100:1 to the range of 10:1 with clear evidence that the natural depletion curves all are downward decay curves. An EROI of more than ~3 then is what appears necessary to provide the energy for socially important tasks, such as maintaining government, legal and financial institutions, a transportation infrastructure, manufacturing, building construction and maintenance, and the lifestyles of all members of a given society.<ref name=":0" />
[[File:Stone faces in Bayon, Angkor (3).JPG|thumb|During the course of the 15th century, nearly all of [[Angkor]] was abandoned.]]
The social scientist Luke Kemp indicated that alternative sources of energy, such as solar panels, have a low EROI because they have low energy density, meaning they require a lot of land, and require substantial amounts of rare earth metals to produce.<ref name=":8" /> Hall and colleagues reached the same conclusion. There is no on-site pollution, but the EROI of renewable energy sources may be too low for them to be considered a viable alternative to fossil fuels, which continue to provide the majority of the energy used by humans.<ref name=":23" />

The mathematician Safa Motesharrei and his collaborators showed that the use of non-renewable resources such as fossil fuels allows populations to grow to one order of magnitude larger than they would using renewable resources alone and as such is able to postpone societal collapse. However, when collapse finally comes, it is much more dramatic.<ref name=":18" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last=Safa Motesharrei, Jorge Rivas, Eugenia Kalnay, Ghassem R. Asrar, Antonio J. Busalacchi, Robert F. Cahalan, Mark A. Cane, Rita R. Colwell, Kuishuang Feng, Rachel S. Franklin, Klaus Hubacek, Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm, Takemasa Miyoshi, Matthias Ruth, Roald Sagdeev, Adel Shirmohammadi, Jagadish Shukla, Jelena Srebric, Victor M. Yakovenko, Ning Zeng|date=December 2016|title=Modeling sustainability: population, inequality, consumption, and bidirectional coupling of the Earth and Human Systems|journal=National Science Review|volume=3|issue=4|pages=470–494|doi=10.1093/nsr/nww081|pmid=32747868|pmc=7398446}}</ref> Tainter warned that in the modern world, if the supply of fossil fuels were somehow cut off, shortages of clean water and food would ensue, and millions would die in a few weeks in the worst-case scenario.<ref name=":18" />

Homer-Dixon asserted that a declining EROI was one of the reasons that the Roman Empire declined and fell. The historian Joseph Tainter made the same claim about the Maya Empire.<ref name=":8" />

===Models of societal response===
According to [[Joseph Tainter]]<ref>Tainter, Joseph (1990), ''The Collapse of Complex Societies'' (Cambridge University Press) pp. 59-60.</ref> (1990), too many scholars offer facile explanations of societal collapse by assuming one or more of the following three models in the face of collapse:

# The '''Dinosaur''', a large-scale society in which resources are being depleted at an exponential rate, but nothing is done to rectify the problem because the ruling elite are unwilling or unable to adapt to those resources' reduced availability. In this type of society, rulers tend to oppose any solutions that diverge from their present course of action but favor intensification and commit an increasing number of resources to their present plans, projects, and social institutions.
# The '''Runaway Train''', a society whose continuing function depends on constant growth (''cf.'' [[Frederick Jackson Turner]]'s [[Frontier Thesis]]). This type of society, based almost exclusively on acquisition (such as pillaging or exploitation), cannot be sustained indefinitely. The [[ancient Assyrians|Assyrian]], [[Roman Empire|Roman]] and [[Mongol Empire|Mongol]] Empires, for example, all fractured and collapsed when no new conquests could be achieved.
# The '''House of Cards''', a society that has grown to be so large and include so many complex social institutions that it is inherently unstable and prone to collapse. This type of society has been seen with particular frequency among [[Eastern Bloc]] and other [[communist]] nations, in which all social organizations are arms of the government or ruling party, such that the government must either stifle association wholesale (encouraging dissent and [[Subversive|subversion]]) or exercise less authority than it asserts (undermining its legitimacy in the public eye).
#:

====Tainter's critique====
Tainter argues that those models, though superficially useful, cannot severally or jointly account for all instances of societal collapse. Often, they are seen as interconnected occurrences that reinforce one another.

Tainter considers that social complexity is a recent and comparatively-anomalous occurrence, requiring constant support. He asserts that collapse is best understood by grasping four axioms. In his own words (p.&nbsp;194):

# human societies are problem-solving organizations;
# sociopolitical systems require energy for their maintenance;
# increased complexity carries with it increased costs per capita; and
# investment in sociopolitical complexity as a problem-solving response reaches a point of declining marginal returns.

With those facts in mind, collapse can simply be understood as a loss of the energy needed to maintain social complexity. Collapse is thus the sudden loss of social complexity, stratification, internal and external communication and exchange, and productivity.

===Toynbee's theory of decay===
In his acclaimed 12-volume work, ''[[A Study of History]]'' (1934–1961), the British historian [[Arnold J. Toynbee]] explored the rise and fall of 28 civilizations and came to the conclusion that civilizations generally collapsed mainly by internal factors, factors of their own making, but external pressures also played a role.<ref name=":8" /> He theorized that all [[civilization]]s pass through several distinct stages: genesis, growth, time of troubles, universal state, and disintegration.<ref name=":11" />

For Toynbee, a civilization is born when a "creative minority" successfully responds to the challenges posed by its physical, social, and political environment. However, the fixation on the old methods of the "creative minority" leads it to eventually cease to be creative and degenerate into merely a "[[dominant minority]]" (that forces the majority to obey without meriting obedience), which fails to recognize new ways of thinking. He argues that creative minorities deteriorate from a worship of their "former self", by which they become prideful, and they fail in adequately addressing the next challenge that they face. Similarly, the German philosopher [[Oswald Spengler]] discussed the transition from ''Kultur'' to ''Zivilisation'' in his ''[[The Decline of the West]]'' (1918).<ref name=":11" />

Toynbee argues that the ultimate sign a civilization has broken down is when the dominant minority forms a [[A Study of History#Universal state|Universal State]], which stifles political creativity. He states:

{{blockquote|First the Dominant Minority attempts to hold by force - against all right and reason - a position of inherited privilege which it has ceased to merit; and then the [[Proletariat]] repays injustice with resentment, fear with hate, and violence with violence when it executes its acts of secession. Yet the whole movement ends in positive acts of creation - and this on the part of all the actors in the tragedy of disintegration. The Dominant Minority creates a universal state, the Internal Proletariat a universal church, and the External Proletariat a bevy of barbarian war-bands.}}

He argues that as civilizations decay, they form an "Internal Proletariat" and an "External Proletariat." The Internal proletariat is held in subjugation by the dominant minority inside the civilization, and grows bitter; the external proletariat exists outside the civilization in poverty and chaos and grows envious. He argues that as civilizations decay, there is a "schism in the body social", whereby ''abandon'' and ''self-control'' together replace [[creativity]], and ''truancy'' and ''martyrdom'' together replace [[Apprenticeship|discipleship]] by the creative minority.

He argues that in that environment, people resort to [[archaism]] (idealization of the past), [[Futures studies|futurism]] (idealization of the future), [[escapism|detachment]] (removal of oneself from the realities of a decaying world), and [[transcendence (philosophy)|transcendence]] (meeting the challenges of the decaying civilization with new insight, as a prophet). He argues that those who transcend during a period of social decay give birth to a new Church with new and stronger spiritual insights around which a subsequent civilization may begin to form after the old has died. Toynbee's use of the word 'church' refers to the collective spiritual bond of a common worship, or the same unity found in some kind of [[social order]].

The historian [[Carroll Quigley]] expanded upon that theory in ''The Evolution of Civilizations'' (1961, 1979).<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Evolution of Civilizations - An Introduction to Historical Analysis (1979)|url=https://archive.org/details/CarrollQuigley-TheEvolutionOfCivilizations-AnIntroductionTo|via=Internet Archive}}</ref> He argued that societal disintegration involves the metamorphosis of social instruments, which were set up to meet actual needs, into institutions, which serve their own interest at the expense of social needs.<ref>Harry J Hogan in the foreword (p17) and Quigley in the conclusion (p416) to {{cite book|author=Carroll Quigley|url=https://archive.org/details/evolutionofcivil0000quig|title=The evolution of civilizations: an introduction to historical analysis|publisher=Liberty Press|year=1979|isbn=0-913966-56-8|access-date=26 May 2013|url-access=registration}}</ref> However, in the 1950s, Toynbee's approach to history, his style of civilizational analysis, started to face skepticism from mainstream historians who thought it put an undue emphasis on the divine, which led to his academic reputation declining. For a time, however, Toynbee's ''Study'' remained popular outside academia. Interest revived decades later with the publication of ''[[The Clash of Civilizations]]'' (1997) by the political scientist [[Samuel P. Huntington]], who viewed human history as broadly the history of civilizations and posited that the world after the end of the Cold War will be multipolar and one of competing major civilizations, which are divided by "fault lines."<ref name=":11" />

===Systems science===
Developing an integrated theory of societal collapse that takes into account the complexity of human societies remains an open problem.<ref name=":17" /> Researchers currently have very little ability to identify internal structures of large distributed systems like human societies. Genuine structural collapse seems, in many cases, the only plausible explanation supporting the idea that such structures exist. However, until they can be concretely identified, scientific inquiry appears limited to the construction of scientific narratives,<ref>T.F. Allen, J.A. Tainter et al. 2001 Dragnet Ecology: The Privilege of Science in a Postmodern World. BioScience</ref><ref name=":17" /> using [[systems thinking]] for careful [[storytelling]] about systemic organization and change.

In the 1990s, the evolutionary anthropologist and quantitative historian [[Peter Turchin]] noticed that the equations used to model the populations of predators and preys can also be used to describe the ontogeny of human societies. He specifically examined how social factors such as [[income inequality]] were related to political instability. He found recurring cycles of unrest in historical societies such as Ancient Egypt, China, and Russia. He specifically identified two cycles, one long and one short. The long one, what he calls the "secular cycle," lasts for approximately two to three centuries. A society starts out fairly equal. Its population grows and the cost of labor drops. A wealthy upper class emerges, and life for the working class deteriorates. As inequality grows, a society becomes more unstable with the lower-class being miserable and the upper-class entangled in infighting. Exacerbating social turbulence eventually leads to collapse. The shorter cycle lasts for about 50 years and consists of two generations, one peaceful and one turbulent. Looking at US history, for example, Turchin identified times of serious sociopolitical instability in 1870, 1920, and 1970. He announced in 2010 that he had predicted that in 2020, the US would witness a period of unrest at least on the same level as 1970 because the first cycle coincides with the turbulent part of the second in around 2020. He also warned that the US was not the only Western nation under strain.<ref name=":18" />

However, Turchin's model can only paint the broader picture and cannot pinpoint how bad things can get and what precisely triggers a collapse. The mathematician Safa Motesharrei also applied predator-prey models to human society, with the upper class and the lower class being the two different types of "predators" and natural resources being the "prey." He found that either extreme inequality or resource depletion facilitates a collapse. However, a collapse is irreversible only if a society experiences both at the same time, as they "fuel each other."<ref name=":18" />


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Civilizations|History|Society}}
* [[Decline]]
* [[Diaspora]]
* [[Accelerationism]]
* [[Global empire]]
* [[Apocalypticism]]
* [[List of disasters]]
* [[Decadence]]
* [[Lost cities]]
* [[Doomer]]
* [[Malthusian catastrophe]]
* [[Doomsday cult]]
* [[Human extinction]]
* [[Millennium Ecosystem Assessment]]
* [[John B. Calhoun#Mouse experiments|John B. Calhoun's mouse experiments]]
* [[Medieval demography]]
* [[Overpopulation]]
* [[Lost city]]
* [[Peak oil]]
* [[Millenarianism]]
* [[Population dynamics]]
* [[Ruins]]
* [[Survivalism]]
* [[Survivalism]]
* [[Fragile state]]
* [[Social alienation]]
* [[Weltschmerz]]
;Malthusian and environmental collapse themes
* [[Collapsology]]
* [[Behavioral sink]] – rat colony collapse
* [[Catastrophism]]
* ''[[Earth 2100]]''
* [[Ecological collapse]]
* [[Global catastrophic risk]]
* [[Human overpopulation]]
* [[Medieval demography]]
* [[Millennium Ecosystem Assessment]]
* [[Overshoot (population)|Overshoot]]
;Cultural and institutional collapse themes
* [[Civil war]]
* [[Degrowth]]
* [[Economic collapse]]
* [[Failed state]]
* [[Failed state]]
* [[Earth 2100]]
* [[Fragile state]]
* [[Group cohesiveness]]
* [[Language death]]
* [[Progress trap]]
* [[Social cycle theory]]
* [[Sociocultural evolution]]
* [[State collapse]]
* [[Urban decay]]
;Systems science
* [[Failure mode and effects analysis]]
* [[Fault tree analysis]]
* [[Hazard analysis]]
* [[Risk assessment]]
* [[Systems engineering]]

==Notes==
{{reflist|group=note}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist|refs=
<ref name=":8">{{Cite web|last=Kemp|first=Luke|date=18 February 2019|title=Are we on the road to civilisation collapse?|url=https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190218-are-we-on-the-road-to-civilisation-collapse|access-date=5 September 2020|website=BBC Future}}</ref>
<ref name=":10">{{Cite web|last=Nuwer|first=Rachel|author-link=Rachel Nuwer |date=18 April 2017|title=How Western civilisation could collapse|url=https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20170418-how-western-civilisation-could-collapse|access-date=6 September 2020|website=BBC Future}}</ref>
<ref name=":5">{{cite journal|last1=Spinney|first1=Laura|date=18 February 2020|title=Panicking about societal collapse? Plunder the bookshelves|journal=Nature|language=en|volume=578|issue=7795|pages=355–357|doi=10.1038/d41586-020-00436-3|bibcode=2020Natur.578..355S|doi-access=free}}</ref>
<ref name=":4">{{cite journal|last1=Barras|first1=Vincent|last2=Greub|first2=Gilbert|date=June 2014|title=History of biological warfare and bioterrorism|journal=Clinical Microbiology and Infection|volume=20|issue=6|page=498|doi=10.1111/1469-0691.12706|pmid=24894605|quote=In the Middle Ages, a famous although controversial example is offered by the siege of Caffa (now Feodossia in Ukraine/Crimea), a Genovese outpost on the Black Sea coast, by the Mongols. In 1346, the attacking army experienced an epidemic of bubonic plague. The Italian chronicler Gabriele de’ Mussi, in his ''Istoria de Morbo sive Mortalitate quae fuit Anno Domini 1348'', describes quite plausibly how the plague was transmitted by the Mongols by throwing diseased cadavers with catapults into the besieged city, and how ships transporting Genovese soldiers, fleas and rats fleeing from there brought it to the Mediterranean ports. Given the highly complex epidemiology of plague, this interpretation of the Black Death (which might have killed > 25 million people in the following years throughout Europe) as stemming from a specific and localized origin of the Black Death remains controversial. Similarly, it remains doubtful whether the effect of throwing infected cadavers could have been the sole cause of the outburst of an epidemic in the besieged city.|doi-access=free}}</ref>
<ref name=":3">{{Cite book|last1=Cochran|first1=Gregory|title=The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution|last2=Harpending|first2=Henry|publisher=Basic Books|year=2010|isbn=978-0-465-02042-3|location=United States of America|chapter=Chapter 6: Expansions}}</ref>
<ref name=":7">{{Cite news|title=Why a two-state solution doesn't guarantee peace in the Middle East|work=Washington Examiner|url=http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/article/2615183|access-date=5 April 2017}}</ref>
<ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last=Turchin|first=Peter|date=2 July 2008|title=Arise 'cliodynamics'|journal=Nature|volume=454|issue=7200|pages=34–5|doi=10.1038/454034a|pmid=18596791|bibcode=2008Natur.454...34T|s2cid=822431|doi-access=free}}</ref>
<ref name=":1">{{cite book|last1=Tainter|first1=Joseph A.|title=The Collapse of Complex Societies|date=1990|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-38673-X|edition=1st paperback|location=Cambridge|author-link=Joseph Tainter}}</ref>
<ref name=":0">Hall, Charles 2009 "What is the Minimum EROI that a Sustainable Society Must Have" ENERGIES [http://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/2/1/25]</ref>
<ref name=":11">{{Cite journal|last=Kumar|first=Krishan|date=3 October 2014|title=The Return of Civilization—and of Arnold Toynbee?|journal=Comparative Studies in Society and History|volume=56|issue=4|pages=815–843|doi=10.1017/S0010417514000413|doi-access=free}}</ref>
}}


==Further reading ==
== Bibliography ==
*{{Cite book |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/144922970 |title=Essential Visual History of the World |publisher=National Geographic |year=2007 |isbn=978-1-4262-0091-5 |location=Washington, D.C. |oclc=144922970 |ref={{SfnRef|National Geographic|2007}}}}
* [[Jared Diamond|Diamond, Jared M]]. (2005). [[Collapse (book)|Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed]]. New York: Viking Books. ISBN 0-14-303655-6.
* Greer, John Michael. (2005). How Civilizations Fall: A Theory of Catabolic Collapse. [http://www.xs4all.nl/~wtv/powerdown/greer.htm]
* Homer-Dixon, Thomas. (2006). The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity, and the Renewal of Civilization. Washington DC: Island Press.
* [[Joseph Tainter|Tainter, Joseph A]]. (1990). [[Joseph Tainter|The Collapse of Complex Societies]] (1st paperback ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-38673-X.
* [[Arnold J. Toynbee|Toynbee, Arnold J]]. (1934-1961). [[A Study of History]], Volumes I-XII. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
* Weiss, V. (2007). The population cycle drives human history - from a eugenic phase into a dysgenic phase and eventual collapse. The Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies 32: 327-358. [http://www.volkmar-weiss.de/cycle.html]
* [[Ronald Wright|Wright, Ronald]]. (2004). [[A Short History of Progress]]. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers. ISBN 0-7867-1547-2.


== Further reading ==
*{{Cite journal |last1=Ehrlich |first1=Paul R. |author-link=Paul R. Ehrlich |last2=Ehrlich |first2=Anne H. |date=9 January 2013 |title=Can a collapse of global civilization be avoided? |journal=[[Proceedings of the Royal Society B]] |volume=280 |issue=1754 |pages=20122845 |doi=10.1098/rspb.2012.2845 |pmc=3574335 |pmid=23303549}} <small> &nbsp; [http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1767/20131193#ref-1 Comment] by Prof. Michael Kelly, disagreeing with the paper by Ehrlich and Ehrlich; and [http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1767/20131373 response] by the authors</small>
* [[Thomas Homer-Dixon|Homer-Dixon, Thomas]]. (2006). [[The Upside of Down (book)|The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity, and the Renewal of Civilization]]. Washington DC: Island Press.
* Huesemann, Michael H., and Joyce A. Huesemann (2011). [http://www.newtechnologyandsociety.org ''Technofix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us or the Environment''], Chapter 6, "Sustainability or Collapse", New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, British Columbia, Canada, {{ISBN|978-0-86571-704-6}}, 464 pp.
* {{Cite journal |last1=Motesharrei |first1=Safa |last2=Rivas |first2=Jorge |last3=Kalnay |first3=Eugenia |author-link3=Eugenia Kalnay |year=2014 |title=Human and nature dynamics (HANDY): Modeling inequality and use of resources in the collapse or sustainability of societies |journal=[[Ecological Economics (journal)|Ecological Economics]] |volume=101 |pages=90–102 |doi=10.1016/j.ecolecon.2014.02.014 |doi-access=free|bibcode=2014EcoEc.101...90M }}
* [[Ronald Wright|Wright, Ronald]]. (2004). [[A Short History of Progress]]. New York: Carroll & Graf Publishers. {{ISBN|0-7867-1547-2}}.

==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{Doomsday}}
{{Doomsday}}
{{Portal bar|History|Politics|Energy}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Societal Collapse}}
[[Category:Sociology]]
[[Category:Societal collapse| ]]
[[Category:Doomsday scenarios]]
[[Category:Economic problems]]
[[Category:Social systems]]
[[Category:Social systems]]
[[Category:Urban decay]]
[[Category:Eschatology]]
[[Category:Theories of history]]
[[Category:Theories of history]]
[[Category:Dark ages]]

[[es:Colapso societal]]
[[fr:Déclin de civilisation]]

Latest revision as of 11:03, 17 November 2024

Destruction, from The Course of Empire by Thomas Cole (1836)
Destruction, from The Course of Empire by Thomas Cole (1836)
Desolation, from The Course of Empire by Thomas Cole (1836)
Desolation, from The Course of Empire by Thomas Cole (1836)

Societal collapse (also known as civilizational collapse or systems collapse) is the fall of a complex human society characterized by the loss of cultural identity and of social complexity as an adaptive system, the downfall of government, and the rise of violence.[1] Possible causes of a societal collapse include natural catastrophe, war, pestilence, famine, economic collapse, population decline or overshoot, mass migration, incompetent leaders, and sabotage by rival civilizations.[2] A collapsed society may revert to a more primitive state, be absorbed into a stronger society, or completely disappear.

Virtually all civilizations have suffered such a fate, regardless of their size or complexity. Most never recovered, such as the Western and Eastern Roman Empires, the Maya civilization, and the Easter Island civilization.[1] However, some of them later revived and transformed, such as China, Greece, and Egypt.

Anthropologists, historians, and sociologists have proposed a variety of explanations for the collapse of civilizations involving causative factors such as environmental degradation, depletion of resources, costs of rising complexity, invasion, disease, decay of social cohesion, growing inequality, extractive institutions, long-term decline of cognitive abilities, loss of creativity, and misfortune.[1][3][4] However, complete extinction of a culture is not inevitable, and in some cases, the new societies that arise from the ashes of the old one are evidently its offspring, despite a dramatic reduction in sophistication.[3] Moreover, the influence of a collapsed society, such as the Western Roman Empire, may linger on long after its death.[5]

The study of societal collapse, collapsology, is a topic for specialists of history, anthropology, sociology, and political science. More recently, they are joined by experts in cliodynamics and study of complex systems.[6][3]

Concept

[edit]

Joseph Tainter frames societal collapse in The Collapse of Complex Societies (1988), a seminal and founding work of the academic discipline on societal collapse.[7] He elaborates that 'collapse' is a "broad term," but in the sense of societal collapse, he views it as "a political process."[8] He further narrows societal collapse as a rapid process (within "few decades") of "substantial loss of sociopolitical structure," giving the fall of the Western Roman Empire as "the most widely known instance of collapse" in the Western world.[8]

Others, particularly in response to the popular Collapse (2005) by Jared Diamond[9] and more recently, have argued that societies discussed as cases of collapse are better understood through resilience and societal transformation,[10] or "reorganization", especially if collapse is understood as a "complete end" of political systems, which according to Shmuel Eisenstadt has not taken place at any point.[11] Eisenstadt also points out that a clear differentiation between total or partial decline and "possibilities of regeneration" is crucial for the preventive purpose of the study of societal collapse.[11] This frame of reference often rejects the term collapse and critiques the notion that cultures simply vanish when the political structures that organize labor for large archaeologically prominent projects do. For example, while the Ancient Maya are often touted as a prime example of collapse, in reality this reorganization was simply the result of the removal of the political system of Divine Kingship largely in the eastern lowlands as many cities in the western highlands of Mesoamerica maintained this system of divine kingship into the 16th century. The Maya continue to maintain cultural and linguistic continuity into the present day.

Societal longevity

[edit]

The social scientist Luke Kemp analyzed dozens of civilizations, which he defined as "a society with agriculture, multiple cities, military dominance in its geographical region and a continuous political structure," from 3000 BC to 600 AD and calculated that the average life span of a civilization is close to 340 years.[1] Of them, the most durable were the Kushite Kingdom in Northeast Africa (1,150 years), the Aksumite Empire in East Africa (1,100 years), and the Vedic civilization in South Asia and the Olmecs in Mesoamerica (both 1,000 years), and the shortest-lived were the Nanda Empire in India (24) and the Qin dynasty in China (14).[12]

A statistical analysis of empires by complex systems specialist Samuel Arbesman suggests that collapse is generally a random event and does not depend on age. That is analogous to what evolutionary biologists call the Red Queen hypothesis, which asserts that for a species in a harsh ecology, extinction is a persistent possibility.[1]

Contemporary discussions about societal collapse are seeking resilience by suggesting societal transformation.[13]

Causes of collapse

[edit]

Because human societies are complex systems, common factors may contribute to their decline that are economical, environmental, demographic, social and cultural, and they may cascade into another and build up to the point that could overwhelm any mechanisms that would otherwise maintain stability. Unexpected and abrupt changes, which experts call nonlinearities, are some of the warning signs.[14] In some cases, a natural disaster (such as a tsunami, earthquake, pandemic, massive fire or climate change) may precipitate a collapse. Other factors such as a Malthusian catastrophe, overpopulation, or resource depletion might be contributory factors of collapse, but studies of past societies seem to suggest that those factors did not cause the collapse alone.[15] Significant inequity and exposed corruption may combine with lack of loyalty to established political institutions and result in an oppressed lower class rising up and seizing power from a smaller wealthy elite in a revolution. The diversity of forms that societies evolve corresponds to diversity in their failures. Jared Diamond suggests that societies have also collapsed through deforestation, loss of soil fertility, restrictions of trade and/or rising endemic violence.[16]

In the case of the Western Roman Empire, some argued that it did not collapse but merely transformed.[17]

Natural disasters and climate change

[edit]
The Indus Valley Civilization likely de-urbanized and shifted because of changes in crop patterns.[18]

Archeologists have identified signs of a megadrought which lasted for a millennium between 5,000 and 4,000 years ago in Africa and Asia. The drying of the Green Sahara not only turned it into a desert but also disrupted the monsoon seasons in South and Southeast Asia and caused flooding in East Asia, which prevented successful harvests and the development of complex culture. It coincided with and may have caused the decline and the fall of the Akkadian Empire in Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley Civilization.[19] The dramatic shift in climate is known as the 4.2-kiloyear event.[20]

The highly advanced Indus Valley Civilization took root around 3000 BC in what is now northwestern India and Pakistan and collapsed around 1700 BC. Since the Indus script has yet to be deciphered, the causes of its de-urbanization[18] remain a mystery, but there is some evidence pointing to natural disasters.[21] Signs of a gradual decline began to emerge in 1900 BC, and two centuries later, most of the cities had been abandoned. Archeological evidence suggests an increase in interpersonal violence and in infectious diseases like leprosy and tuberculosis.[22][23] Historians and archeologists believe that severe and long-lasting drought and a decline in trade with Egypt and Mesopotamia caused the collapse.[24] Evidence for earthquakes has also been discovered. Sea level changes are also found at two possible seaport sites along the Makran coast which are now inland. Earthquakes may have contributed to decline of several sites by direct shaking damage or by changes in sea level or in water supply.[25][26][27]

Volcanic eruptions can abruptly influence the climate. During a large eruption, sulfur dioxide (SO2) is expelled into the stratosphere, where it could stay for years and gradually get oxidized into sulfate aerosols. Being highly reflective, sulfate aerosols reduce the incident sunlight and cool the Earth's surface. By drilling into glaciers and ice sheets, scientists can access the archives of the history of atmospheric composition. A team of multidisciplinary researchers led by Joseph McConnell of the Desert Research Institute in Reno, Nevada deduced that a volcanic eruption occurred in 43 BC, a year after the assassination of Julius Caesar on the Ides of March (15 March) in 44 BC, which left a power vacuum and led to bloody civil wars. According to historical accounts, it was also a period of poor weather, crop failure, widespread famine, and disease. Analyses of tree rings and cave stalagmites from different parts of the globe provided complementary data. The Northern Hemisphere got drier, but the Southern Hemisphere became wetter. Indeed, the Greek historian Appian recorded that there was a lack of flooding in Egypt, which also faced famine and pestilence. Rome's interest in Egypt as a source of food intensified, and the aforementioned problems and civil unrest weakened Egypt's ability to resist. Egypt came under Roman rule after Cleopatra committed suicide in 30 BC. While it is difficult to say for certain whether Egypt would have become a Roman province if Okmok volcano (in modern-day Alaska) had not erupted, the eruption likely hastened the process.[28]

Global average temperatures show that the Little Ice Age was not a distinct global time period but the end of a long temperature decline, which preceded the recent global warming.[29]

More generally, recent research pointed to climate change as a key player in the decline and fall of historical societies in China, the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas. In fact, paleoclimatogical temperature reconstruction suggests that historical periods of social unrest, societal collapse, and population crash and significant climate change often occurred simultaneously. A team of researchers from Mainland China and Hong Kong were able to establish a causal connection between climate change and large-scale human crises in pre-industrial times. Short-term crises may be caused by social problems, but climate change was the ultimate cause of major crises, starting with economic depressions.[30] Moreover, since agriculture is highly dependent on climate, any changes to the regional climate from the optimum can induce crop failures.[31]

After around 1130, North America had significant climatic change in the form of a 300-year period of aridity called the Great Drought.[32] The Mississippian culture collapsed during this period. The Ancestral Puebloans left their established homes in the 12th and 13th centuries. Current scholarly consensus is that Ancestral Puebloans responded to pressure from Numic-speaking peoples moving onto the Colorado Plateau, as well as climate change that resulted in agricultural failures.

The Mongol conquests corresponded to a period of cooling in the Northern Hemisphere between the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, when the Medieval Warm Period was giving way to the Little Ice Age, which caused ecological stress. In Europe, the cooling climate did not directly facilitate the Black Death, but it caused wars, mass migration, and famine, which helped diseases spread.[31]

The Thirty Years' War devastated much of Europe and was one of the many political upheavals during the General Crisis of the Seventeenth Century, which is causally linked to the Little Ice Age.

A more recent example is the General Crisis of the Seventeenth Century in Europe, which was a period of inclement weather, crop failure, economic hardship, extreme intergroup violence, and high mortality because of the Little Ice Age. The Maunder Minimum involved sunspots being exceedingly rare. Episodes of social instability track the cooling with a time lap of up to 15 years, and many developed into armed conflicts, such as the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648),[30] which started as a war of succession to the Bohemian throne. Animosity between Protestants and Catholics in the Holy Roman Empire (in modern-day Germany) added fuel to the fire. Soon, it escalated to a huge conflict that involved all major European powers and devastated much of Germany. When the war had ended, some regions of the empire had seen their populations drop by as much as 70%.[33][note 1] However, not all societies faced crises during this period. Tropical countries with high carrying capacities and trading economies did not suffer much because the changing climate did not induce an economic depression in those places.[30]

Foreign invasions and mass migration

[edit]

Between ca. 4000 and 3000 BCE, neolithic populations in western Eurasia declined, probably due to the plague and other viral hemorrhagic fevers.[34] This decline was followed by the Indo-European migrations.[35] Around 3,000 BC, people of the pastoralist Yamnaya culture from the Pontic–Caspian steppe, who had high levels of WSH ancestry, embarked on a massive expansion throughout Eurasia, which is considered to be associated with the dispersal of the Indo-European languages by most contemporary linguists, archaeologists, and geneticists. The expansion of WSHs resulted in the virtual disappearance of the Y-DNA of Early European Farmers (EEFs) from the European gene pool, significantly altering the cultural and genetic landscape of Europe. EEF mtDNA however remained frequent, suggesting admixture between WSH males and EEF females.[36]

A mysterious loose confederation of fierce maritime marauders known as the Sea Peoples was identified as one of the main causes of the Late Bronze Age Collapse in the Eastern Mediterranean.[37] It is possible that the Sea Peoples were themselves victims of the environmental changes that led to widespread famine and precipitated the Collapse.[38]

Barbarian invasions played an important role in the fall of the Western Roman Empire.

In the third century BC, a Eurasian nomadic people, the Xiongnu, began threatening China's frontiers, but by the first century BC, they had been completely expelled. They then turned their attention westward and displaced various other tribes in Eastern and Central Europe, which led to a cascade of events. Attila rose to power as leader of the Huns and initiated a campaign of invasions and looting and went as far as Gaul (modern-day France). Attila's Huns were clashing with the Roman Empire, which had already been divided into two-halves for ease of administration: the Eastern Roman Empire and the Western Roman Empire. Despite managing to stop Attila at the Battle of Chalons in 451 AD, the Romans were unable to prevent Attila from attacking Roman Italy the next year. Northern Italian cities like Milan were ravaged. The Huns never again posed a threat to the Romans after Attila's death, but the rise of the Huns also forced the Germanic peoples out of their territories and made those groups press their way into parts of France, Spain, Italy, and even as far south as North Africa. The city of Rome itself came under attack by the Visigoths in 410 and was plundered by the Vandals in 455.[note 2][39][better source needed] A combination of internal strife, economic weakness, and relentless invasions by the Germanic peoples pushed the Western Roman Empire into terminal decline. The last Western Roman Emperor, Romulus Augustulus, was dethroned in 476 by the German Odoacer, who declared himself King of Italy.[40][better source needed]

In the eleventh century AD, North Africa's populous and flourishing civilization collapsed after it had exhausted its resources in internal fighting and suffering devastation from the invasion of the Bedouin tribes of Banu Sulaym and Banu Hilal.[41] Ibn Khaldun noted that all of the lands ravaged by Banu Hilal invaders had become arid desert.[42]

Expansion of the Mongol Empire from 1206 to 1294

In 1206, a warlord achieved dominance over all Mongols with the title Genghis Khan and began his campaign of territorial expansion. The Mongols' highly flexible and mobile cavalry enabled them to conquer their enemies with efficiency and swiftness.[43][better source needed] In the brutal pillaging that followed Mongol invasions during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the invaders decimated the populations of China, Russia, the Middle East, and Islamic Central Asia. Later Mongol leaders, such as Timur, destroyed many cities, slaughtered thousands of people, and irreparably damaged the ancient irrigation systems of Mesopotamia. The invasions transformed a settled society to a nomadic one.[44] In China, for example, a combination of war, famine, and pestilence during the Mongol conquests halved the population, a decline of around 55 million people.[31] The Mongols also displaced large numbers of people and created power vacuums. The Khmer Empire went into decline and was replaced by the Thais, who were pushed southward by the Mongols. The Vietnamese, who succeeded in defeating the Mongols, also turned their attention to the south and by 1471 began to subjugate the Chams.[45][better source needed] When Vietnam's Later Lê dynasty went into decline in the late 1700s, a bloody civil war erupted between the Trịnh family in the north and the Nguyễn family in the south.[46][note 3] More Cham provinces were seized by the Nguyễn warlords.[47] Finally, Nguyễn Ánh emerged victorious and declared himself Emperor of Vietnam (changing the name from Annam) with the title Gia Long and established the Nguyễn dynasty.[46] The last remaining principality of Champa, Panduranga (modern-day Phan Rang, Vietnam), survived until 1832,[48] when Emperor Minh Mạng (Nguyễn Phúc Đảm) conquered it after centuries of Cham–Vietnamese wars. Vietnam's policy of assimilation involved the forcefeeding of pork to Muslims and beef to Hindus, which fueled resentment. An uprising followed, the first and only war between Vietnam and the jihadists, until it was crushed.[49][50][51]

Famine, economic depression, and internal strife

[edit]
Map of the Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200 BC) in the Eastern Mediterranean

Around 1210 BC, the New Kingdom of Egypt shipped large amounts of grain to the disintegrating Hittite Empire. Thus, there had been a food shortage in Anatolia but not the Nile Valley.[38] However, that soon changed. Although Egypt managed to deliver a decisive and final defeat to the Sea Peoples at the Battle of Xois, Egypt itself went into steep decline. The collapse of all other societies in the Eastern Mediterranean disrupted established trade routes and caused widespread economic depression. Government workers became underpaid, which resulted in the first labor strike in recorded history and undermined royal authority.[52] There was also political infighting between different factions of government. Bad harvest from the reduced flooding at the Nile led to a major famine. Food prices rose to eight times their normal values and occasionally even reached twenty-four times. Runaway inflation followed. Attacks by the Libyans and Nubians made things even worse. Throughout the Twentieth Dynasty (~1187–1064 BC), Egypt devolved from a major power in the Mediterranean to a deeply divided and weakened state, which later came to be ruled by the Libyans and the Nubians.[38]

Between 481 BC and 221 BC, the Period of the Warring States in China ended by King Zheng of the Qin dynasty succeeding in defeating six competing factions and thus becoming the first Chinese emperor, titled Qin Shi Huang. A ruthless but efficient ruler, he raised a disciplined and professional army and introduced a significant number of reforms, such as unifying the language and creating a single currency and system of measurement. In addition, he funded dam constructions and began building the first segment of what was to become the Great Wall of China to defend his realm against northern nomads. Nevertheless, internal feuds and rebellions made his empire fall apart after his death in 210 B.C.[53]

The Russian famine of 1921–1922 occurred as a result of drought and the ongoing Russian Civil War

In the early fourteenth century AD, Britain suffered repeated rounds of crop failures from unusually heavy rainfall and flooding. Much livestock either starved or drowned. Food prices skyrocketed, and King Edward II attempted to rectify the situation by imposing price controls, but vendors simply refused to sell at such low prices. In any case, the act was abolished by the Lincoln Parliament in 1316. Soon, people from commoners to nobles were finding themselves short of food. Many resorted to begging, crime, and eating animals they otherwise would not eat. People in northern England had to deal with raids from Scotland. There were even reports of cannibalism.

In Continental Europe, things were at least just as bad. The Great Famine of 1315–1317 coincided with the end of the Medieval Warm Period and the start of the Little Ice Age. Some historians suspect that the change in climate was due to Mount Tarawera in New Zealand erupting in 1314.[54] The Great Famine was, however, only one of the calamities striking Europe that century, as the Hundred Years' War and Black Death would soon follow.[54][55] (Also see the Crisis of the Late Middle Ages.) Recent analysis of tree rings complement historical records and show that the summers of 1314–1316 were some of the wettest on record over a period of 700 years.[55]

Disease outbreaks

[edit]
The angel of death striking a door during the plague of Rome; engraving by Levasseur after Jules-Elie Delaunay (1828–1891).

Historically, the dawn of agriculture led to the rise of contagious diseases.[56] Compared to their hunting-gathering counterparts, agrarian societies tended to be sedentary, have higher population densities, be in frequent contact with livestock, and be more exposed to contaminated water supplies and higher concentrations of garbage. Poor sanitation, a lack of medical knowledge, superstitions, and sometimes a combination of disasters exacerbated the problem.[1][56][57] The journalist Michael Rosenwald wrote that "history shows that past pandemics have reshaped societies in profound ways. Hundreds of millions of people have died. Empires have fallen. Governments have cracked. Generations have been annihilated."[58]

From the description of symptoms by the Greek physician Galen, which included coughing, fever, (blackish) diarrhea, swollen throat, and thirst, modern experts identified the probable culprits of the Antonine Plague (165–180 AD) to have been smallpox or measles.[58][59] The disease likely started in China and spread to the West via the Silk Road. Roman troops first contracted the disease in the East before they returned home. Striking a virgin population, the Antonine Plague had dreadful mortality rates; between one third to half of the population, 60 to 70 million people, perished. Roman cities suffered from a combination of overcrowding, poor hygiene, and unhealthy diets. They quickly became epicenters. Soon, the disease reached as far as Gaul and mauled Roman defenses along the Rhine. The ranks of the previously formidable Roman army had to be filled with freed slaves, German mercenaries, criminals, and gladiators. That ultimately failed to prevent the Germanic tribes from crossing the Rhine. On the civilian side, the Antonine Plague created drastic shortages of businessmen, which disrupted trade, and farmers, which led to a food crisis. An economic depression followed and government revenue fell. Some accused Emperor Marcus Aurelius and Co-Emperor Lucius Verus, both of whom victims of the disease, of affronting the gods, but others blamed Christians. However, the Antonine Plague strengthened the position of the monotheistic religion of Christianity in the formerly-polytheistic society, as Christians won public admiration for their good works. Ultimately the Roman army, the Roman cities, the size of the empire and its trade routes, which were required for Roman power and influence to exist, facilitated the spread of the disease. The Antonine Plague is considered by some historians as a useful starting point for understanding the decline and fall of the Western Roman Empire. It was followed by the Plague of Cyprian (249–262 AD) and the Plague of Justinian (541-542). Together, they cracked the foundations of the Roman Empire.[59]

Plague epidemics in the Middle Ages and early modern period often killed a high percentage of the population in the affected cities

In the sixth century AD, while the Western Roman Empire had already succumbed to attacks by the Germanic tribes, the Eastern Roman Empire stood its ground. In fact, a peace treaty with the Persians allowed Emperor Justinian the Great to concentrate on recapturing territories belonging to the Western Empire. His generals, Belisarius and Narses, achieved a number of important victories against the Ostrogoths and the Vandals.[60] However, their hope of keeping the Western Empire was dashed by the arrival of what became known as the Plague of Justinian (541-542). According to the Byzantine historian Procopius of Caesarea, the epidemic originated in China and Northeastern India and reached the Eastern Roman Empire via trade routes terminating in the Mediterranean. Modern scholarship has deduced that the epidemic was caused by the bacterium Yersinia pestis, the same one that would later bring the Black Death, the single deadliest pandemic in human history, but how many actually died from it remains uncertain. Current estimates put the figure between thirty and fifty million people,[57] a significant portion of the human population at that time.[61] The Plague arguably cemented the fate of Rome.[57]

The epidemic also devastated the Sasanian Empire in Persia. Caliph Abu Bakr seized the opportunity to launch military campaigns that overran the Sassanians and captured Roman-held territories in the Caucasus, the Levant, Egypt, and elsewhere in North Africa. Before the Justinian Plague, the Mediterranean world had been commercially and culturally stable. After the Plague, it fractured into a trio of civilizations battling for power: the Islamic Civilization, the Byzantine Empire, and what later became known as Medieval Europe. With so many people dead, the supply of workers, many of whom were slaves, was critically short. Landowners had no choice but to lend pieces of land to serfs to work the land in exchange for military protection and other privileges. That sowed the seeds of feudalism.[62]

Spread of the Bubonic plague through Europe

There is evidence that the Mongol expeditions may have spread the bubonic plague across much of Eurasia, which helped to spark the Black Death of the early fourteenth century.[63][64][65][66] The Italian historian Gabriele de’ Mussi wrote that the Mongols catapulted the corpses of those who contracted the plague into Caffa (now Feodossia, Crimea) during the siege of that city and that soldiers who were transported from there brought the plague to Mediterranean ports. However, that account of the origin of the Black Death in Europe remains controversial, though plausible, because of the complex epidemiology of the plague. Modern epidemiologists do not believe that the Black Death had a single source of spreading into Europe. Research into the past on this topic is further complicated by politics and the passage of time. It is difficult to distinguish between natural epidemics and biological warfare, both of which are common throughout human history.[64] Biological weapons are economical because they turn an enemy casualty into a delivery system and so were favored in armed conflicts of the past. Furthermore, more soldiers died of disease than in combat until recently.[note 4][61] In any case, by the 1340s, Black Death killed 200 million people.[57] The widening trade routes in the Late Middle Ages helped the plague spread rapidly.[58] It took the European population more than two centuries to return to its level before the pandemic.[57] Consequently, it destabilized most of society and likely undermined feudalism and the authority of the Church.[67]

With labor in short supply, workers' bargaining power increased dramatically. Various inventions that reduced the cost of labor, saved time, and raised productivity, such as the three-field crop rotation system, the iron plow, the use of manure to fertilize the soil, and the water pumps, were widely adopted. Many former serfs, now free from feudal obligations, relocated to the cities and changed profession to crafts and trades. The more successful ones became the new middle class. Trade flourished as demands for a myriad of consumer goods rose. Society became wealthier and could afford to fund the arts and the sciences.[62]

Aztec victims of smallpox, from the Florentine Codex (1540–85)

Encounters between European explorers and Native Americans exposed the latter to a variety of diseases of extraordinary virulence. Having migrated from Northeastern Asia 15,000 years ago, Native Americans had not been introduced to the plethora of contagious diseases that emerged after the rise of agriculture in the Old World. As such, they had immune systems that were ill-equipped to handle the diseases to which their counterparts in Eurasia had become resistant. When the Europeans arrived in the Americas, in short order, the indigenous populations of the Americas found themselves facing smallpox, measles, whooping cough, and the bubonic plague, among others. In tropical areas, malaria, yellow fever, dengue fever, river blindness, and others appeared. Most of these tropical diseases were traced to Africa.[68] Smallpox ravaged Mexico in the 1520s and killed 150,000 in Tenochtitlán alone, including the emperor, and Peru in the 1530s, which aided the European conquerors.[69] A combination of Spanish military attacks and evolutionarily novel diseases finished off the Aztec Empire in the sixteenth century.[1][68] It is commonly believed that the death of as much as 90% or 95% of the Native American population of the New World was caused by Old World diseases,[68][70] though new research suggests tuberculosis from seals and sea lions played a significant part.[71]

Similar events took place in Oceania and Madagascar.[68] Smallpox was externally brought to Australia. The first recorded outbreak, in 1789, devastated the Aboriginal population. The extent of the outbreak is disputed, but some sources claim that it killed about 50% of coastal Aboriginal populations on the east coast.[72] There is an ongoing historical debate concerning two rival and irreconcilable theories about how the disease first entered the continent (see History of smallpox). Smallpox continued to be a deadly disease and killed an estimated 300 million people in the twentieth century alone, but a vaccine, the first of any kind, had been available since 1796.[61]

As humans spread around the globe, human societies flourish and become more dependent on trade, and because urbanization means that people leave sparsely-populated rural areas for densely-populated neighborhoods, infectious diseases spread much more easily. Outbreaks are frequent, even in the modern era, but medical advances have been able to alleviate their impacts.[57] In fact, the human population grew tremendously in the twentieth century, as did the population of farm animals, from which diseases could jump to humans, but in the developed world and increasingly also in the developing world, people are less likely to fall victim to infectious diseases than ever before. For instance, the advent of antibiotics, starting with penicillin in 1928, has resulted in the saving of the lives of hundreds of millions of people suffering from bacterial infections. However, there is no guarantee that would continue because bacteria are becoming increasingly resistant to antibiotics, and doctors and public health experts such as former Chief Medical Officer for England Sally Davies have even warned of an incoming "antibiotic apocalypse." The World Health Organization warned in 2019 that the spread of vaccine scepticism has been accompanied by the resurrection of long-conquered diseases like measles. This lead the WHO to name the antivaccination movement one of the world's top 10 public-health threats.[61]

Institutional unemployment

[edit]

During the Roman Empire, citizen employment was vastly being replaced by slave labor. Slaves were replacing many of the jobs citizens were doing. Slaves were receiving apprenticeships and education and were even learning to replace the jobs of skilled craftsman.[73]

Since slaves do not pay taxes and were replacing most jobs from citizens, this reduced the revenue the state could accrue from their citizens.

This high level of unemployment also led to high levels of poverty, which reduced demand for businesses relying on slave labor.

As taxes fell, so did government revenue. To compensate for this economic slowdown and mitigate the high levels of poverty, the Roman government implemented a form of welfare called the dole, providing citizens free money and free grain.[74]

Paying for the dole required high levels of government spending, exacerbating the Roman debt and also producing inflation. With slavery replacing most labor, tax revenues also plummeted, further exacerbating the government's debt.

To pay off the enormous debt, the Romans began to devalue the currency and produce more coinage. Eventually, this overwhelmed the Roman Empire and partially contributed to its collapse. [75]

Demographic dynamics

[edit]

Several key features of human societal collapse can be related to population dynamics.[76] For example, the native population of Cusco, Peru at the time of the Spanish conquest was stressed by an imbalanced sex ratio.[77]

There is strong evidence that humans also display population cycles.[78] Societies as diverse as those of England and France during the Roman, medieval, and early modern eras, of Egypt during Greco-Roman and Ottoman rule, and of various dynasties in China all showed similar patterns of political instability and violence becoming considerably more common after times of relative peace, prosperity, and sustained population growth. Quantitatively, periods of unrest included many times more events of instability per decade and occurred when the population was declining, rather than increasing. Pre-industrial agrarian societies typically faced instability after one or two centuries of stability. However, a population approaching its carrying capacity alone is not enough to trigger general decline if the people remained united and the ruling class strong. Other factors had to be involved, such as having more aspirants for positions of the elite than the society could realistically support (elite overproduction), which led to social strife, and chronic inflation, which caused incomes to fall and threatened the fiscal health of the state.[79] In particular, an excess in especially young adult male population predictably led to social unrest and violence, as the third and higher-order parity sons had trouble realizing their economic desires and became more open to extreme ideas and actions.[80] Adults in their 20s are especially prone to radicalization.[81] Most historical periods of social unrest lacking in external triggers, such as natural calamities, and most genocides can be readily explained as a result of a built-up youth bulge.[80] As those trends intensified, they jeopardized the social fabric, which facilitated the decline.[79]

Military and civilian fatalities

Theories

[edit]
Jared Diamond suggested that Easter Island's society so destroyed their environment that by around 1600, their society had fallen into a downward spiral of warfare, cannibalism, and population decline.

Historical theories have evolved from being purely social and ethical, to ideological and ethnocentric, and finally to multidisciplinary studies. They have become much more sophisticated.[38]

Cognitive decline and loss of creativity

[edit]

The anthropologist Joseph Tainter theorized that collapsed societies essentially exhausted their own designs and were unable to adapt to natural diminishing returns for what they knew as their method of survival.[82] The philosopher Oswald Spengler argued that a civilization in its "winter" would see a disinclination for abstract thinking.[38] The psychologists David Rand and Jonathan Cohen theorized that people switch between two broad modes of thinking. The first is fast and automatic but rigid, and the second is slow and analytical but more flexible. Rand and Cohen believe that explains why people continue with self-destructive behaviors when logical reasoning would have alerted them of the dangers ahead. People switch from the second to the first mode of thinking after the introduction of an invention that dramatically increases the standards of living. Rand and Cohen pointed to the recent examples of the antibiotic overuse leading to resistant bacteria and failure to save for retirement. Tainter noted that according to behavioral economics, the human decision-making process tends to be more irrational than rational and that as the rate of innovation declines, as measured by the number of inventions relative to the amount of money spent on research and development, it becomes progressively harder for there to be a technological solution to the problem of societal collapse.[5]

Social and environmental dynamics

[edit]
During the 9th century AD, the central Maya region suffered major political collapse, marked by the abandonment of cities.

What produces modern sedentary life, unlike nomadic hunter-gatherers, is extraordinary modern economic productivity. Tainter argues that exceptional productivity is actually more the sign of hidden weakness because of a society's dependence on it and its potential to undermine its own basis for success by not being self limiting, as demonstrated in Western culture's ideal of perpetual growth.[82]

As a population grows and technology makes it easier to exploit depleting resources, the environment's diminishing returns are hidden from view. Societal complexity is then potentially threatened if it develops beyond what is actually sustainable, and a disorderly reorganization were to follow. The scissors model of Malthusian collapse, in which the population grows without limit but not resources, is the idea of great opposing environmental forces cutting into each other.

The complete breakdown of economic, cultural, and social institutions with ecological relationships is perhaps the most common feature of collapse. In his book Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, Jared Diamond proposes five interconnected causes of collapse that may reinforce each other: non-sustainable exploitation of resources, climate changes, diminishing support from friendly societies, hostile neighbors, and inappropriate attitudes for change.[16][83]

Energy return on investment

[edit]

Energy has played a crucial role throughout human history. Energy is linked to the birth, growth, and decline of each and every society. Energy surplus is required for the division of labor and the growth of cities. Massive energy surplus is needed for widespread wealth and cultural amenities. Economic prospects fluctuate in tandem with a society's access to cheap and abundant energy.[84]

Political scientist Thomas Homer-Dixon and ecologist Charles Hall proposed an economic model called energy return on investment (EROI), which measures the amount of surplus energy a society gets from using energy to obtain energy.[85][86] Energy shortages drive up prices and as such provide an incentive to explore and extract previously uneconomical sources, which may still be plentiful, but more energy would be required, and the EROI is then not as high as initially thought.[84]

There would be no surplus if EROI approaches 1:1. Hall showed that the real cutoff is well above that and estimated that 3:1 to sustain the essential overhead energy costs of a modern society. The EROI of the most preferred energy source, petroleum, has fallen in the past century from 100:1 to the range of 10:1 with clear evidence that the natural depletion curves all are downward decay curves. An EROI of more than ~3 then is what appears necessary to provide the energy for socially important tasks, such as maintaining government, legal and financial institutions, a transportation infrastructure, manufacturing, building construction and maintenance, and the lifestyles of all members of a given society.[86]

During the course of the 15th century, nearly all of Angkor was abandoned.

The social scientist Luke Kemp indicated that alternative sources of energy, such as solar panels, have a low EROI because they have low energy density, meaning they require a lot of land, and require substantial amounts of rare earth metals to produce.[1] Hall and colleagues reached the same conclusion. There is no on-site pollution, but the EROI of renewable energy sources may be too low for them to be considered a viable alternative to fossil fuels, which continue to provide the majority of the energy used by humans.[84]

The mathematician Safa Motesharrei and his collaborators showed that the use of non-renewable resources such as fossil fuels allows populations to grow to one order of magnitude larger than they would using renewable resources alone and as such is able to postpone societal collapse. However, when collapse finally comes, it is much more dramatic.[5][87] Tainter warned that in the modern world, if the supply of fossil fuels were somehow cut off, shortages of clean water and food would ensue, and millions would die in a few weeks in the worst-case scenario.[5]

Homer-Dixon asserted that a declining EROI was one of the reasons that the Roman Empire declined and fell. The historian Joseph Tainter made the same claim about the Maya Empire.[1]

Models of societal response

[edit]

According to Joseph Tainter[88] (1990), too many scholars offer facile explanations of societal collapse by assuming one or more of the following three models in the face of collapse:

  1. The Dinosaur, a large-scale society in which resources are being depleted at an exponential rate, but nothing is done to rectify the problem because the ruling elite are unwilling or unable to adapt to those resources' reduced availability. In this type of society, rulers tend to oppose any solutions that diverge from their present course of action but favor intensification and commit an increasing number of resources to their present plans, projects, and social institutions.
  2. The Runaway Train, a society whose continuing function depends on constant growth (cf. Frederick Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis). This type of society, based almost exclusively on acquisition (such as pillaging or exploitation), cannot be sustained indefinitely. The Assyrian, Roman and Mongol Empires, for example, all fractured and collapsed when no new conquests could be achieved.
  3. The House of Cards, a society that has grown to be so large and include so many complex social institutions that it is inherently unstable and prone to collapse. This type of society has been seen with particular frequency among Eastern Bloc and other communist nations, in which all social organizations are arms of the government or ruling party, such that the government must either stifle association wholesale (encouraging dissent and subversion) or exercise less authority than it asserts (undermining its legitimacy in the public eye).

Tainter's critique

[edit]

Tainter argues that those models, though superficially useful, cannot severally or jointly account for all instances of societal collapse. Often, they are seen as interconnected occurrences that reinforce one another.

Tainter considers that social complexity is a recent and comparatively-anomalous occurrence, requiring constant support. He asserts that collapse is best understood by grasping four axioms. In his own words (p. 194):

  1. human societies are problem-solving organizations;
  2. sociopolitical systems require energy for their maintenance;
  3. increased complexity carries with it increased costs per capita; and
  4. investment in sociopolitical complexity as a problem-solving response reaches a point of declining marginal returns.

With those facts in mind, collapse can simply be understood as a loss of the energy needed to maintain social complexity. Collapse is thus the sudden loss of social complexity, stratification, internal and external communication and exchange, and productivity.

Toynbee's theory of decay

[edit]

In his acclaimed 12-volume work, A Study of History (1934–1961), the British historian Arnold J. Toynbee explored the rise and fall of 28 civilizations and came to the conclusion that civilizations generally collapsed mainly by internal factors, factors of their own making, but external pressures also played a role.[1] He theorized that all civilizations pass through several distinct stages: genesis, growth, time of troubles, universal state, and disintegration.[89]

For Toynbee, a civilization is born when a "creative minority" successfully responds to the challenges posed by its physical, social, and political environment. However, the fixation on the old methods of the "creative minority" leads it to eventually cease to be creative and degenerate into merely a "dominant minority" (that forces the majority to obey without meriting obedience), which fails to recognize new ways of thinking. He argues that creative minorities deteriorate from a worship of their "former self", by which they become prideful, and they fail in adequately addressing the next challenge that they face. Similarly, the German philosopher Oswald Spengler discussed the transition from Kultur to Zivilisation in his The Decline of the West (1918).[89]

Toynbee argues that the ultimate sign a civilization has broken down is when the dominant minority forms a Universal State, which stifles political creativity. He states:

First the Dominant Minority attempts to hold by force - against all right and reason - a position of inherited privilege which it has ceased to merit; and then the Proletariat repays injustice with resentment, fear with hate, and violence with violence when it executes its acts of secession. Yet the whole movement ends in positive acts of creation - and this on the part of all the actors in the tragedy of disintegration. The Dominant Minority creates a universal state, the Internal Proletariat a universal church, and the External Proletariat a bevy of barbarian war-bands.

He argues that as civilizations decay, they form an "Internal Proletariat" and an "External Proletariat." The Internal proletariat is held in subjugation by the dominant minority inside the civilization, and grows bitter; the external proletariat exists outside the civilization in poverty and chaos and grows envious. He argues that as civilizations decay, there is a "schism in the body social", whereby abandon and self-control together replace creativity, and truancy and martyrdom together replace discipleship by the creative minority.

He argues that in that environment, people resort to archaism (idealization of the past), futurism (idealization of the future), detachment (removal of oneself from the realities of a decaying world), and transcendence (meeting the challenges of the decaying civilization with new insight, as a prophet). He argues that those who transcend during a period of social decay give birth to a new Church with new and stronger spiritual insights around which a subsequent civilization may begin to form after the old has died. Toynbee's use of the word 'church' refers to the collective spiritual bond of a common worship, or the same unity found in some kind of social order.

The historian Carroll Quigley expanded upon that theory in The Evolution of Civilizations (1961, 1979).[90] He argued that societal disintegration involves the metamorphosis of social instruments, which were set up to meet actual needs, into institutions, which serve their own interest at the expense of social needs.[91] However, in the 1950s, Toynbee's approach to history, his style of civilizational analysis, started to face skepticism from mainstream historians who thought it put an undue emphasis on the divine, which led to his academic reputation declining. For a time, however, Toynbee's Study remained popular outside academia. Interest revived decades later with the publication of The Clash of Civilizations (1997) by the political scientist Samuel P. Huntington, who viewed human history as broadly the history of civilizations and posited that the world after the end of the Cold War will be multipolar and one of competing major civilizations, which are divided by "fault lines."[89]

Systems science

[edit]

Developing an integrated theory of societal collapse that takes into account the complexity of human societies remains an open problem.[38] Researchers currently have very little ability to identify internal structures of large distributed systems like human societies. Genuine structural collapse seems, in many cases, the only plausible explanation supporting the idea that such structures exist. However, until they can be concretely identified, scientific inquiry appears limited to the construction of scientific narratives,[92][38] using systems thinking for careful storytelling about systemic organization and change.

In the 1990s, the evolutionary anthropologist and quantitative historian Peter Turchin noticed that the equations used to model the populations of predators and preys can also be used to describe the ontogeny of human societies. He specifically examined how social factors such as income inequality were related to political instability. He found recurring cycles of unrest in historical societies such as Ancient Egypt, China, and Russia. He specifically identified two cycles, one long and one short. The long one, what he calls the "secular cycle," lasts for approximately two to three centuries. A society starts out fairly equal. Its population grows and the cost of labor drops. A wealthy upper class emerges, and life for the working class deteriorates. As inequality grows, a society becomes more unstable with the lower-class being miserable and the upper-class entangled in infighting. Exacerbating social turbulence eventually leads to collapse. The shorter cycle lasts for about 50 years and consists of two generations, one peaceful and one turbulent. Looking at US history, for example, Turchin identified times of serious sociopolitical instability in 1870, 1920, and 1970. He announced in 2010 that he had predicted that in 2020, the US would witness a period of unrest at least on the same level as 1970 because the first cycle coincides with the turbulent part of the second in around 2020. He also warned that the US was not the only Western nation under strain.[5]

However, Turchin's model can only paint the broader picture and cannot pinpoint how bad things can get and what precisely triggers a collapse. The mathematician Safa Motesharrei also applied predator-prey models to human society, with the upper class and the lower class being the two different types of "predators" and natural resources being the "prey." He found that either extreme inequality or resource depletion facilitates a collapse. However, a collapse is irreversible only if a society experiences both at the same time, as they "fuel each other."[5]

See also

[edit]
Malthusian and environmental collapse themes
Cultural and institutional collapse themes
Systems science

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ See the end of the section 'Demographic dynamics' for a chart of the death rate (per 100,000) of the Thirty Years' War compared to other armed conflicts between 1400 and 2000.
  2. ^ The Vandals thus made themselves the origin of the modern English word 'vandalism'.
  3. ^ North and South here are with respect to the Gianh River, which is close to the Bến Hải River, or approximately the 17th Parallel, used for the Partition of Vietnam after the First Indochinese War and before the Second Indochinese War, commonly known as the Vietnam War.
  4. ^ For example, during the Napoleonic Wars, for every British soldier who got killed in action, eight died of disease. During the American Civil War, two-thirds of the almost 700,000 dead were victims of smallpox, dysentery, typhoid, malaria, and pneumonia, collectively referred to as the "Third Army."

References

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Bibliography

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Further reading

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