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The Things Our Ancestors Knew: 500 Forgotten Pieces of Knowledge That Built Civilization
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235774100
- EAN9798235774100
- Date de parution11/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Before the internet. Before the library. Before the printed page. There was a world that ran entirely on what people knew. What they had been taught, what they had watched, what they had tested with their hands and remembered in their bones. Five hundred pieces of that world are collected here. The Things Our Ancestors Knew gathers the practical, symbolic, and experiential knowledge that built human civilization from the ground up, and which has largely vanished from ordinary life within the last two hundred years.
Knowledge of fire, food, weather, plants, animals, the body, the seasons, the sky, the dead, and the living community that held everything together. Some of it was brilliant. Some of it was wrong. Some of it turns out to have been better advice than the people who gave it could have known. What you will find inside: How to read the sky, the smoke, the animals, and the landscape as reliable sources of information The plants that genuinely worked as medicine, and why modern research keeps rediscovering them The food preservation techniques that kept families alive through winter without refrigeration The protective marks, charms, and rituals that made sense within the world that produced them The social structures, laws, and memory systems that held communities together without institutions The knowledge of death, birth, illness, and the body that ordinary people once carried as a matter of survival This is not nostalgia.
The past was hard, frequently brutal, and often brief. What it produced, across thousands of years of close attention to the world, was a body of knowledge that deserves to be remembered on its own terms. From banking a fire overnight to reading a mackerel sky. From the doctrine of signatures to the human memory chain. From bog butter to the fulacht fiadh. From the last wolf in Ireland to the first swallow of summer.
Knowledge of fire, food, weather, plants, animals, the body, the seasons, the sky, the dead, and the living community that held everything together. Some of it was brilliant. Some of it was wrong. Some of it turns out to have been better advice than the people who gave it could have known. What you will find inside: How to read the sky, the smoke, the animals, and the landscape as reliable sources of information The plants that genuinely worked as medicine, and why modern research keeps rediscovering them The food preservation techniques that kept families alive through winter without refrigeration The protective marks, charms, and rituals that made sense within the world that produced them The social structures, laws, and memory systems that held communities together without institutions The knowledge of death, birth, illness, and the body that ordinary people once carried as a matter of survival This is not nostalgia.
The past was hard, frequently brutal, and often brief. What it produced, across thousands of years of close attention to the world, was a body of knowledge that deserves to be remembered on its own terms. From banking a fire overnight to reading a mackerel sky. From the doctrine of signatures to the human memory chain. From bog butter to the fulacht fiadh. From the last wolf in Ireland to the first swallow of summer.



