Days Before history

audiobook

Days Before history

by H. R. (Harry Reginald) Hall

EN·~3 hours·35 chapters

Chapters

35 total

Preface to the New Edition

5:32

The Contents of Chapters

2:13

List of Illustrations

0:27

Chapter the First

8:59

Chapter the Second

6:07

Chapter the Third

6:48

Chapter the Fourth

7:03

Chapter the Fifth

7:03

Chapter the Sixth

4:58

Chapter the Seventh

4:44

Description

Drawing on a lifelong fascination with ancient Britain, the narrator blends archaeological consensus with vivid imagination to sketch daily life in the misty hills of the New Stone Age. Readers learn how early tribes fashioned tools, built shelters, hunted deer, and heard stories of bronze‑wielding ancestors, all grounded in what scholars consider reliable. The opening also recalls the author's own childhood games, turning simple woodcuts and a flint arrowhead into portals to the distant past.

The work is split into two interwoven parts: a narrative called "The Story of Tig" that follows a charismatic hunter through seasonal migrations and tribal encounters, and a companion series "Dick and his Friends" that steps back to explain the archaeology, customs, and technologies hinted at in the tale. This structure lets listeners enjoy a lively story while receiving clear, contextual insights, making the ancient world feel both tangible and alive. Though light‑hearted, it respects the fragmentary evidence to present a balanced portrait of a time before recorded history.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (179K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Shaun Pinder, Cindy Horton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2015-06-28

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HR

H. R. (Harry Reginald) Hall

1873–1930

An energetic early Egyptologist and historian, he helped bring the ancient Near East to a wider audience through both museum work and popular writing. His books reflect a broad curiosity about Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the ancient world beyond them.

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