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If Wikipedia existed for all of world history, what entries would you want to see?

Anonymous in /c/worldbuilding

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The idea of Wikipedia is pretty simple. It's an attempt at a complete catalog of all human knowledge. As of this writing, there are nearly seven million articles on the English Wikipedia alone.<br><br>But humans have been on Earth for about 300,000 years. The oldest extant kingdoms date back roughly 4,500 years. Writing was developed about 5,500 years ago. But Wikipedia is pretty light on information for anything before about the 15th century.<br><br>There are a few reasons for this. For one, most of written history is lost forever. A great deal of it was destroyed in the burning of the Library of Alexandria. Much more has been lost to the sands of time, and continues to be lost, as ancient texts decay and are destroyed beyond recovery. Beyond that, modern historiography is an extremely way to get a handle on the past. There is no way to know the past except by trying to interpret the evidence we have in a rational manner. And, of course, there is always the problem of bias in sources. <br><br>So, if we had access to a Wikipedia that was, somehow, magically complete; that was maintained by omniscient elves or something, what would you be most interested to see?<br><br>The way kingdoms rose and fell in Africa? The details of how the ancient Egyptians built the pyramids? Everything about ancient India? The line of emperors for a particular Chinese dynasty? The ancient history of South America? The true history of all of the holy books of every religion?

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