The ancient Mediterranean world was full of peoples who showed up in the annals of the ancient Greeks and Romans (e.g. Scythians, Iberian Celts, Medes, Illyrians, Lydians, Arveni, Thracians, Visigoths) or the Bible (e.g. Canaanites, Elamites, Hittites, Philistines), but eventually faded from history, absorbed or displaced by other groups. Not much is known of these “forgotten peoples”, as remaining records tend to be sketchy and/or unreliable, or to use the same names to mean different things (or vice-versa), but that doesn't mean that they didn't leave a mark on the world or didn't have rich histories.
In this book, Philip Matyszak provides an overview of what current scholarship has to say of each such nation, as well as a bit about the historiography around them. It’s not much, in any one case, but there are plenty of interesting anecdotes sprinkled throughout the book, such as the story of a tribe that migrated all the way from Scandinavia to North Africa, discussion of a brief cultural melding between Greece and India, or the fact that the ancient world had its own fascinations with the long-ago past, as evidenced by an archeologist king who was digging up ruins, around two thousand years ago, of a society two thousand years older than that. Try to get your mind around that, if you can. The reader gets a sense of the ancient world as a colorful, diverse, and ever-changing one, with shifting alliances, hostilities, and cultural interchange. I couldn’t help but think that the shifting demographics of the United States, a reality currently contributing to a certain amount of political unrest here, really aren’t anything remarkable in the grand sweep of history, especially in a country that hasn’t even been around for the historically paltry span of three hundred years. A mere two hundred years before that, of course, the cultural makeup of North America was entirely different yet again. (Rome, by comparison, including the early kingdom and the late Byzantine empire, was around from 750 BC to 1453 AD, with its peak lasting about six hundred years.)
Naturally, I would have liked to hear more about less well-known peoples from other parts of the world besides the Mediterranean -- or even some of the more recent history from that geographic area (it doesn’t go much further than the end of the Roman Empire) -- but I recognize that the author was writing from his particular area of academic expertise. For what it is, this was a satisfying enough audiobook. It’s also short enough to be a manageable listen.
Funnily enough, a few of the peoples mentioned here show up in the fictional novel I decide to read next, so this proved to be good prep.