The Ancient Greeks used gears in millworks, & were skilled at casting bronze; nobody had ever seen anything like the mechanism before, when it was recovered. People at the time thought such precision engineering was beyond the Ancient Greeks.
Yeah, apparently not.
Every time I see an artifact, I see an object that tells its own story - but there's also a lot of unspoken stories too. Like, in order to make bronze weaponry, what do you need to know to do that? Is it cast bronze? Forged? Well, before you figure out how to make bronze, you need the *tools* to make it...
& so on.
Technologies build on other technologies, they don't stand alone.
Anyway, here's the Wikipedia article on the Antikythera Mechanism, for an introductory overview: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism
@Impious_Jade you might be interested in a book called Cræft
An Inquiry into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands.
while it's heavily based on England/European history, it still might be of interest if you like the why of things
@redenigma Oh cool, I'll have to check it out! Thanks :)
I'm of the opinion that modern people don't give our ancestors enough credit for their technological skills. Like when people think the Mayan or Egyptian pyramids were built by aliens, because ancient humans supposedly couldn't have pulled it off.