1 / 51

Chapter 2

Chapter 2. Early Societies in Southeast Asia and the Indo-European Migrations. Civilization Defined. Cities/Urban Political/Military system Social Hierarchy Economic/Job Specialization Complex Religion Written language “ Higher Culture ” – Art & Architecture Public Works. Sumerians.

benny
Download Presentation

Chapter 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Early Societies in Southeast Asia and the Indo-European Migrations

  2. Civilization Defined • Cities/Urban • Political/Military system • Social Hierarchy • Economic/Job Specialization • Complex Religion • Written language • “Higher Culture”– Art & Architecture • Public Works

  3. Sumerians Early Mesopotamia3000-2000 B.C.E. • “Between the Rivers” • Tigris and Euphrates • Modern-day Iraq • Cultural continuum of “fertile crescent” • Sumerians the dominant people

  4. The Wealth of the Rivers • Nutrient-rich silt • Key: irrigation • Necessity of coordinated efforts (reservoirs, canals, dikes, dams) • Promoted development of local governments • City-states • Sumer begins small-scale irrigation 6000 BCE • By 5000 BCE, complex irrigation networks • Population reaches 100,000 by 3000 BCE • Attracts Semitic migrants, influences culture

  5. Sumerian City-States • Cities appear 4000 BCE • Dominate region from 3200-2350 BCE • Ur (home of Abraham, see Genesis 11:28), Nineveh • Ziggurat - home of the city god • Divine mandate to Kings • Regulation of Trade • Defense from nomadic marauders

  6. The Ziggurat of Ur

  7. Ziggurat at Ur • Temple • “Mountain of the Gods”

  8. Example of Defensive Walls

  9. Sumerian Religion - Polytheistic Enki Innana Anthropomorphic Gods

  10. Political Decline of Sumer • Semitic peoples from northern Mesopotamia overshadow Sumer • Sargon of Akkad (2370-2315 BCE) • Destroyed Sumerian city-states one by one, created empire based in Akkad • Empire unable to maintain chronic rebellions • Hammurabi of Babylon (1792-1750 BCE) • Improved taxation, legislation • Used local governors to maintain control of city-states • Babylonian Empire later destroyed by Hittites from Anatolia, c. 1595 BCE

  11. Akkadian Empire

  12. Hammurabi The upper part of the stele of Hammurabi’s code of laws

  13. Legal System • The Code of Hammurabi • Established high standards of behavior and stern punishment for violators • lex talionis –“law of retaliation” • Social status and punishment • women as property, but some rights

  14. Hittite Chariot and Soldiers

  15. Later Mesopotamian Empires • Weakening of central rule an invitation to foreign invaders • Assyrians use new iron weaponry • Beginning 1300 BCE, by 8th-7th centuries BCE control Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, most of Egypt • Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon (r. 605-562) takes advantage of internal dissent to create Chaldean (New Babylonian) Empire • Famously luxurious capital

  16. The Hanging Gardens by Martin Heemskerc, 16th C.

  17. Mesopotamian Empires, 1800-600 BCE

  18. Technological Development in Mesopotamia • Bronze (copper with tin), c. 4000 BCE • Military, agricultural applications • Iron, c. 1000 BCE • Cheaper than bronze • Wheel, boats, c. 3500 BCE • Shipbuilding increases trade networks

  19. Sophisticated Metallurgy Skills at Ur

  20. Social Classes • Ruling classes based often on military prowess • Originally elected, later hereditary • Perceived as offspring of gods • Religious classes • Role: intervention with gods to ensure fertility, safety • Considerable landholdings, other economic activities • Free commoners • Peasant cultivators • Some urban professionals • Slaves • Prisoners of war, convicted criminals, debtors

  21. Patriarchal Society • Men as landowners, relationship to status • Patriarchy: “rule of the father” • Right to sell wives, children • Double standard of sexual morality • Women drowned for adultery • Relaxed sexual mores for men • Yet some possibilities of social mobility for women • Court advisers, temple priestesses, economic activity • Introduction of the veil at least c. 1500 BCE

  22. Development of Writing • Sumerian writing systems form 3500 BCE • Pictographs • Cuneiform: “wedge-shaped” • Preservation of documents on clay • Declines from 400 BCE with spread of Greek alphabetic script

  23. Cuneiform:“Wedge-Shaped” Writing

  24. Cuneiform Writing

  25. Deciphering Cuneiform

  26. Sumerian Scribes “Tablet House”

  27. Uses for Writing • Trade • Astronomy • Mathematics • Agricultural applications • Calculation of time • 12-month year • 24-hour day, 60-minute hour

  28. Mesopotamian Literature • Epic of Gilgamesh, compiled after 2000 BCE • Heroic saga • Search for meaning, esp. afterlife • This-worldly emphasis

  29. Gilgamesh

  30. Gilgamesh

  31. Gilgamesh Epic Tablet:Flood Story

  32. The Early Hebrews • Patriarchs and Matriarchs from Babylon, c. 1850 BCE • Parallels between early biblical texts, Code of Hammurabi • Early settlement of Canaan (Israel), c. 1300 BCE • Biblical text: slavery in Egypt, divine redemption • On-going conflict with indigenous populations under King David (1000-970 BCE) and Solomon (970-930 BCE)

  33. Egypt's king, Ramses II, written about in the Old Testament, is now thought to have reigned between 1290-1224 B.C.E. This Egyptian wall art depicts Ramses holding what is suspected to be three slaves. One is black, one appears to be East Asian, and the third, in the foreground, appears to be Semitic. The blacks and Semite came from close by. The East Asian leaves us wondering.

  34. David and Goliath by Caravaggio, 1600

  35. Michelangelo's David

  36. David with the Head of Goliath, c. 1450/1455, Andrea del Castagno

  37. Model of Solomon’s Temple

  38. Moses and Monotheism • Hebrews shared polytheistic beliefs of other Mesopotamian civilizations • Moses introduces monotheism, belief in single god • Denies existence of competing parallel deities • Personal god: reward and punishment for conformity with revealed law • The Torah (“doctrine or teaching”)

  39. Foreign conquests of Israel • Assyrian conquest, 722 BCE • Conquered the northern kingdom • Deported many inhabitants to other regions • Many exiles assimilated and lost their identity • Babylonian conquest, 586 BCE • Destroyed Jerusalem • Forced many into exile • Israelites maintained their religious identity and many returned to Judea

  40. The Phoenicians • City-states along Mediterranean coast after 3000 BCE • Extensive maritime trade • Dominated Mediterranean trade, 1200-800 BCE • Development of alphabet symbols • Simpler alternative to cuneiform • Spread of literacy

  41. Israel and Phoenicia , 1500-600 BCE

  42. Indo-European Migrations • Common roots of many languages of Europe, southwest Asia, India • Implies influence of a single Indo-European people • Probable original homeland: modern-day Ukraine and Russia, 4500-2500 BCE • Domestication of horses, use of Sumerian weaponry allowed them to spread widely

  43. Indo-European Migrations 3000-1000 BCE

More Related