1 / 29

PREHISTORY – 600 CE

PREHISTORY – 600 CE. BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION. HOMINID DEVELOPMENT Early Hominids Australopithecines Homo Habilis Homo Erectus True Humans Homo Sapiens Neanderthal Cro-Magnon Homo Sapiens Sapiens “ Out of Africa ” thesis. PREHISTORY – 600 CE. BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION.

wlangley
Download Presentation

PREHISTORY – 600 CE

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. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • HOMINID DEVELOPMENT • Early Hominids • Australopithecines • Homo Habilis • Homo Erectus • True Humans • Homo Sapiens • Neanderthal • Cro-Magnon • Homo Sapiens Sapiens • “Out of Africa” thesis

  2. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • PALEOLITHIC ERA • Stone Age • Eras divided by tool usage • Use of natural material for tools • Early Tool making • Basic tools (clubs and axes) • More Advanced (hunting, clothing and defense) • Spears, fish hooks, harpoons, etc. • Pottery • Woven cloth • Better built structures (caves => huts and shelters)

  3. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • HUNTING AND GATHERING • Families, clans, and tribes • Foraging Societies • Living off the resources of the environment • Mobile society that did have leadership, religion, culture, and gender divisions

  4. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION • End of Ice Age leads to increased population • Start providing their own food supply (settled agriculture) • Leads to “permanent” settlements, which require more sophisticated systems…

  5. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • PASTORALISM AND HERDING • Domestication of animals • Food, clothing, labor • Nomadic herders (move around - animals needed to graze) • Less sophisticated…need fewer rules (less settled) • Took longer to develop society

  6. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • DIFFUSION OF SETTLED AGRICULTURE • Middle East => Balkans => Nile => Northeast Africa => Continental Europe • People out of this link (Americas and Asia) develop independently • Diffusion of techniques (best practices and crops are shared from spot to spot) • Slash and Burn agriculture

  7. PREHISTORY – 600 CE BUILDING BLOCKS OF CIVILIZATION • EARLY CITIES, METALLURGY, AND WRITING • As people settled, they occupied common areas…needed more complexity • Governments and religions • Use of the wheel (Middle East) and pottery • Productivity increases (specialization) • Growth of towns, villages, and cities • Jerricho and Catal Hayuk • Metal tools…plows, needles, shovels, saws • Mix of copper and tin to create bronze • Better tools, lasted longer • Replaced by Iron • Use of written word (poems, rituals, folktales, etc.) • First used by Sumerians (3500 BCE)

  8. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS • Mesopotamia – Tigris and Euphrates • Began by Sumerians and Babylonians • Central government ruled by priests • Use of cuneiform: Gilgamesh, Hammurabi legal code • Builders and craftspeople (used clay) • Ziggurats, canals, and dams • Advancements in math – base 60 (time and navigation) • Traders with large economic network

  9. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS • Egypt – Nile • History began with King Menes • Division of long periods of time • Early Dynastic, Old Kingdom, New Kingdom • Invasion of Hyksos unite larger, more active Egypt • Lots of building projects and territorial acquisitions • Pharaoh – living incarnation of sun god • More rural than Mesopotamia • Women had a fair amount of privileges (Hatshepsut) • Sophisticated religion – mummification • Hieroglyphics and papyrus • Pyramids and monuments

  10. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS • Indus Valley – NW India/Pakistan • Undeciphered language • Details about society are unknown • Very large, lots of cities • Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro • Central governments • Large trading networks • Environmental (?) downfall

  11. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS • China – Yellow River • Rivers are prime spot for agriculture • Establish dynasties (succession of emperors) • Shang Dynasty • Warrior aristocracy • Expanded borders • Trade networks (jade, ivory, silk) • Pictograms • Ancestor Worship • Zhou Dynasty • Longest lasting – ends at Warring States period • Preserve technology, make additions… • Mandate of Heaven, Confucianism, Daoism

  12. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • THE ANCIENT MIDDLE EAST • Hittites • Systematic use of iron weapons • Assyrians and Neo-Babylonians • First true empire; used cavalry • Ruthless and cruel rule • Nebuchadnezzar and Hanging Gardens • Persians (Iran) • Large Empire => network of roads, decentralized gov’t. • Satraps – regional governors • Cyrus (1st) => Darius (3rd) • Zoroastrianism • Fought wars with Greece • Conquered by Alexander the Great

  13. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • THE ANCIENT MIDDLE EAST (cont.) • Hebrews • Founders of Jewish religion • First to promote monotheism • Enslaved by Egyptians, conquered by Assyrians • Phoenicians and Lydians • Great cities (Tyre and Sidon) that traded timber and dye • Moved around the Mediterranean (great sailors) • Established Carthage • One of the dominant cities of it’s era • First true alphabet

  14. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • GREECE AND ROME (FOUNDATIONS OF W. CIV.) • Greece • Minoan (Crete) and Mycenaean (mainland) • Trading Societies • Fought Trojan War • Dark Age in Greece • City-States • Mountains and islands kept cities from uniting • Most important: Athens (culture-politics) and Sparta (army) • Oligarchies and slavery • Pericles – leader of Athens, create democracy • Classical Period and Alexander the Great • Greeks go to war with Persia (x2, Persians defeated) • War’s between Athens and Sparta…leads to the rise of Macedonia and Alexander the Great (Hellenism)

  15. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • GREECE AND ROME (FOUNDATIONS OF W. CIV.) • Greece • Culture (Hellenism) • Science, geometry, physics, math, astronomy • Literary masterpieces and philosophy • Socrates, Plato, Aristotle • Established the modern scientific inquiry • Early Rome • Gained independence from Etruscans • Republic • Conflict between classes (plebians and patrichians) • Wars with Carthage (Punic Wars) • Series of civil wars – power shifts from senate to individual leaders (Caesar)

  16. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • GREECE AND ROME (FOUNDATIONS OF W. CIV.) • Roman Empire • Began by Caesar Augustus (Octavian) • Huge economic and military growth • Empire splits into 2 parts (east and west) • Economy fails, Germanic invasions • Roman Society • Citizens vs. Non-Citizens (no civil rights) • Wealth was key to social standing (not birth status) • Wide use of slaves (Spartacus) • Paterfamilias • Women could divorce, own property, influence • Culture • Preserved Hellenic culture (foundations of West. Civ.) • Literature, philosophy, science, building-engineering • Law • Christianity

  17. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • CHINA THROUGH HAN AND TANG DYNASTIES • Qin Dynasty • Shi Huangdi – first dictator, centralized country • Strong emperor with large bureaucracy • Modernized army (iron weapons, cavalry) • Roads and the Great Wall – Terracotta Warriors • Han Dynasty • Powerful, efficient government • Extended control of empire (beyond modern China) • Canal Systems and roads (travel and business) • Silk production leads to strong economy • Comparisons to Rome

  18. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • CHINA THROUGH HAN AND TANG DYNASTIES • Sui Dynasty • Short lived but effective • Reunites China, Grand Canal, burst of military conquests • Tang Dynasty • Set up tributary system by Asian neighbors/conquests • Great economy, lots of trade (silk road) • Indian Ocean markets also important • Collapses because of rebellions and military disasters • Empire breaks up in independent states

  19. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • CLASSICAL INDIA • Aryan Invasion • Northern people that move into subcontinent • Beginning of India’s history (?) • Conquered the southern people (Dravidians) • Components of new culture • Common language (Sanskrit) • Religion (Hindu and Vedic) • Caste system • Priests (Brahmin) • Warriors and Political Leaders • Commoners • Servants and Peasants • Untouchables

  20. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • CLASSICAL INDIA • Mauryan Empire • First unified Indian State • Ashoka – Buddhism • Collapsed because of outside pressure/invasion • Gupta Empire • 500 years later… • Ruled northern and central India • Religious tolerance • Also collapsed because of outside forces • India remains decentralized until Muslim invaders

  21. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • BYZANTIUM (Eastern part of Roman Empire) • Centered at Constantinople • Crossroads location made it important • Preserved Christianity in eastern Europe and Middle East • Blended Greek and Roman culture • Hagia Sophia • Would eventually lose power due to rapid expansion of Islam

  22. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA • Bantu • From west-central Africa, but migrate throughout continent • Spread knowledge of agriculture and iron tools • Depended on the wealth of cattle • Nubia and Ghana • Nubia (Kush) – south of Egypt; lots of gold • Meroe – as Egypt declined, grew more powerful and independent • Ghana – west Africa (Atlantic coast); also a land of gold • Major trade spot south of the Sahara trade lines • Eventually conquered by Muslims

  23. PREHISTORY – 600 CE MAJOR SOCIETIES, KINGDOMS, & EMPIRES • THE AMERICAS • Mexico and Central America • Olmec – east central Mexico • Impact on the civilizations that followed • Teotihuacan – Mexico City; very large city state • Eventually overtaken by the Mayan • South America • Peru (Andes mtns.) – Chavin, Moche, Huari, and Chimu • Skilled artisans (pottery, weaving, metalwork) • Urban societies (stratified) • North America • Mound builders – Adena, Hopewell, and Mississippian • Anasazi – 4 corners, cliff dwellers

  24. MAJOR WORLD RELIGIONS POLYTHEISM • HINDUISM • Synthesis of many religious traditions • Mixture of Aryan and native (Vedism) • Upanishads (900 BCE) outline concepts of religion • Ramayana and Mahabharata also outline key ideas • Beliefs: release the soul to join with the World Soul • Undergoing cycles is key to release (samsara) • Karma leads to place of birth…good deeds leads one closer and closer to release of soul • Leads to establishment /acceptance of the Caste System and Sati • Many gods and goddesses, manifestations of the World Soul

  25. MAJOR WORLD RELIGIONS POLYTHEISM • BUDDHISM • Founded by Siddhartha Gautama • Philosophy or religion ? • Reduce the rituals involved with karma and reincarnation • 4 truths and 8 fold path to enlightenment • 2 groups of followers • Thervada – lack of emphasis on deities • Mahayana – blend with other religions, absorb deities, Buddha becomes god like

  26. MAJOR WORLD RELIGIONS POLYTHEISM • DAOISM • Founded by Laozi • Perceive the world in antirational, non-logical ways • Individual concerns are more important than worldly things (money, politics, possessions) • Easily adapted to other religions and philosophies

  27. MAJOR WORLD RELIGIONS POLYTHEISM • DAOISM • Founded by Laozi • Perceive the world in antirational, non-logical ways • Individual concerns are more important than worldly things (money, politics, possessions) • Easily adapted to other religions and philosophies

  28. MAJOR WORLD RELIGIONS POLYTHEISM • ANCESTOR WORSHIP • PANTHEONS • Gods with personalities, responsible for different aspects of society • Greece, Rome, Vedic gods (India), Norse (Europe) BRIDGE TO MONOTHEISM • ZOROASTRIANISM • Worship only one god, Ahura Mazda • Enemy was Ahriman (god of darkness) • Cosmic struggle between good and evil

  29. MAJOR WORLD RELIGIONS MONOTHEISM • JUDAISM • CHRISTIANITY • ISLAM • Muhammad • Principles of Faith • Expansion • Umma (community), caliph (leader) • Umayyad, followed by Abbasid • Sunni vs. Shiite

More Related