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THE NEOLITHIC PERIOD 10,000 BC – 5,000 BC (note: the end date is very debatable, and this period did not end at the same time everywhere at once.).
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THE NEOLITHIC PERIOD10,000 BC – 5,000 BC (note: the end date is very debatable, and this period did not end at the same time everywhere at once.)
Neolithic Revolution – What does it mean?This period in human history is important, as we went through two different revolutions (or complete changes in the way society was set up) during this time – the agricultural revolution, and the urban revolution.
The Neolithic Age • So far, we have looked at two major time periods… • First, we looked at the Pliocene, which was the age of Apes. Creatures such as Lucy lived in this time frame, which covers about 5 million ybp to 2 million ybp. • Second, we looked at the Paleolithic Age, which is when our first true ancestors started to evolve, called the Homo family, starting with Homo Habilius. This covers about 2 million ybp to 10,000 ybp and includes the Great Leap Forward, which occurred about 50,000 ybp. • Now, we are going to look at a third age, the Neolithic Age (New Stone Age), which starts when humans first form simple societies and end when they form civilizations. It starts around 10,000 BC, but there is no end date to this time frame, as some places developed civilizations by about 6,000 BC, while some remote tribes are still living a Neolithic lifestyle even today. • Although we will not get to all of them, the following eras of human history are… • The Ancient Period (Bronze Age). 4000 BC – 500 BC (Egypt, Mesopotamia) • The Classical Period (Iron Age). 500 BC – 500 AD (Greece, Rome) • The Middle Ages (Dark Ages). 500 AD – 1400 AD (small city-states) • The Renaissance. 1400 AD – 1700 AD (nation-states, England, France) • The Modern Age. 1700-Present
By about 10,000 years ago, people had stopped living in simple family groups (pre-society) and had started to live in larger groups with their own culture. How would living in societies change our development?
The Agricultural Revolution was one of the most significant events in human history – but what was it?
How many people in the community need to farm in order to create a food surplus?
So, if only a small percentage of the village needs to farm in order to feed everyone, what does everyone else do?
What is specialization of labour?How could it change society?
The Neolithic Formula • Farming = food surplus = specilization of labour = civilization
Figs: The First Grown FoodFig Cultivation is about 12,000 years old. Why were they not a revolutionary crop?
Humans originally figured out how to grow eight different important plants on farms. They were important because they could be dried and eaten later, or ground into flour. These are called the “founder crops.” Any guesses as to what our oldest food is?
The 8 Foundation Crops • Emmer Wheat • Einkorn wheat • Barley • Lentils • Peas • Chickpeas • Bitter Vetch • Flax
Growing your food instead of hunting it means you only get food once a year. Why?When our ancestors tried this, they encounterd 4 distinct problems, which they had to overcome. What are the problems, and the solutions?
4 Problems to only Getting Food Once a Year • Where do you keep it? • How do you keep people from stealing it? • How do you keep track of grain storage? • How do you keep rats and other vermin from eating your food? • What are the solutions to these problems?
Who would have an advantage in warfare – a Neolithic farming village, or a Neolithic group of hunter-gatherers?
Where were good places to start farming? Why?http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7bqi70B3tE&feature=related
Up to now, the Neolithic peoples had been living only in societies, or simple communities. Soon, they would start to invent some of the seven characteristics of a civilization. When a society developed all seven of these, they became a civilization. What are these seven? WHAT IS A CIVILIZATION?
1) Religion: All societies after 50,000 BCWhy was it needed? What are the Pros and Cons
2) Government: All Neolithic SocietiesWhat types exist, why is it needed?
3) Trade: Most Neolithic SocietiesWhy might a civilization need it?
4) Social Classes – What are they, why do they exist?Why does a society need them before they become a civilization?
The Fertile Crescent – the Homeland of FarmingAgriculture would later spread to sub-saharan Africa, and would be independently invented in China and India. Much later it would be invented in North and South America.
The Four “Cradles of Civilization”, the river valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates, Nile, Indus and Yellow.
The Four Cradles • These four places would eventually invent all seven characteristics of a civilization by about 5,000 BC. • Other parts of the world would either invent or copy these characteristics too, though much later. • By about 5,500 BC all four of the cradles had the first six characteristics – but one was still missing. • Whoever invented it first would become the world’s first civilization. • And the winner is….
Assignment • Read pages 28-30 • Complete Section 2 Review
Neolithic Quiz • 1 – What does Neolithic mean? • 2 – What was one of the revolutions that occurred during the Neolithic? • 3 – What was the other revolution that occurred during the Neolithic? • 4 – Name one of the eight founder crops • 5 – Name another of the eight founder crops • 6 – List a problem with getting all your food only once a year, AND the solution. • 7 – List another problem with storing your food all year, AND the solution • 8,9,10 – List any THREE aspects of a civilization
Answers • 1- New Stone Age • 2 - Urban Revolution • 3 - Agricultural Revolution • 4/5 - Bitter vetch, Emmer Wheat, Einkorn wheat, Barley, Lentils, Peas, Chickpeas, Bitter Vetch, Flax • 6/7 – Storage/Silos, Rationing/record keeping, theft/police, rodents/cats • 8/9/10 • Government • Agriculture • Specilization • Classes • Trade • Writing/Science • Religion