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World History Unit 1 Key Notes. Early Civilizations. Civilizations. Mesopotamia Egypt Hebrews Phoenicians. Mesopotamia. Farming in the area allowed for the emergence of civilization. Fertile cresent Agriculture allowed people to settle down, social and cultural prosperity
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World History Unit 1 Key Notes Early Civilizations
Civilizations • Mesopotamia • Egypt • Hebrews • Phoenicians
Mesopotamia • Farming in the area allowed for the emergence of civilization. • Fertile cresent • Agriculture allowed people to settle down, social and cultural prosperity • Code of Hammurabi • First written law code • “Eye for an eye” • Social inequality • Cuneiform = wedge-shaped form of writing
Mesopotamian Religion • Ziggurat = political and religious center • Polytheistic = belief in multiple gods • Tigris and Euphrates Rivers • Unpredictable flooding led to the development of religion • People believed the gods were angry when the rivers flooded
Mesopotamian Government • City-state: political unit that included a city and its surrounding lands and villages • Instable because of constant warfare with each other
Egypt • Pharaoh = religious and political leader (theocracy) • Pyramids are a symbol of the Pharaohs’ divine power • Hieroglyphics = Egyptian form of writing with symbols and pictographs
Judaism a.k.a. Hebrews • Monotheistic = belief in one god • Different from polytheistic Mesopotamian and Egyptian religions • Torah = holy book, first five books of the Old Testament
Zoroastrianism • Monotheistic • Created by Zoroaster • Believed in one universal god • Struggle of good vs. evil
Phoenicians • Traded throughout the Mediterranean, spreading language and culture • Created the Phoenician alphabet • Most similar to present-day English alphabet
Key terms • Monotheism • Polytheism • Hieroglyphics • Cuneiform • Pyramid • Ziggurat • Hammurabi’s Law Code • Hebrews (Judaism) • Zoroastrianism • Pharaoh • City-state • Theocracy • Phoenician alphabet