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River Valley Civilizations. Characteristics of Civilizations. Cities Centralized government, law codes, organized religion System of writing Specialized jobs – Division of Labor Social Class Structure Advanced Technology. Four Early River Valleys. How did they become civilizations?.
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Characteristics of Civilizations • Cities • Centralized government, law codes, organized religion • System of writing • Specialized jobs – Division of Labor • Social Class Structure • Advanced Technology
How did they become civilizations? • Neolithic Revolution – domestication of plants & animals • Organized Farming & village life • Food Surplus was created led to specialization of labor • Growth in population • Creation of complex socieites requiring complex institutions which governed large scale projects like irrigation
Population Growth & Development of Civilizations • Iron Age = new farms tools = food surplus • Farming and Pastoral Nomads replaced hunter-gatherers • Domesticated animals = beasts of burden = food surplus • Increased, healthier population living closer together in new urban areas • Increased immunities based on close proximity & better health
Population Growth & Development of Civilizations • Cultural connections increased through new trade routes • Developments of empires • Development of Writing systems to record taxes to pay for expanded governments • Development of great road building projects to encourage trade, uniform coinage, uniform weights & measurements (Lydian's & Persians)
Introducing Mesopotamia:(foundations) • Jereme Monette • Jereme.monette@sdhc.k12.fl.us • Plant City High School • Hillsborough County, Florida.
Mesopotamia - Persia For early Civilizations “Rivers Deliver”… Why are rivers essential for them?
Mesopotamia: “Land between the rivers” • Technology helps Mesopotamian societies thrive (How?) • Dikes and canals help tame floods • Agricultural technologies lead to food surplus
The Sumerian Civilization - the beginning of the whole “Mess” • Develop cuneiform as a system of writing (Impact?) • Record laws, treaties, social & political customs… • Via trade, written language spreads to other Civs. • Develop 12 month calendar and use geometry to develop arches and columns. • Polytheistic religion using Ziggurats to worship Gods. • Fell to invaders, but the culture did not die (why?)
Akkadians, then Babylonians, then Hitties, then… bla bla bla. • The Akkadians develop the first known code of laws using Sumerian Cuneiform. • The Babylonian King Hammurabi developed the Code of Hammurabi (impact?) • Babylonian bronze weapons fall to the Hittite’s iron weapons that fall to the Assyrian’s stronger iron that fall to the Chaldean King Nebuchadnezzar who rebuilds Babylon and falls to the Persains.
Code of Hammurabi What language would the code of Hammurabi be in?
Persians:Biggest and Best of the “Mess” • The Great Royal Road connects Persia to the word (why?) • The Lydians (coin money), Phoenicians (alphabet), and Hebrews (Judaism).
Name 6 major contributions of the early Mesopotamian civs. • Describe how each society changes and cultures are preserved.
Early River Civilizations: EGYPT3000BCE • Egyptian Science and Technology 1. Irrigation – water from Nile River (god) to grow wheat & other foods 2. Preserving the human body after death through mummification 3. Physicians diagnose illness & perform brain & body surgery
Egyptian Science and Technology • Accurate calendar • Hieroglyphics: system of writing called • Advanced mathematical geometry & engineering skills in the creation of the pyramids • irrigation systems
EGYPT • Monarchy – Kingdom/Empire • Pharaoh God/King • Dynasty – ruling family • Polytheistic • Advances in medicine, math, calendars, irrigation, cosmetics, mummification, building & architecture, pyramids, jewelry, metal work • Social Class Structure: Pharaoh, Priest/Nobles, merchants/artisans (Middle Class), peasants, slaves
MESOPOTAMIA – FERTILE CRESCENT • Sumerians 1st Civilization: 1st to build wheeledvehicles - 3500 BCE • built irrigationsystems, dykes, and canals for better farming • Cuneiform system of writing – 1st • Sumerian- algebra and geometry • Sumerian: - city-states, Preist/Kings polytheistic,
India • 2500BCE: First cultivation of rice, cotton and tea • built ships, navigated seas, international commerce (Indian Ocean & overland) • well-planned towns, rectangular patterns • Art -copper, bronze, and pottery, including a large collection of terra-cotta toys • two-storied and spacious, lined the town streets; they had drainage systems that led into brick-lined sewers
Ancient India • Social Class Structure: Caste System: Brahmana (priests), Kshatriya (warriors), Vaishya (traders and agriculturists), and Shudra (workers). Person's occupation or group depended upon birth • Sanskrit: writing system
EarlyChina • ShangDynasty: 2000BCE system of writing pictographs - drawings of objects ideographs – thought or idea • Oracle Bone early writing: • Zhou Dynasty: Mandate of Heaven rise & fall of dynasties • Qin Dynasty: Shi huangdi - new technologies warfare, cavalry, Legalism – you will obey orders! Burned Confucian books
Ancient China • Qin China: standardized the language and writing of China • currency became standardized circular copper coin • Great Wall built in north to protect China • Roads and irrigation canals built –Burned books
Legacies of River Valleys • Expanded populations & urbanization • New networks – roads & trade routes lined, sea routes • Established systems of government, laws, & religion • Established patterns of culture & cultural diffusion