960 likes | 1.12k Views
3a. During the New Stone Age, permanent settlements appeared in river valleys and around the Fertile Crescent. WHY?. Mesopotamia. Fertile Crescent. Land between Persian Gulf and Mediterranean Sea Mesopotamia : “land between the rivers” Between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers
E N D
3a • During the New Stone Age, permanent settlements appeared in river valleys and around the Fertile Crescent. • WHY?
Fertile Crescent • Land between Persian Gulf and Mediterranean Sea • Mesopotamia: “land between the rivers” • Between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers • Fertile soil from the silt brought by floods
Challenges of Mesopotamia • Flood or Drought: The Tigris and Euphrates would flood yearly at unpredictable times, often causing great loss. When the rivers weren’t flooding, the rain stopped falling. • Solution—live a little further from the river and dig irrigation ditches and reservoirs
Sumer • A major city-state to appear in Mesopotamia was Sumer.
Challenges of Mesopotamia • Easy Target: Living in the wide-open spaces in the Fertile Crescent left the Sumerian city-states open for attacks from nomads. • Solution---build a city wall
Challenges of Mesopotamia • Limited Resources: Sumerians had fertile soil and lots of reeds, but not much else for natural resources. • Solution—They traded for what they didn’t have and became a huge trading center.
Sumerian Religion (3c) • Polytheists: Sumerians believed in almost 3,000 gods. • Sumerians built huge temples, or ziggurats, and made sacrifices to the gods • No afterlife
Sumerian Gods • The most powerful gods were the god of the heaven, Anu, and Ea, the god of water. • Close second, came the gods of the sun, moon and stars. • There were also city and house gods. • Sumerian gods had human characteristics, but humans were merely their servants.
Sumerian Government (3b) • Usually controlled by the priests who could pacify the anger of the gods • Priests taxed the people for sacrifices and to feed the temple workers • Military Leaders controlled the government in times of war, which became increasingly frequent • Eventually the priests and military leaders split the power
Class System (3b) • Priests and Kings • Wealthy Merchants • Normal artisans and workers • Slaves (could sometimes work obediently to earn their freedom)
Writing • Cuneiform • The form of writing throughout Sumer (Mesopotamia)
The End of Sumer • The multiple Sumerian City States fought against each other too often. They weakened each other and were defeated by nomads.
Sargon of Akkad (3b) • Conquered N. and S. Mesopotamia • Created the 1stEmpire: several peoples and nations under the control of one ruler • ~2350 BC – 2150 BC
Babylonian (Amorite) Empire (3b) • Led by Hammurabi • Hammurabi’s Code: • Credited as 1st written law • Unified law for the whole empire • Based on: • Retaliation • Class system • Government responsibility
The Nile • Flows from Lake Victoria • Upper and Lower Egypt: • Upper in the South • Lower in the North
Effects of the Nile • Made transportation easy • Flooded in June • Irrigation used to create Flood—Plant-- Harvest cycle • Egypt was the “Gift of the Nile” • Egyptians worshiped the Nile so it wouldn’t flood too much or not enough
Deserts • Egypt’s cities were built along the Nile • West = Libyan Desert (Sahara) • East = Arabian Desert • Deserts were protection from invaders • Isthmus of Suez was only way in and out for invaders or trade
History of Egypt • The story of Egypt can be told in three different parts.. • The Old Kingdom (2686-2181 BCE) • The Middle Kingdom (1991-1786 BCE) • The New Kingdom (1570-1070 BCE) ..We will start in the Old Kingdom
Egypt Unites • ~3200 BC two kingdoms formed, Upper and Lower Egypt • King Menes • ~3100, united the 2 kingdoms
Pharaohs • God-Kings • Head of government, religion, army, weather… everything • Ruled even after death
Pyramids • Elaborate burial tombs (more important than palaces) • Mummification • How were they built? They didn’t even have wheels. • Historians think peasants built pyramids as public works projects
Pyramid at Giza • 13 acre base • 2.5-15 ton blocks
Life in Egypt • Social Classes • Pharaoh • Nobility/Rich • Middle Class Merchants and Artisans • Peasant Farmers and unskilled workers • Slaves
Social Mobility • Everyone worked for the Pharaoh • Hard work and loyalty led to promotions • Women could move up too
Writing • Hieroglyphics: • “sacred carving” • Started as pictographs and evolved into a quasi-alphabet • Papyrus: • Reed paper used to keep records
Rosetta Stone • Translation guide to hieroglyphics • Found in 1799 by the French
Egyptian Science & Technology • Number System • For collecting taxes • Geometry • For building pyramids and laying out fields • Calendar • To plan for floods, planting and harvests • Medicine • Check heart rates, set broken bones, treated fevers and wounds.
End of Egypt’s Old Kingdom Hyksos(~1640 BC) • Invaders on chariots • Brought: • Powerful bows • Chariots • New weaving techniques • Bronze making skills
The Middle Kingdom • Time where the king’s power weakened and which allowed for other to take over • Art flourished early • Some pyramids were built during this time but most were built in the Old Kingdom
The New Kingdom Egypt’s New Kingdom • 1570-1075 BC • Warlike Pharaohs overthrew the Hyksos • Stronger & Richer than ever
Hatshepsut • 1st & only female pharaoh • Led war & encouraged trade
Thutmose III • Killed his mother to become Pharaoh faster • Conquered Nubia • Source of wealth • Located in Southern Egypt
Ramses II • Conquered the Hittites in Syria and Palestine • Built the Temple of Amon • Pharaohs of this time built their tombs under cliffs in the “Valley of the Kings”
Egypt Falls Again • Invaded by “the People of the Sea” • Egypt never recovered
Nubia/Kush Took Over • Kush empire was in Nubia between the Nile and the Red Sea • ~1000 BC conquered Egypt WH Chapter 4
Nubia/Kush • Rich from trade • Great location between the Mediterranean Sea and Red Sea • Adopted Egypt’s Culture • Pyramids, Pharaohs, Hieroglyphics, etc. WH Chapter 4
Geography of India • India is a Subcontinent • 2 big rivers • Indus • Ganges • Rivers Provided • Flooding for new soil • Easy travel for trade
Indus Civilization (2750-1750 BC) • 2 Big Cities • Harappa • MohenjoDaro
City Layouts • Grid streets • Central storehouse for grain • Uniform houses with courtyards • Community bath houses • Under ground sewers • Uniform bricks (oven fired) • Uniform carts • Crop Fields around the city • Careful Planning is a sign of a strong central government
Things we don’t know • Writing is not translated • Religion is suspected but not confirmed • Where did they go?
..Moving ahead to Indo-European Migration into the Indus Valley and India
Indo-Europeans Migrate • Who? • People from the steppes between the Black and Caspian Seas • Herders who rode horses and chariots • Spread all over Europe and Asia Chapter 3
Migration • Movements of people from one region to another • Indo-Europeans did it in waves over a long period of time Chapter 3