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Ch 1 and 2 Review Ancient River Valley Civilizations. The Ancient Middle East. PREHISTORY. PERIOD IN WHICH OUR ANCESTORS EXISTED ON EARTH BUT HAD NOT YET INVENTED WRITING OUR KNOWLEDGE OF THEM COMES FROM SCATTERED AND SCARCE PHYSICAL EVIDENCE
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The Ancient Middle East
PREHISTORY • PERIOD IN WHICH OUR ANCESTORS EXISTED ON EARTH BUT HAD NOT YET INVENTED WRITING • OUR KNOWLEDGE OF THEM COMES FROM SCATTERED AND SCARCE PHYSICAL EVIDENCE • BECAUSE OF LACK OF WRITTEN EVIDENCE WE CAN ONLY SPECULATE ON WHAT THEY THOUGHT ABOUT, HOW THEY ORGANIZED THEMSELVES, HOW THEY INTER-RELATED WITH EACH OTHER, AND WHY AND HOW THEY BEHAVED THE WAY THEY DID
Ancient History As Humans scattered out and populated Earth, they did so as small hunter/gatherer bands. Then, about 10k years ago, that changed. People discovered agriculture—the systematic planting of food crops and domestication of animals.
The First Agricultural Revolution • Occurred at around the same time in five different locations: Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China and Mesoamerica
The Neolithic Revolution • What was it? • 8000 – 3500 BCE • Why did it happen? • Dwindling game? • Why was it such a big deal?
More Food = More People • Agriculture led to permanent settlements (usually along rivers/lakes) and increased population. • More people living in smaller spaces means greater opportunity for conflict and growth. • Growth= language, religion, society • Conflict= crime, disease, disorder • Cultural Diffusion
Evolution of Civilization • Key Traits of a Civilization: • Growth of cities • Specialization • Written Language • Advanced Technology • Complex Institutions
Growth of Cities (Urbanization) • Large urban areas • Centers for trade and commerce
Specialization (Skilled Labor) • Skilled Workers, called artisans • Trade amongst artisans for goods
Written Language • Transitions human history from Prehistory to History
Advanced Technology • Wheel • Plow • Sailboat • metalworking
Complex Institutions • Government • Organized religion • schools
Ancient Mesopotamia“Land between the Rivers” • Sumer—southern Fertile Crescent (4k-2k BC) • Loess—fertile windblown soil • Civilization of city-states bound together by a common culture 1) Sumerians believed to have migrated to the region from Persia/central Asia prior to 5000 BC
The Ancient Fertile Crescent Area The Middle East: “The Cradle of Civilization”
A Hostile Land B. Geography 1) Water—unpredictable flooding/drought (too much or not enough)
Hostile Neighbors 2) Defense problems—open, flat land w/no natural barriers for protection
Scarcity of Resources 3) Resources—limited natural resources in the region • Lack of forests = no wood • Few mineral/metal resources • Dirt, rock and sand in abundance
Perseverance • C. Solutions • Water---irrigation systems • Defense—walled cities and standing armies • Resources—broad trading networks with other regions
Enter the Supernatural D. Religion • polytheism—multiple gods based on nature; classes and rankings of gods (Anu, Enlil and Ea) • Human qualities and emotions • Interference into human lives—hostile/care • Afterlife—”Land of No Return”; no joy or emotion, bleak dismal
Ziggurat at Ur • One of the earliest cities • Temple • “Mountain of the Gods”
Evolution of Religion in Sumer • Ruling society of kings and priests • Earliest society ruled by priests (Theocracy) • In times of war, priest turned over power to military leader • As wars became more commonplace, turned to military leadership more often • Evolved into a king who was military leader/religious leader
Sumerian Religion - Polytheistic Enki Innana Anthropomorphic Gods
The First Empires After the fall of Sumer, a series of foreign invasions swept the region * empire--political unit in which a number of peoples are controlled by single ruler
The Amorites • Another Semitic group from eastern Syria, the Amorites, conquer the region • Conquered the Sumerian city-states to the south • Established capital at Babylon • Greatest expansion and growth under King Hammurabi
King and Lawgiver • Strong leader who united most of Mesopotamia • Growth of trade and agriculture • Hammurabi is most famous for his written code of laws--282 sections with laws from around the region—created a type of equity of law • Specific laws with harsh punishments kept harmony
Babylonian Society • Similar class system to Sumer with laws/punishments differing for each class • Borrowed heavily from Sumerian culture and adopted cuneiform to their Semitic language
Collapse of Babylon • After Hammurabi’s death, empire collapsed • Successors unable to keep empire together • Hittite invasion destroyed Babylon
Mesopotamian Trade (Cultural Diffusion) “The Cuneiform World”
The Egyptians • Kemet (Black Land) of the Nile River Valley • 5000 BC, nomads began settling along the Nile • Farming villages that grew wheat and barley • Series of tribal kingdoms develop
The Two Kingdoms • Early Egypt divided into north and south • Lower Egypt in the north where Nile empties into Mediterranean • Upper Egypt in the south bordering Ethiopia • Narmer (Menes), king of Upper Egypt conquered Lower Egypt around 3000 BC w/capital at Memphis
Ahmose was the first ruler of the New Kingdom, first to use the title pharaoh (great house of the king) • Ahmose rebuilt Egypt to even greater glory
The Woman Pharaoh • Around 1480 BC, Hatshepsut came to power when her husband Thutmose II (her half brother) died. • Her stepson (born to Thutmose II and a harem girl) was too young to rule • She became Regent of Egypt
Hatshepsut About 7 years into her regency, she proclaimed herself pharaoh and wore men’s clothing and the false beard Why? Now believe there were several coup attempts against her and her stepson Had to take on the persona of a male pharaoh to gain legitimacy and acceptance
Egyptian Culture and Society • Similar to Sumer: • Upper class—nobility and priests • Middle class—artisans, merchants, scribes • Lower class—farmers and laborers • slaves
Religion • Polytheistic • Greater focus on afterlife • Idea of god/king • Religion evolved over time to include afterlife for all people • Originally only royalty and nobility had an afterlife, but by the New Kingdom the concept was universal
Hieroglyphics • Writing with pictures • Also hieratic for day-to-day transactions (simplified version) • Scribes • Papyrus paper
Ancient Civilizations: China and India
The Indus River Valley/ Harappa • Located in ancient India • People were the Harappans • At their height around 2500BC • Not much is known about them; by 2000BC they were in decline • We cannot decipher the writing they left behind
Mohenjo Daro and Harappa • Built great cities • highly organized plan • laid out in a grid system • Mohenjo Daro and Harappa were the major cities; each had pop. of about 40,000. • Advanced technology & engineering • Indoor plumbing, bathrooms, underground sewage • Aryans • From north • move into the area their religious beliefs blend with the Indus cities to form the basis for the Hindu religion • Brought Vedas and Sanskrit language
The Huang He /China • Civilizations developed along 3 rivers in China • By about 2205BC, The Huang He civilization dominated • Huang He; “Yellow River” • gets its name from the yellow soil of the region: loess • Yearly flooding can be very destructive; “China’s sorrow” • Most of China’s pop. is in this area • The Huang He was the most isolated of the early civilizations • China has the longest continuous civilization in the world
Huang He Civilization • Most isolated of the river valleys • Xia (shah) Dynasty • first, legendary dynasty • Shang Dynasty (1766-1122 BCE) • First to unify China • first to leave written records • bronze metallurgy • Central rule to oversee irrigation and flood control • Walled citied, elaborate palaces and tombs • Writing: Oracle Bones • Written on bone and used to foretell future
Zhou Dynasty1028 BCE - 221 BCE • Beat the Shang Dynasty claiming the Zhou had heaven’s approval to rule China; the “Mandate of Heaven” • Nobles owned large pieces of land and peasants worked the land • Relatives of the royal family were appointed governor’s of city-states • Each of these lords raised his own army • This works at first, but eventually the begin to fight among themselves
Chinese Dynasties (ruling families) • Shang Dynasty is first to unite China • Zhou Dynasty • During the Zhou Dynasty-1027-256 BC war among rivals but also economic growth • traded with silk, jade and porcelain • The last 200 years of the Zhou is known as the “Era of Warring States” • Both Confucius and Laozi were alive during the Zhou Dynasty (but their philosophies did not become popular until later)
Qin Dynasty Eventually China is united under the warlike Qin Dynasty 221BC • This empire gives China its name • First Emperor: Qin Shi Huangdi • reorganized the government • Standardized money, weights & measures • Burnt books containing different ideas • Began The Great Wall of China to keep out hostile neighbors to the north (214-208 BC) • Built extensive roads and canals • Major achievements: • Gunpowder • Moveable type and paper