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Indus River Valley. Time Period and Geographic Location. Around 2500 B.C. Considered a Sub-Continent of Asia High mountain ranges separate it from the rest of Asia Present-day Pakistan and part of India
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Indus River Valley Time Period and Geographic Location • Around 2500 B.C. • Considered a Sub-Continent of Asia • High mountain ranges separate it from the rest of Asia • Present-day Pakistan and part of India • Mountains to the North and desert to the East helped protect the Indus Valley from invasion
Indus River Valley Time Period and Geographic Location • Around 2500 B.C. • Considered a Sub-Continent of Asia • High mountain ranges separate it from the rest of Asia • Present-day Pakistan and part of India • Mountains to the North and desert to the East helped protect the Indus Valley from invasion
Indus River Valley Geographic Locations continued • Located near the Ganges and Indus Rivers • Seasonal winds - monsoons - dominate India’s climate, at times, bringing so much moisture, that flooding occurs - the monsoon winds were unpredictable • Experience droughts during summer monsoons fail to develop, much like Arizona
Indus River Valley Economic Orientation • Agriculture and Trade based • Imported gold and silver from Afghanistan • Imported semi-precious stones from Persia • Exported brightly-colored cotton • Close to the sea, so it was easy to ship goods in and out of the civilization
Indus River Valley Government/Law System • The history still remains somewhat of a mystery • There is some evidence (planned cities and protection for a royal family) of a central government
Indus River Valley Social Organization/Classes • Social divisions were minor • Fairly wealthy society - could afford non-essential items (i.e., toys) • Discipline was the essence of schooling
Indus River Valley Artistic & Technological Innovations • Built strong walls along rivers to keep water out of cities • Sophisticated city planning - on a precise grid system • A citadel contained a city’s major buildings • Highly sophisticated sewage and plumbing systems
Indus River Valley Artistic & Technological Innovations • Walls divided residential districts • Houses varied in size • Developed a written language, but it still has not been decoded • Excellent transportation, via the sea, for trade with other civilizations
Indus River Valley Religious Organization • Believed to be a theocracy, but there is no evidence of any temples • Priests probably prayed for successful harvests and protection from floods • Possible links to modern Hindu culture
Chinese River Valleys Time Period & Geographic Locations • Around 2,000 B.C. • Isolated by natural barriers (i.e. oceans, seas, and mountains) • Faced danger of flooding - The Yellow River (Huang He River) is also known as “China’s Sorrow” because some floods have devoured entire villages • Only 10% of China’s land is suitable for farming
Chinese River Valleys Economic Orientation • Agriculture • Trade with foreign civilizations
Chinese River Valleys Government/Law System • Xia - 1st Dynasty • Xia leader was a mathematician and engineer • Shang Dynasty rose to power (1,700 to 1,027 B.C.) • 1st family of Chinese rulers to leave written records • Built elaborate palaces and tombs • Leaders able to raise and control large forces of workers
Chinese River Valleys Government/Law System • Zhou (joh) took over in 1,027 B.C. but kept many of the Shang practices/ideals • “Mandate of Heaven” gave a just ruler divine approval • Created a feudalism system - nobles and lords were granted the use of lands that belonged to the king in return for military service for and protection of the king
Chinese River Valleys Social Organization/Class • Higher classes lived in wood-framed houses located within the city walls • Peasants and craftspeople lived in huts outside the city • Family in central to Chinese culture • respect for parents is #1 virtue • men controlled property and made important decisions • Women were treated as inferiors
Chinese River Valleys Social Organization/Class • Girls’ marriages were arranged for them when they were between 13-16 years old • Producing a son for her husband’s family was the only way a female could hope to improve her status • Nobles’ children learned to write, but peasants’ children were largely uneducated
Chinese River Valleys Artistic and Technological Innovations • Flood control and irrigation systems • Cities surrounded by walls for protection • Chariots used by professional warriors • Writing - each character represents one syllable or idea • No connection between spoken and written language • People in all parts of China could learn the written language, but had to know thousands of characters
Chinese River Valleys Artistic and Technological Innovations • Zhou Dynasty • Roads and canals • Coined money • Blast furnaces produced cast iron for tools and weapons
Chinese River Valleys Religious Orientation • There was a belief that spirits of family ancestors had the power to bring good fortune or disaster • The spirits weren’t revered as gods; treated more like neighbors • Every family member paid their respects to the father’s ancestors • The people consulted gods through the spirits
Chinese River Valleys Religious Orientation • Supreme god - Shang Di and many lesser gods • Shang kings consulted gods through the use or oracle bones (animal bones and tortoise shells)