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Princeton Review. AP World History. The Ancient Stuff Around 8000 BCE to Around 600 CE. The Big Picture. What are civilizations all about? How does change occur within a society? How are people impacted by, and how do they impact, geography and climate?. Nomads.
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Princeton Review AP World History
The Big Picture • What are civilizations all about? • How does change occur within a society? • How are people impacted by, and how do they impact, geography and climate?
Nomads • Why was the development of more stable civilizations so significant? • Language • Fire • Simple stone tools • Foraging Societies – hunter-gatherer • Pastoral Societies – domestication of animals
Neolithic Revolution (Agricultural Revolution) • Nomads start staying in the same place • Becomes “their” home • Food surplus – specialized labor • Beginnings of “civilization” • Dramatically impacted environment
Technology • Use of animals • Wheels, sails, baskets • Use of Metals (Bronze Age) – later part of Neolithic Revolution
Civilizations • Rivers – fertile soil • Social, Political and Economic developments • City States – loosely connected • Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China and the Americas
Mesopotamia – “Land between Rivers” (Tigris/Euphrates) • Sumer, Babylon, Persia • Unpredictable flooding
Sumer • Developed cuneiform – form of writing; spread through trade routes to other regions • Wheel, 12 month calendar, math system based on sixty, geometry • Polytheistic – Ziggurats (temples for their gods) • When disaster struck, the gods were unhappy
Babylon • Sumer declined; Akkad rose to dominate region – wrote first known code of laws in cuneiform. • Babylon overtook Akkad • King Hammurabi – Code of Hammurabi
Babylon fell to Kassites and then Hittites – used iron weapons • Assyria – capital Ninevah; learned use of iron weapons from Hittites; cruel; sent large groups of people into exile (cultural diffusion) • Medes and Chaldeans defeat Assyria; King Nebuchadnezzar rebuilds Babylon
Persia Empire • Built road system – Great Royal Road • Within the Persian Empire: • Lydians – coined money • Phoenicians – established naval city-states; developed simple 22 letter alphabet (led to our system of letters) • Hebrews – Judaism; monotheistic; believed they were God’s chosen people
Ancient Egypt • Nile River • Predictable flooding – followed stable agricultural process • Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom, New Kingdom – height of power
Pharaohs, hieroglyphics, astronomy, calendar • Trade – need a lot of supplies for huge building projects – brought them into contact with other civilizations • Polytheistic – belief in afterlife (pyramids)
Queen Hatshepsut – first known female ruler • High status of women – more rights and opportunities than Mesopotamia women Peasants Pharaohs Priests Nobles Merchants/Artisans Slaves
Egypt Decline: • Assyria invaded • Persia conquered • Later Greeks occupied Egypt • Became part of Roman Empire
Indus Valley Civilization • Mountains limited contact with other civilizations (Khyber Pass) • Harappa and Mohenjo-Darro – carefully planned cities – strong central government • Polytheistic
Cities were abandoned (don’t know why) • Aryans arrived to the area • Belief system (reincarnation) • Social structure (caste system) • Would be basis of Hinduism
China • Shang • Isolated • Bronze, horse drawn chariots • Spoked wheel • Production of pottery and silk • Extended family – belief in dead ancestor spirits
Zhou – longest lasting dynasty (900 yrs) • Mandate of Heaven • Feudal System – king granted land to nobles; eventually nobles became too powerful and built own kingdoms • Decline: fighting feudal kingdoms
Mesoamerica and Andean South America • Developed independently from the other civilizations • Did not develop along rivers • Olmec (Mexico) • Corn, beans squash • Irrigation, large scale buildings, polytheistic, writing, calendar
Chavin (Andes, S. America) • Access to coast; supplemented diet with seafood • Polytheistic, use of metal tools, used llamas
West Africa • Bantu Migrations – the Bantu family of languages migrated South and East • Migrated due to climatic changes • Jenne-Jeno – first city in Sub-Sahara • Fishing settlement • A collection of individual communities
India • Mauryan Empire • Chandragupta Maurya – unified the Aryan kingdoms • Ashoka Maurya – his grandson; take it to its height • Trade; powerful military • Ashoka converted to Buddhism • Rock and Pillar Edicts – live generous and righteous lives • Ashoka’s conversion to Buddhism enabled it to spread throughout SE Asia
Gupta Empire • Mauryan Empire declined; Chandra Gupta revived it. • Decentralized; smaller empire • Mathematics: Pie and zero, Arabic numerals • Iron weapons • Hinduism once again dominant religion • Reinforced caste system • Women lost rights • Child marriages
China • Qin Dynasty • Lasted less than a decade • Qin Shihuangdi – legalism • Recentralized feudal kingdoms; standardized laws; strict on dissent • Built Great Wall of China
Han Dynasty • Trade thrived along silk road; carried culture • Buddhism spread • Civil service system – exam for highly educated government workers • Invented paper, sundials and calendars; broadened use of metals
Greece • Trade thrived due to limited land resources • Collection of polis (city-states) • Athens – political, commercial and cultural center • Government changed from monarchy to aristocracy (Draco and Solon)
Sparta – militaristic and agricultural • Society: • Citizens – adult males • Free people – no rights • Slaves – 1/3 of population – relied heavily on slaves • All citizens (adult males) were expected to participate in in civic decisions – lead to first democracy
Polytheistic – mythology • Persian Wars – united Greece to fight mutual enemy • Pericles • Golden Age • Rebuilt Athens • Delian League – alliance of Greek city-states
Philosophy – Socrates, Plato Aristotle • Comedies and tragedies • Homer – wrote The Iliad and The Odyssey • Ancient Greek accomplishments would be inspiration for European Renaissance and Enlightenment 2000 years later
Decline of Athens • Peloponnesian War: Athens vs. Sparta; Sparta Wins • Macedonians – Philip conquered Greece, but allowed culture to flourish
Alexander the Great • Defeats Persian Empire • Spreads Greek culture – Hellenism • 3 Empires: Antigonid (Greece and Macedon), Ptlomaic (Egypt), Seleucid (Bactria and Anatolia) • Focused on Ptlomaic – Alexandria; Hellenistic cultural city
Rome • Polytheistic (Greek Origin) • Social Structure • Patricians/Plebeians • Twelve Tables of Rome (innocent until proven guilty) • Pater familias – eldest male • Slaves
Roman Military • Carthage – city-state in N. Africa became enemies • Punic Wars – with Carthage • Hannibal • Rome became undisputed power in Mediterranean
Collapse of Republic • 1st Triumvirate: Pompey, Crassus, Julius Caesar • Civil War between Caesar and the Senate; Caesar become emperor
2nd triumvirate: Octavius, Marc Antony, Lepidus • Octavius=Augustus Caesar; end of republic • Pax Romana
Literature • Architecture (Pantheon, Coliseum, Forum) • Science • Ptolemy (Astronomy) • Roads and aqueducts
Paganism – made sacrifices to gods • Christianity • Grew out of Judaism • Persecution • Constantine ended persecution • Edict of Milan – Christianity became official religion
Empires Collapse • Han China • Would end up being divided into several regional kingdoms for 400 yrs • Gupta India • Invaded by Huns (culture survived)
Roman Empire • Internal decay, bad leaders, size of empire • Diocletian splits empire into 2. • Constantine established new capital in the East (Byzantine) • Rome fell to Germanic invasions • East would survive (Byzantine Empire)
Belief Systems • Polytheism • Confucianism • Daoism • Legalism • Hinduism • Buddhism • Judaism • Christianity
Go Back to the Big Picture • 1. Civilizations • 2. Sources of Change • 3. Humans vs. Nature