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Ancient Near East. Egypt, Mesopotamia, & The Hebrews. Egypt. Nile: World’s longest river Herodotus: Egypt=“gift of the Nile” Overflowed on regular, annual basis: Fertile land Sense of order Egypt protected by desert & sea From about 3100 BCE, for 3000 yrs. Mesopotamia.
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Ancient Near East Egypt, Mesopotamia, & The Hebrews
Egypt • Nile: World’s longest river • Herodotus: Egypt=“gift of the Nile” • Overflowed on regular, annual basis: • Fertile land • Sense of order • Egypt protected by desert & sea • From about 3100 BCE, for 3000 yrs.
Mesopotamia • Tigris and Euphrates Rivers—Fertile Crescent • Mesopotamia=“the land between the two rivers” • Overflow unpredictable • Sense of instability • Exposed plains • Open to invasion
Mesopotamia • Beginning with Sumer, about 3500 BCE • First cities: Uruk, Ur, Kish, Nippur, Lagash • Unlike Egypt, Mesopotamia was a series of civilizations
Hebrews • Tribal people who migrated from Fertile Crescent to Canaan (Israel) after 2000 BCE • After 1700 BCE migrated to Egypt, and enslaved • Around 1300 BCE returned to Canaan (the “Exodus”)
Religion God & Creation
Egypt: God & Creation • At beginning of time, Nile produced mound of silt and sun god emerged from it • this sun god (Amon, Re, Aten) gave birth to the other gods (19) • Amon gives ankh (“life”)
Egypt: God & Creation • Akhentaten’s Reform (30): monotheism • The power of the sun’s rays: in 1.17 the rays end in hands • marked by a change in the visual arts, movement toward realism
Mesopotamia: God & Creation • Man created through violence & strife • Apsu (sweet waters) and Tiamat (bitter waters) give birth to Lahmu and Lahamu (Note: As in Egypt, silt precipitates) • Anshar and Kishar (horizon of sky and earth) give birth to Anu (god of sky) who gives birth to Ea (wisdom).
Mesopotamia: God & Creation • Tiamat prepares for war. • Marduk is Supreme Commader to fight Tiamat (bitter waters). • Upon slaying Tiamat, Marduk splits open Tiamat’s body to make sky and earth. • Marduk makes man as a work of “cosummate art” for the “faithful service” of the gods.
Hebrews: God & Creation • Supreme Creator, who existed before the physical world, with ethical charge (47): ethical monotheism (48)
Genesis • Genesis 1: God created “man” last. God created “man” male and female: put them over the earth to subdue/master it. • Genesis 2: God creates man first (out of the soil), then the garden, the animals, then the woman.
Religion Morality & Afterlife
Egypt: Isis & Osiris • Isis—Osiris Set (Osiris’ evil brother): chopped Osiris into pieces and threw in Nile • Isis: puts Osiris back together again and brings him back to life • Horus: revenge on Set—becomes ruler of Egypt
Myth of Isis & Osiris • Pharaohs associated with Horus, the avenging son of Isis & Osiris • The myth supported a belief in resurrection of the dead—not only for the pharaoh but for commoners as well
Mesopotamia: Epic of Gilgamesh • Gilgamesh, 2/3 god and 1/3 man, has lost his best friend Enkidu. • Gilgamesh is heartbroken, and he also fears his own death, so goes on a journey to his father Utnapishtim, who has eternal life, to see if he can gain it too.
Epic of Gilgamesh (2) • First he needs to seek out the permission of Man-Scorpion to pass through the mountain • He hangs out with Siduri, maker of wine, for a while, then eventually reaches Utnapishtim, who informs Gilgamesh that all is impermanent.
Epic of Gilgamesh (3) • Gilgamesh asks Utnapishtim how he got everlasting life, and Utnapishtim relates the story of the flood and how he managed to survive and save mankind. • Gilgamesh goes with Urshanabi the Ferryman to check out the plant that brings everlasting youth, but in the end a serpent snatches it away.
Hebrews: Morality & Afterlife • Ten commandments: the consequences for bad behavior are not in an afterlife but in this life and in future generations—see 49; See also Jeremiah on 51. • “eye for eye, tooth for tooth” (49) • responsibility to enemies (49)
Hebrews: Afterlife • Hebrew attitude toward the afterlife was uncertain: see Job 53
Egypt: Gov/Society • Union of Upper and Lower Egypt shown on Palette of Narmer (22-23). • Narmer was the first pharaoh. Pharaoh: “great house” • Theocracy: pharaoh ruled in the name of the sun god • Pharaoh identified with Horus and symbolized by the falcon
Egypt: Gov/Society • Land was sacred: ruled by the pharaohs in the name of the gods—worked by the peasants and slaves. • System: theocratic socialism: harvest shared by community
Egypt: Gov/Society • Authority went from the pharaoh to the husband of the pharaoh’s daughter—thus sometimes sons would marry their sisters in order to get the thrown. (Property passed through women)
Egypt: Social Structure • Pharaoh • Vizier: top bureaucratic official • Merchants traders, builders, scribes (middle class) • Peasants • Slaves: unfree: captured enemies, criminals, debtors