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Early Civilizations. I. Civilization. Permanent settlements, such as Catal Huyuk, led to emergence of civilization Societies that rely on agriculture, produce food surpluses Have formal political organization, other long-lasting institutions
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I. Civilization • Permanent settlements, such as Catal Huyuk, led to emergence of civilization • Societies that rely on agriculture, produce food surpluses • Have formal political organization, other long-lasting institutions • Characterized by groups of non-farming elites, merchant and manufacturing groups, other specialized workers • Writing • Essential to civilization for communication, record keeping, establishment of law and order • Cuneiform– first known system of writing, emerged in Middle East (Sumer) around 3500 B.C.E.
II. Tigris-Euphrates Rivers • Located in modern-day Iraq • Often called Mesopotamia(“land between the rivers”) • First example of human civilization • Began 4000 - 3500 B.C.E. • Complex religious beliefs • Sumerians erected shrines and massive monuments/towers, called ziggurats, to honor gods • Some ideas (gods’ creation of earth, floods) can be found in various proto-religions • Judaism – earliest monotheisticreligion
II. continued… • Highly organized • Relied on city-states – small, autonomous regions ruled by a king, with developed urban center • Developed strict class systems – kings, noble class, priests controlled most land • Regulated system of laws and courts • Babylonian leader, Hammurabi, set early code of law in stone
II. Nile River • Located in northern Africa, modern-day Egypt • Began around 3000 B.C.E. • Ruled by a pharaoh, or god-king • Considered to be directly descended from the gods • Complex religious and political rituals • Polytheistic • Theocracy– ruled through laws based on religious beliefs/through religious leaders • Development of writing • Hieroglyphics – comes from Greek words meaning “sacred carving” • More complex than cuneiform • Used papyrus reeds to make a paper-like writing surface
IV. Indus River • Located in modern-day Pakistan, near India’s border • Began around 2500 B.C.E. • Known for its advanced cities • Sophisticated city planning (grid-like patterns), running water • Harappa, MohenjoDaro • Limited trade with Mesopotamia, but developed independently • Developed system of writing, but never been translated • Thought to be a theocracy, religion a precursor to Hinduism • Environment and invasions a factor in disappearance • Monsoons, floods • Nomadic invaders took over, abandoned cities
V. Huanghe (Yellow River) • Located in northern half of modern-day China • Began about 2000 B.C.E. • Developed independently from other civilizations • Largely cut off from contact with outside world by geography (desert, mountains, ocean) • Developed sophisticated irrigations systems • Controlled flooding of Yellow River • Early pioneers in science and weapon/tool-making • Developed unique written language based on ideographicsymbols • Early religious beliefs based on spirits, centered around respect for elders • Social classes divided society • Established system of feudalism – nobles owned all the land that peasants worked • Rigid political system develops – paves way for dynasty system • Shang dynasty was earliest – 1500 B.C.E.