Basic Features of Civilization P E R S I A Political Organization Economy Religion Society [Social Classes] Innovations [Technology] Art and Architecture
Mesopotamia Land Between Two Rivers
Crossroads of Three Continents
Mesopotamia The Fertile Crescent
Sumerians 3000 BCE
Sumerian Political Organization Priests with religious and power –Success of crops –irrigation Warrior kings –Defense –Dynasties City-states—Ur Laws Taxes Public Works –Ziggurats –Walled cities
Royal Standard of Ur Depicts scenes of war and peace
Economy Agriculture –Catastrophic floods Irrigation Canals –Date Palms, grains such as barley and wheat Trade –Traded—grain, cloth, crafted tools –Received—stone, wood, metal
Mesopotamian Trade
Sumerian Cylinder Seals
Religion Polytheistic Goddesses Afterlife Pessimistic
Society Social Hierarchy Kings, ruling family and Priests Merchants, scribes, lesser priests Peasant farmers Slaves –Captured in war –Sold self into slavery to pay off debts
Sumerian Scribes
Innovations Cuneiform Canals, dams, irrigation Mud bricked walls Wheeled vehicles, sail, plow?? Number system based on 60 Arches, columns, ramps Ziggurat
Cuneiform Wedge Shaped Writing on Clay Tablets
Deciphering Cuneiform
Metallurgy Skills
Art and Architecture
Ziggurats
Gilgamesh
The World’s First Empire Akkadians Sargon
Babylonian –Hammurabi Law Code
Hammurabi’s Code STELE
Hammurabi the Judge “Eye for an eye” Why are written laws important?
Hittites Beginning of Iron Age origin in present day Turkey 1900 BCE-1193 BCE Spoke wheeled chariots Iron Weapons
Assyrians –Fierce –One of first world’s libraries Babylonian –Nebuchadnezzar Ishtar Gate Hanging Gardens of Babylon
Cyrus the Great BCE Tolerant ruler— allowed those within his empire to keep their own institutions Greeks called him “Law Giver” 537 BCE allowed over 40,000 Jews to return to Palestine
Darius the Great BCE Built Persepolis Extended empire to Indus River—2 million square miles Established tax collecting system Divided empire into satrapies Royal road Postal system Network of spies
Persepolis
Royal Road
Zoroaster “ Zarathustra ” 570 BCE Good vs. Evil Ahura Mazda vs. Ahriman “Good thoughts, good words, good deeds”
Extent of Zoroastrianism
Trading Peoples Aramaean s
Phoenicians
–Colonies –Alphabet –Purple Dye
Carthage: Phoenicia’s Mightiest Colony
Muryx Shell and Purple Dye
Byblos—Home of the Alphabet
Lydians
Israelites Information comes from archaeological digs, Egyptian and Assyrian royal annals, and the Hebrew Bible or Old Testament –not written down until 5 th century BCE –Point of view of priests of the Temple of Jerusalem –Disagreement by historians as to the degree of accuracy
1900 BCE Israelites and Abraham
Moses and the Exodus 1200’s BCE Moses leads Israelites out of Egypt Renews covenant with God
Route of the Exodus
Temple Mount in Jerusalem Today Solomon’s Temple Wall—Wailing Wall
Israelites in Captivity
Israelites Torah—first five books of the Hebrew Bible approx. 400’s BCE