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Tuesday Turn in Ch.2 Worksheet (marked on syllabus) 4 th period class tray. Minus 10 pts everyday it’s late! Ancient Near East P.P. TAKE NOTES! Remember, I grade your Lecture Notes on Exam days!
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Ch.2 Reading Prompt Q: Discuss the social & economic changes that took place in the ancient Near East that made possible the beginning of what we call civilization.
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Art of the Ancient Near East
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Mesopotamia
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Sumerians Mesopotamia-Land between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. (Fertile land) Creation of the city (organization- agriculture/rules/labor/ writing system/ social hierarchy/ religion) The Epic of Gilgamesh- 1 st literary epic poem/ possible hints as real life King Uruk, builder of Uruk’s city walls (est. urban civilization)
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“Some Apples, Bananas And Peaches…” -- Mrs. Christman
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SUMERIAN AKKADIAN BABYLONIAN ASSYRIAN PERSIAN City of UR (first independent city-state) – Anu and Nanna Ziggurats – developed 1 st writing system – VOTIVE FIGURES – Cylinder seals for stamping – EPIC OF GILGAMESH – invention of the wheel Sargon I defeats Sumerians – Stele of Naramsin – heiratic scale – brutality in art United Sumer under Hammurabi (1792 – 1750 BCE) – Stele of Hammurabi with his Code of Laws – Creation Myths Took control around 1400 BCE – King Assurbanipal – kept library, ziggurat form & Sumerian texts – Human- head lion LAMASSUs guard palace Neo-Sumerian – Gudea of Lagash Lagash Neo-Babylonian – Nebuchadnezzar II Cyrus & the citadel at Persepolis (built between 521-465 BCE)
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White Temple and Ziggurat at Uruk, c. 3200-3000 BCE
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Mesopotamia, land between the Tigris and the Euphrates/ mud brick monumental architecture in the form of a ziggurat/ developed city-state with a division of labor/ two temple complexes dedicated to Anu and Inanna (sky god and goddess of love and war)
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Votive figures at the Temple of Abu (Sumerian)
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Statuettes from the Temple of Abu at Eshnunna (Tell Asmar), c. 2700-2600 BCE, gypsum Votive figures placed in the cella (a “waiting room”) / stylization of physical types/ hypnotic gaze created by large eyes
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Left: Soundbox of a Sumerian lyre (Ur, Iraq), c. 2600 BCE Below: Lyre from Sumerian Royal Cemetery (Ur, Iraq), c. 2600 BCE Sound box/ hybrid human-animal forms/ royal cemetery/ underworld banquet
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Standard of Ur (Sumerian) Discovered in the 1920s
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Standard of Ur (Ur), c. 2700 BCE contrast between war and peace/ use of registers to depict a narrative/ object found in a tomb, created with lapis lazuli/ hierarchical proportion to distinguish the ensi, or ruler
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“War side” of the Standard of Ur
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“Peace side” of the Standard of Ur”
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Cylinder Seals
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Above: Impression from a Sumerian cylinder seal, c.2500 BCE Left:Seated Statuette of Urnanshe, from the Ishtar temple at Mari (modern Tell Hariri, Syria), c. 2600-2500 BCE, gypsum
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Akkadians Summer came under Akkadian power Akkadians introduced concept of Royal Power! Sargon of Akkad “True King” Loyalty to king, than city state
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Stele of NaramSin AKKADIAN c. 2300-2200 BCE 6 ½ ft. tall Sandstone Sargon’s grandson/ victory over mountain people/ stone marker/
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Sargon of Akkad and Naram Sin/ use of a stele to commemorate a victory/ indications of a divine ruler (i.e. a horned helmet) 1 st - king appears as God)
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Head of 1st Akkadian ruler (Ninevah, Iraq), c. 2250-2200 BCE, copper AKKADIAN balance of naturalism and stylization/ introduction of bronze cast sculpture/ importance placed on facial hair
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Seated Statue of Gudea from Lagash Neo-Sumerian c. 2100 BCE He rejected Akkad’s “Absolute Power” Return to votive Tradition
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Right: Votive statue of Gudea, c.2120 BCE, diorite Gudea and the Sumerian god of rivers, Ningirsu/ use of diorite to indicate importance/ depiction of a temple plan/ pose of piety and humility
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Ziggurat of Ur Neo-Summerian About 2100 BCE One of the largest in Mesopotamia, about a millenium later than Uruk/ 50ft tall mud brick base/
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Ziggurat at Ur (modern day Iraq), c.2100- 2050 BCE
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Stele of Hammurabi BABYLONIAN c. 1780 BCE
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Babylonian culture and the law code of Hammurabi/ use of law applied different to different classes/ god (Shamash) and ruler linked together/ rod and ring presented to Hammurabi
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Code of Hammurabi http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_w5NG OHbgTwhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_w5NG OHbgTw
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