Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEsmond Roy Benson Modified over 8 years ago
3
Social Structure Small bands Status difference between men and women is small Beliefs Polydaemonism – belief in many different spirits that inhabit living and nonliving things in nature Not polytheistic (belief in many different gods)
4
Increase in reliable food supplies Human control of food production Animals improve efficiency of farming and provide food source Rapid increase in human population Life span increases due to improved nutrition Job specialization (priests, traders, builders) Widening gender difference Men took over agriculture and domestication of animals Women in charge of raising children and cooking Patriarchal system – men holding power over the family, economy, and government Distinction between settled people and nomads
6
Large cities that dominate surrounding area Monumental architecture and public building projects Complex political organization Specialization of labor Long distance trade Material culture – pottery, tools, textiles Nonmaterial culture – beliefs, customs, values Written Language (usually) Advanced Art and Literature (if literate)
7
Civilis – Latin for “of the citizens” Roman usage – distinguish selves from “inferior” people outside republic/empire It is not “advanced” vs. “backward”
8
ADVANTAGESDISADVANTAGES Development of specialized skills, inventions, arts, and literature Building of economically and politically coordinated cities Increased ability to protect people from dangers both inside and outside the city Growth of prosperity, improving quality of life Increase in class and gender distinctions, creating oppression for many Overproduction of land, depletion of soil, eventual destruction caused by increase population Increased attacks from outsiders attracted to wealth Internal crime promoted by crowded conditions Creation of life-threatening congestions, pollution, disease, and decrease in sanitation
9
Shifting cultivation Slash and burn Rain forest zones Environmental destruction increases with movment Pastoral Nomadism Following the herds Horse nomads (chariot first!) Reindeer herders (Scandinavia) Camel herders (Sudan and Arabian peninsula) Cattle nomads (Upper Nile, Southern Sudan) Nomadism – practice of moving frequently from one place to the other Have major impacts, especially when migrating
10
Early job specialization Pottery – cooking and storage; art Metallurgy (copper) knives, axes, hoes, and weapons learned to heat to improve malleability and quality Textile production Plant and animal fibers Spinning thread and weaving fabrics Early River Civs Plow more land could be cultivated more efficiently Greater productivity – growth in towns & cities Bronze Alloy of copper and tin Writing Record keeping Transmission of knowledge
12
Location in river valleys (loess) Complex irrigation systems Development of legal codes Use of money Elaborate art forms and/or written literature More formal scientific knowledge, numbering systems and calendars Intensification of social inequality
13
Early River Civilizations
15
2800-2700 BCE Gilgamesh rules over Uruk 2340 BCE Sargon the Great establishes Akkadian Empire 1800 BCE Amorites conquer renamed as Babylon Code of Hammurabi Epic of Gilgamesh 1500 BCE Hittites conquer Babylon Bring Iron 1000 BCE Assyrians conquer Epic of Gilgamesh Ashurbanipal – ruthless ruler who establishes 30,000 volume library Conquer Israel in 700s BCE 612 BCE Chaldeans conquer Assyrians Nebuchadnezzar – Hanging Gardens of Babylon 529 BCE Persians conquer Chaldeans Cyrus the Great
16
Created in a region that agriculture is possible Irrigation and drainage possible Forced people to work together and formed communities
17
Rivers supplied basics for existence food water sanitation Also provided for shelter How? basics of building?
18
Problems with living near a river valley? Destroyed by frequent floods that ravaged entire cities restrained political development (Sumer was a geographical maze) Communication amongst the various isolated cities was very difficult
19
Origins of Writing probably go back to the ninth millennium B.C. 4th millennium- realized that drawing tokens was easier than making tokens Result was the development of cuneiform: “wedge-shaped” pictographic system
21
Sumer was different from all other earlier civilizations Advanced cities Specialized workers Complex institutions Record keeping Advanced technology Developed city-states Food surplus increased population expanded trade expansion of Sumerian society
22
Polytheistic Wrote myths (Epic of Gilgamesh) Had social classes Priests and kings were at the top Slaves were at the bottom Women probably couldn’t attend school but had many other rights Advances in mathematics Number system based on 60 (60 seconds=1 minute)
23
Wagon wheel Potter’s wheel (shape containers) Number system 12 month calendar Metal plow Sail Some of the earliest known maps New architecture
24
The Sumerian city-states eventually fell to foreign invaders (2000s BCE) The Akkadians: Semites- nomadic people from the Arabian Peninsula that migrated to Mesopotamia Sargon I (2300-2200 BCE) unites all Mesopotamian cities (creates first empire) Under Sargon I Akkadians adopted Sumerian religion Akkadians adopted Sumerian farming
25
Amorites (2000-1600 BCE) Located in modern day Syria Conquered many parts of old Sumeria (including Babylon) Hammurabi--created a law code with harsh punishments Borrowed heavily from Sumerian culture After Hammurabi’s death Babylon declined
26
Began to conquer Asia Minor (2000 BCE) A strong army with chariots Conquered Babylon in 1595 BCE Borrowed from Mesopotamian and Egyptian culture Had a law code less harsh than Hammurabi’s Lasted until about 1200 BC
27
Started to gain strength about 900 BCE Powerful army Treated conquered people cruelly Large empire with good roads Collapsed about 612 BCE
28
Defeated the Assyrains in about 612 BC Descended from Hammarabi’s Babylonians At its height during the rule of Nebuchadnezzar (605- 562 BCE) Spent a lot of money on Babylon Built Hanging Gardens Empire collapsed in 539 BC after being defeated by the Persians
29
Were Indo-Europeans Cyrus (conquered from the Nile to the Indus) Darius I Administered the empire using satraps (governors) Tolerant to those who were conquered Increased trade and built roads Lost to the Greeks in 480 BC
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.