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6,500-3,500 B.C. Most farming villages small—range between 200-1,000 people—everyone involved in agriculture in some way. Agriculture is village’s chief occupation—but not the only one. Once harvest grain—how to store it? How to transport water?
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Pottery—growth of the village artisan (not full time)—store grain, water Development of weaving—basket weaving— better than pottery for grain as is lighter.—use same technology for manufactured cloth— based first on sheep’s wool. Practical applications—clothes, blankets, items that can be traded. Pottery and weaving emerged as important village handicrafts because their products met crucial storage needs.
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What to do if a neighboring village raids yours? Manufacturing of weapons Copper Age c. 6,500. Chalcolithic Era Why copper? Pliable—heat copper ore to smelt it. Through accumulation can produce containers, tools (plowshare), weapons. Evidence from Serbia c. 7,000 B.C. But Caucases, Asia Minor, Cyprus—need for copper stimulates trade, causes an early arms race.
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Better tools: sickles, knives, plows become more advanced. Otzi or the Ice Man had a copper axe. What to do with excess manufactured goods: hides, pottery, grain, livestock? Trade:--means of exchange or gift-giving to cement alliances. Establish goodwill and alliances between villages by means of gift-giving. But trade also: little copper in near East—but much in Cyprus. Early development of trade networks.
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Establishment of villages provokes warfare through the accumulation of goods. Villages have material possessions (nomadic people had few). Livestock, tools, people, fields—things to protect and to tempt potential attackers. To some degree, village warfare stimulated the progress of technology—better weapons to defend yourself and your village.
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Çatal Hüyük in s. Turkey c.7,000 B.C.—large walled Neolithic site of 5,000-8,000 people. Farming community—but walled. Entrances to houses on the roof. Buried dead in village—often under the hearth or bed. Important site for access to copper from Cyprus---Cyprus—Syria corridor.
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C. 6,800 B.C.—large walled village—on trading route between Egypt and Mesopotamia. One of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world. Like Çatal Hüyük, bury dead under the bed. Evidence for habitation back to 9,000 B.C.
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Completely agricultural Very few artisans (no full timers) No specialization of services Physical structure: may or may not be walled; few public spaces—structures private homes. Little trade—communal defense. In some areas, villages will develop into something new: the city.
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Bronze—result of the city Appears c. 3,500 B.C. Bronze = alloy of copper and tin. Much more effective weapon and tool—Harder, more durable than copper. Increases need for tin—encourages trade.
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