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AP World History Ch. 3 The Mediterranean and Middle East, 2000 – 500 BCE
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This will be a quick overview of the Chapter!
Why? Remember an AP World History course is not like a traditional history course. Typically, a history course will examine the shifts form one type of Mediterranean and Middle Eastern empire to the next. In an AP course we move quickly through the details of empires so we may focus on broad comparisons of these empires within this chapter and others.
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COSMOPOLITAN MIDDLE EAST
Hittites (HIT-ite) – most formidable of the states to emerge from this region during this period. 1600 to 717 B.C.E. Upper Mesopotamia/Anatolia Developed a new feared technology of horse drawn war chariots First to develop the process of making iron weapons Primarily a trading society; large metal deposits allowed them to quickly become a key player in international commerce. Polytheistic- Hattia, Battle god Indo-European language family Iron metallurgy arises separately in Africa ~900 BCE
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Why Cosmopolitan? 1. Familiar with and at ease in many different countries and cultures. 2. Including people from many different countries Stability was restored with large states controlling vast land. Shared Culture Shared Lifestyles “elite” groups shared similar values and had a high standard of living. Trade was important Very tolerant of others religions (carried over to Assyrians) Allowed captured people to continue to worship their beliefs
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New Kingdom Egypt 1532 - 1070 BCE Overthrew Hyksos (Bronze) 4M people
Bureaucracy that separated gov’t Akhenaton – monotheism Rameses II - expansion Aggressive Conquered by Kushites then Assyrians (Iron) Separated into religion, court, military, treasury, conquered territories Lots of trade during this period- need resources! Aswan means TRADE
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What factors led to Egypt losing its isolationist perspective in the Near East?
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Aegean World Mycenaean Greece
Minoan Crete MINOANS: c B.C.E. (very approximate) to about 1450/1400 B.C.E. Europe’s first advanced civilization- CRETE Very advanced culture, peaceful Strong commercial ties (especially with Egypt and Sumer) Mycenaean Greece Migration to southern Greece c. 2,000 BCE of Indo-Europeans Lots of contact with Minoans- traded, adapted parts of their culture Attacked Crete (Knossus) c. 1,450 BCE Very prosperous
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What are the similarities and differences between the rise of civilization in the Aegean Sea area with the rise of earlier world civilizations? What are the benefits and limitations of oral histories?
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Assyrian Empire 911 to 612 BCE BIGGEST EMPIRE WE’VE SEEN SO FAR
Would DESTROY those who opposed them/take into slavery Transplant across empire BUT opportunities for conquered to rise within the military/government Military All powerful kings Libraries
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Why have historians called the Assyrian Empire of the first millennium BCE the first true empire?
How were the Assyrians able to conquer and control such a large and diverse empire? How should the Assyrian Empire be judged?
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Israel Existence CONFIRMED by outside sources (Egyptian steles) in second millennium Pastoral nomads from Mesopotamia Monotheistic Many connections to other Middle Eastern civilizations Monarchs BCE- Saul, David, Solomon TEMPLE Role of prophets North kingdom conquered by 722 BCE Judea conquered 586 BCE
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How reliable are religious documents as records of history? (Bible)
What were the causes and consequences of the migrations of the people ultimately known as the Israelites?
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PHOENICIANS Rowers on two different levels Steering oars
Square sails, only really good for going one way
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PHOENICIANS 1200-800 BCE (Dominated trade) Present-day Lebanon
Established the “Phoenician Triangle” Similar in many ways to Mesopotamia Carthage (monopoly/navy) Trade: Purple dye, glass, lumber, high-quality metal goods, pottery, art, textiles Traveled all over the place- esp. in search of raw materials, also because the Assyrians were pushing them out of Lebanon Not much literature, culture mostly destroyed by Romans, but Alphabet- 22 letters Same religion and political structure as in Mesopotamia- also reformed cuneiform Founded Carthage- huge city- 814 BCE- military superpower until Rome destroys in the Punic Wars Trade trade trade: Purple dye, glass, lumber, high-quality metal goods, pottery, art, textiles Traveled all over the place- esp. in search of raw materials, also because the assyrians were pushing them out of lebanon Not much literature, culture mostly destroyed by romans, but Alphabet- 22 letters Same religion and political structure as in mesopotamia- also reformed cuneiform We get bible from “paper coming from byblos” Founded carthage- huge city- 814 BCE- military superpower until rome destroys in the punic wars Got food from israel
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Key Questions? What is meant by the description of Carthage as a commercial empire? Some civilizations still obviously very closely linked to rivers, but why are others not so directly centered on rivers?
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