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THE CODE OF HAMMURABI & ASSYRIANS
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OBJECTIVES, KEY TERMS & PEOPLE Objective Explain how early empires arose in Mesopotamia Key Terms & People: Hammurabi’s Code Behistun Rock Chaldeans Sargon the Great Lydians Babylonians Nebuchadnezzar
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FALL OF SUMERIAN CITY-STATES Around 2350 B.C. Sargon the Great captured the city-states (ruler of Akkad) The Sumerian civilization did not die The rulers of the new kingdoms adopted basic ideas of Sumerian civilization to meet their own needs
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BABYLON Where the first conquerors of Mesopotamia came from Located upstream from Sumer
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BABYLON Babylonians were nomads They quickly adopted the civilized ways of the Sumerians Like what? Ziggurats, art, written laws, literature, cuneiform, irrigated fields and organized society Conquered all of Mesopotamia Why is this important? Civilization spread over a large area
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POLYTHEISM Belief in many gods Each city-state considered itself the property of one god
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EPIC OF GILGAMESH One of the earliest literary works What did it describe? The underworld
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MAJOR ACHIEVEMENTS Code of Laws known as Hammurabi’s Code Based on Sumerian city-state laws More complete because it was for an entire empire Why do societies develop laws? Empire State that has conquered other lands and now rules them
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HAMMURABI’S CODE Written by King Hammurabi Nearly 300 laws He picked out ones he liked from city-states of the empire Written on an 8 foot slab of black rock Why is this important? First written law code-public knowledge Idea of justice required balance Eye for an eye; small crimes get small punishments http://www.mitchellteachers.org/World History/AncientEgyptNearEastUnit/PDF s/CourtCaseHarboringSlave.pdf
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MESOPOTAMIAN ADVANCEMENT Drew up multiplication & division tables Made geometry calculations Use base of 60 Cut circle into 360 degrees 60 minutes in an hour First written records in astronomy Kept records of changing positions of planets and phases of the moon Developed 12 month calendar
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BEHISTUN ROCK Discovered in 1840s by Henry Rawlinson Key to Mesopotamian history Behistan Rock includes eyewitness accounts of a battle and a list of provinces in the empire Used to translate Mesopotamian writing
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HITTITES (1600-1200 B.C.) Invaded Northern Mesopotamia about 1600 B.C. Raided Babylon, Syria, Palestine and challenged Egypt’s power By about 1450 B.C. the Hittite Empire included Asia Minor and Northern Syria Just and humane laws Notable architecture Most important discovery Iron=huge advantage over other empires Sharper and stronger than bronze
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ASSYRIANS (750-612 B.C.) Came from Northern Mesopotamia Their villages were attacked repeatedly by barbarians from the Northern mountains Assyrians learned to be tough fighters over the centuries of attacks
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ASSYRIAN ARMY Soldiers well equipped with iron swords and iron tipped spears Most disciplined army so far Trained to march and fight in tightly organized columns and divisions led by commanders of different ranks Attacking a city March within an arrow’s shot of the wall and on a signal shower the city with arrows Meanwhile, other troops moved to the city gates and hammered them with iron- tipped battering rams
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ASSYRIAN ARMY
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ATTACKING A CITY (CONT.) Show no mercy Tortured, killed or enslaved the people Assyrians uprooted the conquered people from their homelands, sending great groups of people to distant parts of the empire. Why? To prevent later rebellion
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NINEVEH Assyrian capital city Largest city of its day(3 miles long by 1 mile wide) Housed the treasures of the empire Held world’s largest library King Assurbanipal collected 25,000 clay tablets to create it
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CHALDEANS (612-550 B.C) Capital city: Babylon This was 1000 years after Hammurabi Babylon became the center of the empire during this time
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KING NEBUCHADNEZZAR Ruled from 605-562 B.C. Rebuilt Babylon Covered the walls of his palace with shining tiles arranged in bright patterns Most impressive part of the palace was the famous Hanging Gardens of Babylon
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STARGAZERS OF BABYLON Highest building: a 7 tier ziggurat that was more than 300 feet high and visible for miles Priests observed stars nightly Kept records of positions of stars and planets The rise of each constellation (group of stars) marked a new month in their calendar Belief that stars determined human destiny Chaldeans observed the Zodiac (12 constellations to foretell the future) Nebuchadnezzar consulted the temples star charts carefully in governing his kingdom
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LYDIANS ***Major achievement: began the use of coins in trade How did this help with trade? Got rid of the barter system Official government coinage came into use in about 560 B.C. Coins brought about a money economy Money economy: an economic system based on the use of money
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OBJECTIVES & KEY TERMS/PEOPLE Explain how early empires arose in Mesopotamia Sargon starts the first empire Hammurabi’s Code First written code of laws based on an eye for an eye Behistun Rock Translated Mesopotamian writing Chaldeans Nebuchadnezzar was the ruler
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KEY PEOPLE Sargon the Great Conquered the Sumerian city-states Lydians Invented coins Babylonians King was Hammurabi; code of laws Nebuchadnezzar Chaldeans’ leader that built the Hanging Gardens
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