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Five Characteristics of Civilization Advanced cities Center of trade for a larger area Examples – Atlanta, NY, Seattle Specialized workers Workers skilled in specific kinds of work Examples – jewelers, architects, plumbers Complex institutions Long-lasting pattern of organization in a community Examples – US Senate, Roman Catholic Church, New York Stock Exchange Record keeping Written records of a community Examples – receipts, student grades, laws Advanced technology Innovations that allow communities to solve problems Examples – iPads, automobiles, computers Development of English • Indo-European – language spoken by peoples on the Eurasian steppes • Indo-European migrations – Germanic, Celt, Italic, and Greek tribes move west into Europe • Angles and Saxons settle in England – AngloSaxon becomes the language spoken • 1066 – Norman conquest – Norman French, descended from Latin, heavily influences Anglo-Saxon Influence of Judaism • Christianity born of Judaism – major religion of the West • Ten Commandments become the basis for many law and moral codes • Monotheism • Jewish lands become the focus of the Crusades Persian Government • Satraps governed provinces – States and governors • Use of Royal Road to communicate quickly throughout the empire – Highway system – Electronic communication Athenian and U.S. Democracy Athens Citizens = 18 years old males born to citizen parents Both United States Citizens have political power Citizens = born in US or naturalized Three branch government Representatives elected to legislate Laws voted/proposed directly by assembly Legislative passes laws Leaders chosen by lot Executive carries out laws Executive branch = council of 500 Judicial conducts trials with paid jurors 12 member juries Various juries Executive branch headed by president who appoints officials Attorneys and appeal process No attorneys or appeals; one day trials Roman Republic and the U.S. • Elected consuls → elected president – Chief executive, commander-in-chief of army • Senate/assemblies → senate/house of reps – Legislative and advisory responsibilities • Praetors → judicial system (supreme court) – Hear civil and criminal trials and appeals • Twelve Tables → U.S. Constitution • Citizenship – All adult male landowners → native-born or naturalized adults Spread of Christianity • Alexander’s conquests – Brings East and West into direct cultural contact – Fusion of languages into koine Greek – universal language that allowed N.T. to be read broadly • Pax Romana – Christianity spreads along Roman roads – Time of peace allowed missionaries to travel and preach their message – Roman rule = everyone knows Latin/Greek = common language for sharing the gospel Crusades and the Modern Day • Intolerance and hatred between Jews, Christians, and Muslims • Increased persecution of Jews and Muslims in Europe • Seen today in: – Terrorism and the War on Terror – Resentment at western intervention in Islamic states – Economic turmoil (e.g., oil sanctions) English Political Reforms • Henry II – Juries – 12 community members who answered a royal judge’s questions about a case – Common law – body of case law that gave uniformity to England’s justice • John – Magna Carta – guarantee of basic political rights (e.g., no taxation without representation, trial by jury, protection of the law) • Edward I – Parliament – legislative body made up from the nobility and the commons World Religions Hinduism Buddhism Judaism Christianity Islam • Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva • No one person • Sacred texts, including Vedas and Puranas • Reincarnation, moksha = freedom from earthly desires which comes from a lifetime of worship, knowledge, and virtue • no personal deity • Buddha • Multiple sacred texts • Nirvana, Noble Eightfold Path, reincarnation • Yahweh • Abraham • Hebrew Bible, including Torah • Monotheism, loving God who holds people accountable for sins, live by the teachings of the Torah • • • • • • • • God Jesus Christ Bible Monotheism, loving God, Jesus was son of God who died to save humanity from sin, resurrection makes eternal life possible Allah Muhammad Qur’an Five Pillars of Islam: faith, prayer, alms, fasting (Ramadan), pilgrimage to Mecca