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Mesopotamia The first Civilization • Farmers began to settle the flat, fertile lands in between the Tigris River and Euphrates River. • This became known as Mesopotamia, or “Land Between Two Rivers”. • Located in modern-day Iraq The Fertile Crescent • The two rivers flooded Mesopotamia at least once a year. • The flooding softened the soil, creating a thick bed of mud called silt. • Farmers irrigated the silt and grew massive amounts of wheat. • A surplus of food meant an increase in population and specialized workers. Sumer • The first cities began to appear in southern Mesopotamia in a region known as Sumer. • Small farming villages eventually grew into large, walled cities with thriving markets. • THREE Challenges: • Unpredictable flooding • No natural barriers for protection • Limited natural resources The Sumerians • Were the first people to form a civilization • Leaders planned projects and oversaw production. REMINDER: 5 Aspects of a Civilization 1. Advanced cities 2. Specialized workers 3. Complex institutions 4. Record keeping 5. Advanced technology • To provide water, they dug irrigation ditches that carried water to their farms. • For defense, they built city walls • Sumerians traded their goods for raw materials such as wood and stone. Sumerian civilization spreads • The Sumerians built a number of cities with similar characteristics: • Shared the same culture. • Developed their own governments • Each with their own rulers. • Each city and the surrounding land it controlled formed a city-state. Polytheism • The Sumerians believed in many different Gods. • Believed they controlled the forces of nature. • An example: Enlil was the god of storms and air. • Sumerians believed that their Gods fell in love, had children, and fought. • Believed that humans were their servants. Enlil ZIGGURAT OF Ur • The largest city-state in Mesopotamia was Ur. • The Ziggurat is a temple still standing in Ur • Means “Mountain of God”. • 100 mud brick stairs lead to the top • The temple was used for sacrifices and storage • Goats or sheep • Stored grains and fabrics, and gems for the gods A computer-generated image of what the Ziggurat looked like in ancient times. The Ziggurat of Ur as seen today. Cuneiform writing • The earliest form of writing is called cuneiform writing. • They started out as simple pictures representing real objects. • Pictures eventually changed into wedgedshaped symbols. • The symbols were inscribed one above the other on a flattened piece of clay • Later, turned to side-by-side to avoid smudging Government of Sumer • The early government in the city-states were controlled by priests. • The farmers believed that the success of their crops depended upon the blessings of the gods • A portion of every farmer’s crop was given to the priests as taxes. • In times of war, the priests would appoint a military leader to rule until the fighting was over From priests to warriors • As wars became more frequent the warriors ruled for longer periods of time • Eventually they became rulers for life • These rulers usually passed their power on to their sons. • A series of rulers from a single family is called a dynasty. Gudea of Lagash (c. 2140 BC) The bronze age • Sumerian metalworkers discovered that melting together certain amounts of copper and tin made bronze. • This discovery is the beginning of the Bronze Age • Bronze weapons were much stronger and sharper than copper or stone. Sargon of Akkad • For 1000 years the city-states of Sumer were almost constantly at war with one another. • The cities were so weak that they could no longer ward off attacks from the people of the surrounding deserts and hills. • Eventually, a man named Sargon of Akkad attacked and conquered the city-states of Sumer rise and fall of the world’s first empire • Sargon led his army from Akkad and conquered all of the city-states in Sumer. • Akkad was in northern Mesopotamia • Sumer was in southern Mespotamia • By taking control of both northern and southern Mesopotamia, Sargon created the first empire. • An empire is an extensive group of states or countries under one ruler • Sargon’s dynasty lasted only about 200 years. • It eventually fell to internal fighting, invasions, and famine. • The Amorites invade the lands of Sumer and Akkad, establish their rule in the city of Babylon. • Babylon began to conquer the surrounding cities of Mesopotamia during the reign of Hammurabi. hammurabi’s code • The oldest surviving legal record in the world • Hammurabi’s best known achievement. • He recognized that a single, uniform code of laws would bring all the people under his empire together, despite differences • Featured 282 specific laws, and their punishments. • Hammurabi had the code engraved in stone and copies placed all over his empire Hammurabi Babylon after Hammurabi • Nearly two centuries after Hammurabi’s reign, the Babylonian Empire fell, was taken over by the neighboring Kassites. • Over the years, new groups dominated the Fertile Crescent. These new groups would continue many of the ideas and technologies of the early Sumerians. • Sumerian advancements: • Engineering city walls, buildings, and irrigation systems • Architecture arches, columns, ramps • Cuneiforms a system of writing