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World Civilizations I
I. Early Geological & Environmental Changes
About 225 Million Years ago, the world was
one “super continent.”
World Civilizations I
I. Early Geological & Environmental Changes
•About 2 Million Years ago, earth
entered its last “Great Ice Age.”
A marsh village on
the Euphrates River
•Glaciers recede about 10,000 Years Ago.
•Ice/temperature change cause environmental
change & migration. End of ice bridges.
•Shift from hunting to agriculture by
7,000 years ago- the agrarian revolution.
Settlements start in fertile river valleys.
•Villages appear in W. Asia
about 6,500 years ago.
World Civilizations I
I. Early Geological & Environmental Changes
•Approximately:
Dogs domesticated between 15-12,000
years ago (late Paleolithic age).
•Between 8500-6500 years ago, sheep,
pigs, goats & cattle domesticated.
•The wheel, plow & bronze appeared in
Afro-Eurasia about 3,500 years ago.
•Beans & Maize, about 5600-5000 years ago.
•Pastoralism, still in Central Asia, S. Sahara
& parts of E. & S. Africa, continue as dry
climates prevent dense populations.
World Civilizations I
I. Early Geological & Environmental Changes
Location, location, location….
III.
World Civilizations I
Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria
Earliest Known MapBabylonian, about
600 B.C.E.
•Where did Sumerians come from? Language unrelated to others.
•Loose league of independent city-states by 3,200 B.C.
•Social system: “specialists”(administrators,
merchants, priests & artisans), free farmers & slaves.
World Civilizations I
III. Ancient Mesopotamia-SumeriaThe Development of Gender Roles
•Sedentary agriculture raised the value of land….
•Which required protection…
•Which meant to secure land, came “property...”
•Which “prompted” securing that particular property over time…
•Thus, bearing children “thrust” women into a certain role…
•Marriage, “protecting women,” securing women to one man…
(veiling, or “shutting” women, began around 3,000 B.C.E!
•The “value” of bearing boys over girls…
World Civilizations I
IV. Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria-Significance
of Sedentary Agriculture/Property
•Without it, no villages or towns.
•Further advent of social classes, power & influence.
•A new meaning behind conquering territory.
•Need to develop a professional warrior class…
•Need for “serfs” & “slaves.”
•The need for government, rules, law…
•Need & time to develop skills, tools…
V. Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria
Developments/Accomplishments?
•Basic math, algebra,
geometry & time.
•Cuneiform alphabet developed
3500 B.C.E. About 500 wedgeshaped clay characters, it
dominates until 500 B.C.E.
•The Epic of Gilgamesh
comes about 2,000 BCE.
•Irrigation system complement
long dry spells of 8 months.
•First solid wheel, about 3,200 BCE.
Cuneiform Script
V. Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria
•A ziggurat means
"to build on a raised area"
is a temple tower.
•Made of sun-baked
bricks w/colored
facings, from 2-7 tiers.
•It had a astrological
significance w/a temple
or shrine at the summit.
•A school was at the base to
train priests, study stars.
In Iran, a ziggurat from
the 13th century B.C.
•Access to the shrine was provided by a series of
ramps on one side or by a spiral ramp to the summit.
The Ziggurat of Ur, from 21st Century B.C., built to
worship the moon god, Nanna.
V. Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria
•Area conquered three times, between 2320-539 B.C.E.
•In 2334 BC, Sargon established the Dynasty of Akkad,
placing Mesopotamia under centralized rule.
•The Akkadians were Semitic; their
language became dominant.
•By 2200 B.C. power went to
Babylon. State control over
industry reached a new level.
•Hammurabi (ca. 1792-50 B.C.E.)
developed the Hammurabi Code,
first known rules of conduct.
Close-up:
Hammurabi dispenses code.
V. Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria
King Nebuchadnezzar II’s “Hanging Gardens of Babylon” was
considered one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
III. Ancient Mesopotamia-Sumeria
•A century after Hammurabi, Mesopotamia was
again a patchwork of competing principalities.
•The dynasty ended in 1595 BC, when
Babylonia fell to the Hittites.
•The Kassites (1595-1157 BC) have
the longest lasting dynasty in
Babylon, but left few records.
•Persian conquest in 539 B.C.E. ends
home rule, and Mesopotamia becomes
insignificant until recent times.
Stone pillar with the Hammurabi Code.