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Pre-History to 1500 INTRO TO WORLD HISTORY Introduction  History is necessary to human survival  Must know where we came from  Regardless of beliefs, history begins 2 million BC Dawn of History  Old Stone Age or Paleolithic Age  “Lucy” 1959 by Leakey's in Tanzania  First people were hunters and gatherers  Animism – spirits in everything  Neolithic Agricultural Revolution – farming and domestication of animals  Lead to cities and civilizations  Civilizations grew along rivers Features of Civilization  Organized Government  Complex Religions  Job Specialization  Social Classes  Arts and Architecture  Public Works  Writing 4 Oldest River Valley Civilizations  Ancient Egypt  Mesopotamia (Sumer and Babylon)  Ancient China  Ancient India Egypt  Along the Nile River with yearly floods  Pharaohs seen as gods, ruled in dynasties  Religion – polytheism, gods for nature  Afterlife – Osiris, mummification, tombs  Pyramids used as tombs  Hieroglyphics written on papyrus Sumer and Babylon  Fertile crescent – Tigris and Euphrates  City-states ruled by hierarchy  Built ziggurats for religion  Cuneiform – wedge writing  Sargon – 1st empire builder  Hammurabi – code, 1st written laws  Phoenicians create the alphabet China  Grew around Huang He (Yellow) River  Dynasties – Shang, Zhou  Religion – polytheism, ancestor worship  Mandate of Heaven – divine right to rule  Feudal state  Silk making, first books India  Grew around Indus River Valley  Polytheistic with mother goddess  Aryan society: Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas  Vedas – story of early Indian civilizations Greece – Early People  Minoan Civilization  Island of Crete in Aegean Sea  King Minos and Palace at Knossos  Disappeared, volcano and tidal wave  Mycenae  Sea traders, moved ideas and items  1250 B.C. Trojan War  Fall of Troy same time as Mycenaean disappearance Greece – Rise of City-States  Mountainous peninsula  Polis – city  Acropolis – high city, temples to gods  Monarchy – King or queen rule  Aristocracy – rule by landowning elite  Oligarchy – Small, powerful, business elite rule  Military  Iron weapons  Phalanx – formation of armed foot soldiers Greece - Sparta  Government  2 kings and council of elders, assembly of citizens  From birth, trained for military  7 – boys sent to barracks, training, beaten  20 – marry, 30 – move out & join assembly  Women – trained, ran estates & business  Isolated from trade, looked down on wealth Greece Athens  Aristocracy became democracy  Democracy – Government by the people  Set up legislature – lawmaking body  Cared more about art, philosophy than war  Good navy  Women – secluded in homes, family and kids  Education was important above all else  Greeks believed all others were barbarians Greece - Religion  Polytheistic  Many gods and goddesses  Zeus – leader, God of Gods and Humans  Many children became other gods  Used to explain nature  Temples built, prayers & ceremonies to placate them Greece and Its Glory  Philosophers – Socrates, Plato, Aristotle  Developed rhetoric and logic  Architecture – columns  Sculpture of gods, goddesses, athletes, politicians  Drama – Tragedy and Comedy  Writers – Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey Alexander the Great      King Philip killed at daughter’s wedding Conquered lands: Greece to India, Germany to Egypt Spread cultures, mixed together = Hellenistic Named over 20 cities after himself Conquering more than ruling  Traveled 10,000 miles, men made him turn around  Died 3 days after return Rome – The Beginning  Republic – government of the people  Patricians – Upper class,      landholding, made laws Consuls – 2 patricians, ran daily government Dictator – Time of war, complete control Plebeians – farmers, merchants, bulk of population Tribunes – Plebeian officials Veto – can block laws harmful to plebeians Roman Society  Women given more power, held jobs, business  Boys and girls taught to read and write  Religions – similar to Greek but different names  Citizen-Soldiers were part of legion (5000)  Provided own weapons with no pay  Conquered lands treated with justice  Built roads, connected empire  People assimilated and united under Roman rule Rome – Empire Building  Imperialism – Establishing control over foreign lands  Corruption common, caused declines  Reformers - Julius Caesar  Popular Military General  Public works jobs, reorganized government of providences  Created calendar – Julian Calendar  Killed by best friend, Brutus  Census – count people  Good and Bad emperors  Pax Romana – Roman Peace  Bread and Circuses Roman Achievement  Literature – Aeneid, Satirize – make fun of  History – Livy, kept track of events  Philosophy – Emperor Marcus Aurelius – stoic  Art – Sculpture, Mosaic – picture made of tiles  Architecture – Huge temples, arch and columns  Engineering – built aqueducts  Law – Civil Law and Law of Nations Christianity  Early Religions tolerated by Romans  Most were polytheistic, like Romans  Jews rejected Roman religion, persecuted, revolt, fled  Jesus born in 4 B.C.  Apostles and him spread message of peace, love  Deeply rooted in Judaism  Romans crucified him for rebellion  Seen as religion for all – everyone welcome Roman Decline  26 emperors in 50 years  Several tried to help with reforms  Invasion by several groups of nomads hurt Rome  Causes  Military – Mercenaries used, little loyalty  Political – Corruption, divided empire  Economic – Taxes, slaves ran away, economic downfall  Social – Lack of patriotism and devotion  Long, slow decline  Lead to Byzantine Empire (Western Rome) The Americas - Maya  Olmecs – oldest civilization, not on a river  Mayas  Yucatan peninsula  Tikal – huge temples and city  Each city had ruling chief  Priests had highest power  Most people were farmers – corn, cotton, squash  Writing system, accurate time, 365 day calendar, zero  900 A.D. began to abandon cities, don’t know why Aztec Civilization  Late 1200s – Eagle on cactus with snake in beak  Tenochtitlan – city in middle of lake  Chinampas – floating gardens  Conquered other tribes and demanded tribute  Single ruler – royalty, blood letting  Nobles, warriors, commoners  Massive human sacrifice, used conquered people  Calendar, surgery, schools  Hernan Cortes destroyed in 1519 Early People of Peru  Chavin  Worshipped jaguar/man  Lived high in the Andes  Mochica  Built roads, irrigation systems  Beautiful pottery  Nazca  Glyphs – etched lines in the ground  Lines, shapes – part of calendar? The Inca  Pachacuti – founder and first Sapa Inca 1438  In Cuzco, Sapa lived like god, Queen – Coya  Quipu – knotted string collection for records  12,000 miles of road, runners for messages  Only runners and army could use roads  Farmed on terraces  Best metal workers  Had anesthesia and brain surgery  Polytheistic, temples to gods  Destroyed by Pizarro in 1533 North American Natives  Crossed Bering Land Bridge, moved south  Diverse cultures based on environment  Arctic, Coastal, Plains, Woodlands, Southwest  Iroquois League – 5 nations banded together  Hitting peak when Europeans arrived The Middle Ages  Europe carved up by Germanic Tribes, Franks  Charlemagne united Europe  Wanted “Second Rome”, extended Christianity  Feudalism – system of rule among lords and vassals  Lord gave vassal a fief thru feudal contract  Vassal got land and protection, Lord got food  Knights – began at 7, protect castles  Castles were self-sufficient  Peasants poor, hard life, 35 The Medieval Church  Church was the center of towns and lives  Cannon Law – churches laws  Monastery – school, copied manuscripts, hospital  Papal Supremacy – Pope had more power than kings  Persecuted Jews – Anti-Semitism Medieval Economy  Iron plows, horse harnesses – agriculture  3 Field system – corn, wheat, fallow = more food  New trade routes – India and China  Barter rather than money  Guilds – group of same kind of artisans  Set prices, recipes, hours  Apprentice, Journeyman, Master High Middle Ages  Royal families ruled England and France  Kings conflicted with church over power  Magna Carta – nobles forced King John to sign  King is not exempt from laws  Parliament established The Crusades  “God wills it”  200 years  Take back Jerusalem from Muslims  Rape, pillage, kill along way – got rich  Economic expansion and grew churches power Into the Darkness  The Black Death  Rats, fleas spread Bubonic Plague  Spread thru Europe via trade  25 million people died  No workers, blamed Jews & witches, inflation – 100 years  Church Upheaval  Popes lived rich lives  Church accused of corruption  Hundred Years’ War  England vs. France in 1337 to 1453  Joan of Arc and Longbow Muslim Civilization  Prophet Muhammad had vision = Islam  Muslim Civilization was very advanced  Art, architecture and literature was distinct Mongols  Genghiz Khan crossed Persia  Burned and looted  Converted to Islam  Nomadic people  Golden Horde attacked Russia in 1236  Ruled Russia for 240 years  Fierce conquerors but tolerant rulers Silk Road  International trade network  Roads built by Chinese emperor Wu Di  4000 miles from China to Middle East  Towns along the road provided markets and lodging