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Civilization Characteristics of Mesopotamia Geography: Developed: When, Where, How, Why River valleys- made for good farming so could feed large numbers of people, provided fish and freshwater for drinking, crops, bathing, could use rivers for trade and transportation (also helped with spread of ideas) Mesopotamia- “land between 2 rivers”, meso means middle or between Climate, Land, Environment Located in eastern part of Fertile Crescent (curving strip of land that extends from Mediterranean Sea to Persian Gulf Located in what’s now known as Iraq Sumer- city-state in the southern part of Mesopotamia, invented wheel, cuneiform (writing), irrigation Babylon- city-state near Euphrates River, center of trade, created by King Hammurabi, became one of world’s largest and richest cities Assyria- empire started in north, near Tigris River Mesopotamia was located between 2 rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates Tigris- river in southwestern Asia that flows through the eastern part of the Fertile Crescent Euphrates- river in southwestern Asia that flows through the southern part of the Fertile Crescent Rivers were used for trading, used guffa boats to travel along river, can only travel with flow of river (downstream), had to be taken apart and carried back upstream Hot, dry climate Spring flooding of Tigris and Euphrates left behind rich soil for farming Flooding was unpredictable and undependable- because of this, farmers learned to use irrigation (use of canals and dams) Government, Laws, Punishment City-state- self-governing city, often with surrounding lands and villages, each city state had own government and was not part of a larger unit City-states often went to war with each other, fighting for glory and to gain control of more territory, to protect themselves each city-state surrounded itself with a wall 1st kings were probably war heroes, led armies and organized building projects, was an inherited (hereditary) position (when father died, son took over) Empire- group of many different lands under 1 ruler Each city-state ruled by a king- king in charge of everything, made all decisions- got help from priests and governmental officials Taxes helped take care of needs of city-state Men had to pay a burden- which meant they had to do work to help the city-state Had army to protect city-state Religion Code of Hammurabi- over 200 laws and punishments, created by Babylonian King, Hammurabi, 1st written laws in the world, all other laws stem from these Polytheism- belief in many gods and goddesses Believed their gods had power over a natural force or a human activity Worked hard to please gods, believing they controlled everything Built grand temples, called ziggurats to honor gods- ziggurat means “mountain of god” or “hill of heaven” Ziggurat- Large temple located in the centers of ancient Sumerian cities, built to honor gods Priests took care of gods, and made them happy, held ceremonies to honor the gods, offered them food and other sacrifices Believed in 7 great gods Writing Spent lots of time praying to gods, made small statues of themselves which showed them praying to gods (this allowed them to pray to gods all day even while they were doing other things) Cuneiform- system of writing using wedge-shaped symbols to represent sounds, ideas, and objects, 1st form of writing Scribe- person who writes, scrib means to write, usually wealthy boys (had to have money to pay to go to school and only boys went to school), trained for many years Took 12 years to learn how to write Allowed people to keep records: trade, births/deaths, offerings to the gods, amount of crops, amount of taxes, 1st written laws, stories Stable Food Supply, Food, Farming, Agriculture Used stylus, made from reed plants, and wrote on clay tablets Originally nomads (people who moved from place to place), hunter-gatherers (people who hunted animals and gathered food) With farming, able to stay in one place and start villages Irrigation allowed for better farming, flooding of Tigris and Euphrates left behind rich soil for farming As they could grow enough food to feed their people, allowed for job specialization, people could train to do other jobs Grew wheat, melons, apples, dates, figs, grains, barley Fish from rivers Very fertile land, Fertile Crescent Had extra food supplies, so were able to trade with other cities Domesticated (training plants and animals to be useful to humans) sheep, goats, oxen Got milk and cheese from animals Arts, Artisans, Artisans- skilled workers who made metal products, cloth, or Literature, pottery Architecture, Music Epic of Gilgamesh- world’s oldest known story, epic poem that tells the story of a war hero Had musicians who played music as their job Ziggurats had pictures representing important gods, people, events Social System, Social Classes 3 social classes: Upper- kings, priests, government officials Middle- artisans, merchants, farmers, fishermen Lower- enslaved people who worked on farms or in temples Slaves- thought of as property, some were prisoners of war, other were enslaved because they had to pay off debts, did most of house work for wealthy people Men were head of household and could go to school Women cooked, cleaned, took care of kids, could buy and sell property and run businesses Technology, Inventions, Achievements Irrigation, calendar, writing, Code of Hammurabi, wagon wheel, plow, sailboat, used geometry to measure fields and put up buildings, created number system based on 60 (60 minute hour, 60 second minute, 360 degree circle), 7 day week, sundial, dominoes Used mud bricks, made from clay, to make buildings Calendar helped Sumerians know when the floods would come Education, Artisans, farmers, scribes, priests, merchants, traders Jobs, Training Boys could go to school Girls- spin yarn and make cloth, learned to take care of house and family Potters, weavers, artisans, musicians, scribes, priests, governmental officials, farmers People could learn to specialize in other types of jobs because farming provided enough food to feed their people, and didn’t need everyone for farming Specialization- training to do a particular kind of work- able to do other types of jobs because farming allowed them to feed all people- didn’t need everyone hunting-gathering Trading- difficult jobs, could carry things, use donkeys, or go by boat, had to worry about thieves Important People Trade center- central place where people meet to trade goods King Sargon- king of Akkadians, conquered all of Mesopotamia in 2340 BC, set up world’s 1st empire, lasted more than 200 years before it fell to invaders King Hammurabi- King of Babylon, known for his Code of Hammurabi, created Babylonian Empire by conquering cities to the north and south, about 1800 BC Assyrians- had fertile valleys that attracted outside invaders, so they had to build large armies to defend themselves, by 900 BC, began taking over rest of Mesopotamia, were strong because they had well organized army and were 1st large army to use iron tools, once they captured a city they would set fire to its buildings and carry away its people and goods, lived much like Mesopotamians, had one of world’s 1st libraries, by 612 BC, empire collapsed due to rebellions of people (caused by cruelty of leaders) Nebuchadnezzar- Chaldean King, Chaldeans controlled Mesopotamia from 605- 562 BC, many of descendants were Babylonian people Extra Information