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CHAPTER 1: “BREAKTHROUGH AT SUMER,” (pp. 9-53) AGE OF GOD-KINGS: TIMEFRAME 3000-1500 B.C. 1. The literal translation of Mesopotamia. _______________________________ 2-3. The two rivers that framed the valley that became home to both Sumerian and Mesopotamian civilization. ___________________, ______________________. 4. This Biblical city, famous for its walls, had become a center for the salt trade by the seventh millennium B.C. _________________ 5. The Sumerians were the first to invent this, allowing them much more easily to pass knowledge from one generation to the next. __________________ 6-7. The Sumerians not only used irrigation, but also invented this important tool, thus revolutionizing agriculture. ___________ The first crude models of sticks or animal bones had been replaced first by copper, and then by this metal by 3000 B.C. _______ 8-9. The Sumerian gods of heaven and the air, respectively, the latter ultimately replaced the former as the most powerful god. ___________, ________________. 10. The stepped Sumerian temples that towered above the Mesopotamian plain. ________________ 11. Latin for “wedge-shaped,” it is the name given to Sumerian written script. ________________ 12. The 3,500-line poem that represents the crowning achievement of Sumerian literature, it tells the story of a king who seeks the meanings of life and death. _______________________ 13. Established for the purpose of training scribes and open only to males from wealthy families, these Sumerian schools were the world’s first centers of formal education. ________________ 14-16. The Sumerian system of calculation was based on this number. __________ Name at least two units of measurement based on the Sumerian system that remain in use today. ___________________, ___________________. 17. The first city-state in the ancient world, by 2700 B.C. it included a central city of some 50,000 people and a collection of 76 surrounding villages. _______________ 18-19. The goddess Ninkasi was associated with this, the favorite beverage of the Sumerians. _______________ The percentage of Sumerian grain devoted to its production. _____________ 20. As leader of the Akkadians, this Semite warrior-king was the first to unite all of Mesopotamia under one ruler. _________________ 21-22. This previously unimportant northern town became the capital of the Amorites as they began to gain control of Mesopotamia in the decades after 2000 B.C. ___________________ The best-known of the Amorite leaders, he designed a harsh law code that remains associate to this day with the phrase “an eye for an eye.” _______________________ 23. The spells and prayers of this religious work were often placed alongside Egyptian bodies in the belief these would help move the deceased towards a happy afterlife. _____________________ TRUE OR FALSE 24. The Sumerians were the first to think of adapting the potter’s wheel to the purposes of locomotion. _____ 25. The Sumerians were the world’s first great monotheistic civilization. _____ 26. The Sumerian religion was an optimistic creed designed to reassure people when they were feeling down. _____ 27. Sumerian society was divided into just two classes: the very wealthy and slaves. ___ CHAPTER 2: “THE WAY OF THE PHARAOHS” (pp. 55-95), AGE OF GOD-KINGS: TIMEFRAME 3000-1500 B.C. 1. The arc of arable land that reaches from Mesopotamia to Palestine, it was one source of the introduction into the Nile Valley of settlers familiar with agriculture. __________________________ 2. What is the length of the Nile River? ________________ 3-4. The two main tributaries of the Nile. _______________, ____________________. 5-7. What were the two main regions of ancient Egypt? ___________________, ____________________. What geographic feature served as the boundary between the two regions? ________________________ 8. According to Egyptian tradition, the god-king Menes built this capital on land reclaimed from the Nile to commemorate his political and military consolidation of Egypt. ____________________ 9-10. Literally “great house,” this was the title given to the dynastic rulers of ancient Egypt. _________________ The number of dynasties during the millennia between 3000 B.C. and the conquest of Egypt by the Greeks under Alexander the Great. _______ 11-12. Lord of the underworld in Egyptian mythology, according to legend he had once ruled Egypt before being murdered and dismembered by his brother Seth, who spread his body parts across the land. ______________ The wife and sister of Osiris, she collected up the pieces and patched him back together. _______________ 14. Defeating his uncle Seth in battle, according to legend he became the new King of Egypt. ___________ 15. A dead pharaoh’s internal organs were removed through an incision in the abdomen and placed in this vessel. __________________ 16. The Step Pyramid, designed by Imhotep as the tomb of King Djoser and located here, was the world’s first great stone structure. _________________ 17. A shift to smooth-sided pyramids occurred with the emergence of this sun god as Egypt’s most important deity. __________ 18. The reeds from this aquatic plant were pounded together to produce parchment. ___________________ 19-21. What were the three seasons of the Egyptian year? ______________________, __________________________, _________________________. 22. This more condensed and cursive style of writing eventually took precedence for everyday notations over the more elegant and pictographic formal hieroglyphics that continued to be used for monument inscriptions. ___________________ 23. Egypt’s priest astronomers noted that the appearance of this star each year signalled the coming of the Nile’s flood waters – as a result that day, July 19, became the first day of the Egyptian year. _________________ 24-28. Match the Egyptian god to the animal he or she was associated with. Horus _____ Khnum _____ Thoth _____ Hathor _____ Sobek _____ a. ibis b. crocodile c. falcon d. cow e. ram 29. According to Egyptian mythology, the sun god Re traveled across the sky and through the afterworld each 24-hour cycle on this. ______________ 30. The Egyptians thought that this “transfigured spirit” left the individual human body after death to revolve in the heavens as a star. __________ 31-32. What is the location of the Great Pyramid? ____________ What Fourth Dynasty pharaoh was it built for? __________________ 33-34. This 240-foot-long stone sculpture of a mythical creature worshipped as the guardian of sacred places is on the same plateau as the Great Pyramid. _______________ Whose face is on this statue? _________________ 35. The death of the increasingly decrepit pharaoh Pepy II after a reign of some 90 years brought this long Egyptian epoch to a close. ________________ 36. Egyptians from this upriver location were able to defeat the nomarchs of Herakleopis around 2065 B.C. and thus put to an end 100 years of turmoil. ______________ 37. Egypt’s immediate neighbors to the South. ________________ TRUE OR FALSE 38. From the very beginning, the wetlands of the Nile Delta was the most productive and politically centralized region of ancient Egypt. _____ 39. Egypt’s geography was such that it faced a near-continuous series of invasions during ancient times. _____ 40. The Nile was much more erratic and less dependable than the Euphrates. _____ 41. Most Egyptians believed the pharaoh was the human form of the god Horus. _____ 42. Egyptians believed that fulfillment in the afterlife depended in part on the preservation of the body. _____ 43. Rivalry between Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt was a recurring theme in the history of ancient Egypt. _____ CHAPTER 3, “THE EMPIRE ON THE AEGEAN” AGE OF GOD-KINGS: TIMEFRAME 3000-1500 B.C. 1. A 152-mile-long island located at the southern entrance to the Aegean Sea, it became home to Europe’s first civilization. ___________________ 2-3. The maritime prosperity of Crete was based on the export of these two items. __________, _________________. 4. The collective name for the islands north of Crete. ___________________ 5-6. This British archaeologist uncovered the forgotten civilization of Crete in 1900. _______________________ The highlight of his discoveries was a buried palace at this site. _________________ 7. The script used by ancient Cretans, it still has not been deciphered. ______________ 8-10. The legendary king after whom ancient Cretan civilization is named. ____________________ The father and mother of this legendary king. ________, _____________________ 11-15. According to mythology, Athenians were sent every year as tribute to Crete and fed to this monster. __________________ The home of the monster. _______________ The designer of this maze. ___________________ The slayer of the monster. _____________________ The king’s daughter, she provided the slayer of the monster with both a magic sword and thread to mark the way out of the maze. __________ 16. This animal rested at the heart of the religious and political life of Crete. ______ 17. The most sacred of Minoan symbols, it was used in religious ceremonies by priests to sacrifice bulls. ________________ 18. The most important deity of Minoan civilization. ______________________ 19. The most popular Minoan athletic event. _______________________ 20. This force of nature struck Minoan civilization regularly, with a major episode coming perhaps twice a century. ____________________ 21. These war-like people from mainland Greece invaded Crete. _____________________ 22. A giant volcanic explosion on this Aegean island in 1450 B.C. not only sent a 200foot-high tidal wave hurtling towards Crete but may also have given birth to the legend of Atlantis. ________________ 23. Nearly 50,000 of these structures, literally “great stories” in Greek, were constructed by the Stone Age villagers of Europe. ________________ 24. On England’s Salisbury Plain, this monument took 1,500 years to build, and allowed observers to determine the longest day of the year by noting when the sun rose over the tip of a certain outlying stone. ____________________ TRUE AND FALSE 25. One of the downfalls of the Minoans was that, even though they were on a Mediterranean island, they never learned how to sail. _____ 25. That the women of Crete wore tight-fitting jackets that left their breasts bare has been taken by historians as another indication that Minoan women lacked almost any power in comparison to their counterparts in other civilizations of the ancient world. _____ CHAPTER 4: “STIRRINGS IN ASIA” (pp. 129-165) AGE OF GOD-KINGS: TIMEFRAME 3000-1500 B.C. 1. The first great civilization of the subcontinent emerged around 2500 B.C. in the floodplain of this river, in present-day Pakistan. _______________ 2. The first great Chinese civilization developed along this river. _________________ 3. This village gave the first great Indian civilization its name. __________________ 4. Centuries past its hey-day this great Indian city was given its name, literally “Hill of the Dead” in Sindhi. _______________________ 5. What was the most important agricultural breakthrough of the Indus people? _________________________________________________________________ 6. The large plateau of central India. ________________________ 7-9. The first great Chinese civilization emerged along the banks of this, its mightiest river. ________________ ___________ The compact dust that gave the river its name. The desert from which this dust originally had come. _______________ 10. The nickname the Chinese give to this river. _______________________ 11-12. Chinese legend gives credit for the taming of the unpredictable Yellow River to this early emperor, who was said to have lived in the twenty-third century B.C. _____________________ He is also given credit for founding this, the first historically- recorded Chinese dynasty. _______________ 13. This indigenous Chinese people rose to prominence in the middle of the eighteenth century B.C. _______________ 14. This blue mineral often shot through with specks of yellow pyrite was regarded as one of the most valuable in the ancient world. ____________________ TRUE OR FALSE 15. Civilization developed in southern China much sooner than in the north. 16. _____ The civilization that developed along the Yellow River centered around the production of rice. _____