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LANDMARKS
IN HUMANITIES
Chapter 1
Origins: The First Civilizations
ca. 25,000–330 B.C.E.
Prehistory
2

Prehistory
 Human

development before written records
Paleolithic Culture
 Landmark:
making of tools and weapons
 Hunter-gathers; use of fire by end of Ice Age
 Burial of dead
 Cave paintings
 Lascaux
caves
 Naturalism
 Purpose and function debated
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Prehistory
3

Mesolithic and Neolithic Cultures
 Mesolithic
 Plant
and animal domestication
 Neolithic
 Farming


and food production
Nomadic to sedentary lifestyle
Villages with mud- and limestone-faced huts
 Polished
bone and stone tools
 Earth Mother goddess


Concern with earth’s fertility; seasonal cycle
Cycladic figure
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Prehistory
4
 Ceremonial



centers and burial sites
Megaliths/dolmen
 Post-and-lintel construction
Göbekli Tepe, Turkey
Stonehenge
 Celestial observatory
 Site for funerary rituals
 Excavations at Durrington Walls
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Prehistory
5
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Prehistory
6
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Birth of Civilization
7

The Birth of Civilization
 Shift

from rural to urban culture
From Counting to Writing
 Writing
 Clay
evolved from counting
balls
 Pictographs
 Cuneiform
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Birth of Civilization
8

Metallurgy: The Bronze Age
 Metal
began to replace stone and bone
 Gave
greater control over nature
 Travel
and trade essential to Bronze Age culture
 Bronze-casting spread from Mesopotamia
throughout ancient world
 Chinese
master metallurgists
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Birth of Civilization
9
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Birth of Civilization
10
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
11

“Land Between the Rivers”
 Mesopotamia:
the Fertile Crescent formed by the
Tigris and Euphrates rivers
 Sumer, earliest civilization
 Pattern
of conquering and invasion
 Sargon of Akkad
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
12

Myths, Gods, and Goddesses
 Intimate
association with nature; animism
 Myths part of ritual fabric of everyday life
 Polytheism linked to nature and its forces
 Cosmology


of chaos and conflict
The Babylonian Creation
Mesopotamia’s Ziggurats
 Massive
terraced towers made of rubble and brick
 Spiritual center of city-state; shrine and temple
 Abu Temple, Tell Asmar, Iraq
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
13
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
14

Gilgamesh: The First Epic
of Gilgamesh: world’s first literary epic
 Recited orally; written down centuries later
 First literary work to come to terms with death,
or nonbeing
 Epic
 Reflects
human need for immortality ideology
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
15

Babylon: Hammurabi’s Law Code
 Codified
existing legal practices in an effort to
unify territories of Babylonian empire
 Most
extensive set of laws to survive antiquity
 Secular, but bore force of divine decree
 Written
law landmark in advance of human rights
 Storehouse of information regarding class
divisions, family relations, human rights
 Women
considered inferior, but enjoyed considerable
legal protections
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
16

Iron Technology
 Iron
introduced to Asia Minor by Hittites
 Cheaper to produce, more durable than bronze
 Transformed ancient world

Landmarks of the Iron Age
 Iron
technology encouraged rise of empires
 Assyrians,
Chaldeans, Persians all conquered
Mesopotamia
 Imperialism
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
17
 Chaldeans
under Nebuchadnezzar rebuilt
Babylon
 “Tower
of Babel”
 Ishtar Gate

Earliest round arch on a colossal scale
 Cultural
innovations of small states
 Phoenicians:
non-pictographic alphabet
 Lydians: minting of coins
 Hebrews: ethical monotheism
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Mesopotamia
18

The Persian Empire
 Largest
Mesopotamian empire
 Efficient
administrators and powerful monarchs
 First
multicultural civilization
 Persepolis
 Vast network of roads
 Monotheistic religion
 Zoroastrianism
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
19

Africa: Ancient Egypt
 Polytheistic
civilization
 Deeply influenced by the Nile River
 Osiris
 Sun
god held place of honor
 Amon,
Re (Ra), or Aten
 Resurrection
central to belief system
 Book of the Dead
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
20
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
21

Theocracy and the Cult of the Dead
 Believed
pharaoh was living representative of sun
god
 Burial rituals
 Gizeh

Pyramids
 Great
Sphinx
 Valley of the Kings

Tutankhamen (one of few graves to escape vandalism)
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
22

Akhenaten’s Reform
 Monotheistic
reform: elevated Aten to supremacy
among gods
 Built new palace at Tell el-Amarna
 “Hymn to the Aten”
 Nefertiti

Egyptian Women
 Enjoyed
economic privileges, civil rights
 Land passed through female line
 Encouraged
brother-sister marriages
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
23

Egyptian Art
 Most
comes from tombs and graves
 Style mirrors order, societal hierarchy
 Both
perceptual and conceptual
 Hunting scene from tomb of Neb-amon at Thebes
 Monumental
 Balance
sculpture
between realism/stylization
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
24

New Kingdom Temples
 Plan
mirrored central features of Egyptian
cosmos
 Pylons
symbolized mountains, served as gateway
 Open courtyard progresses through hypostyle hall and
into inner sanctuary (voyage from light to dark)
 Great
Temple of Amon-Ra, Karnak
 Not used for communal assembly; commoners
forbidden to enter
 Priests performed daily rituals of cosmic renewal
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
25

Literature and Music
 “Wisdom
literature”
 Satire of Trades
 Lyric poetry
 Song and poetry interchangeable
 Musical instruments found buried with dead
 No certain knowledge of how music sounded
 Visual
representations show music played important
role in both religious and secular life

Egyptian women important in music-making
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Ancient Egypt
26
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Africa: Western Sudan
27

The Nok Terracottas
 Nok,
western Sudan
 Terracotta


sculptures
Earliest known three-dimensional artworks of
sub-Saharan Africa
First evidence of realistic portraiture in African art
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The Americas
28

The Americas
 Early
American civilizations formed mosaic of
migrant cultures
 Caral, Peru
 Pyramids;
evidence of urban community
 Birthplace of “New World” civilization?
 Olmec
(“rubber people”)
 Elite
cadre of priests oversaw spiritual life of the
community
 Colossal stone heads; monumental pyramids;
ceremonial centers
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient India
29

Indus Valley Civilization
(ca. 2709–1500 B.C.E.)
 India’s
earliest known civilization located in Sind
 Sophisticated Bronze Age culture flourished
 Mohenjo-daro;

Harappa
Planned communities
 Written
language; sculptural tradition
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient India
30

The Vedic Era (ca. 1500–322 B.C.E.)
 Sanskrit
emerged
 Vedas


Oldest devotional texts; blending of ancient traditions
Information regarding astronomical phenomena
 Mahabharata
(Great Deeds of the Bharata Clan)
 Ramayana (Song of Prince Rama)
 Caste
system introduced
 Priests
and scholars; rulers and warriors; artisans and
merchants; unskilled workers
 Subdivided by occupations; “Untouchables”
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient India
31
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient India
32

Hindu Pantheism
 Pantheism:
 Basic
belief that divinity inheres in all things
to Hindu view that universe is sacred
 Upanishads
 Enlightenment
through meditation
 Brahman; Atman
 Nirvana: reunion of Brahman and Atman
 Dharma
(right conduct)
 Law of Karma
 Reincarnation,
 Bhagavad-Gita
Wheel of Rebirth, nirvana
(Song of God)
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient China
33

The Shang Dynasty (ca. 1520–1027 B.C.E.)
 Rulers
were considered intermediaries between
people and spirit world
 Lord
on High (Shang-di)
 The “dragon throne”

The Aristocracy of Merit
 First
system in which individuals selected for
government on the basis of merit and education
 Written
examinations tested competence, skill
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient China
34
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient China
35

The Mandate of Heaven
 Different
from divine right; required obedience to
pre-established moral law

Spirits, Gods, and the Natural Order
 Chinese
belief in an inviolable natural order
 Ancestor veneration
 Yin/yang
 Shang-di/Tian
 I jing (The Book of Changes)
 Qi: cosmic/human order a single sacred system
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient China
36
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Beyond the West:
Ancient China
37

Daoism: The Philosophy of the Way
 Most
profound expression of the natural order
 Requires simplicity, harmony with nature
 Dao de jing (The Way and Its Power)
 Influenced
every aspect of Chinese culture
©2013, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.