Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Mesopotamian City-States The earliest civilizations Mesopotamia - The Land Between Two Rivers Mesopotamia-where the first cities began to grow. Mesopotamia means: Land between two rivers. Tigris River and the Euphrates River. Mesopotamia was located in the Middle East, and surrounded by desert. Civilizations arose in Mesopotamia because the soil between the two rivers was very fertile. Mesopotamia was located in the Middle East. Mesopotamia was located in what is now the country of Iraq. Mesopotamia was part of a larger region called the Fertile Crescent. This area, that stretched from the eastern edge of the Mediterranean Sea down to the Persian Gulf, had fertile soil and was where many civilizations started. The shape is somewhat similar to a crescent The Cradle of Civilization Mesopotamia is called the cradle of civilization because the first civilizations began there, about 5,500 years ago in 3500 B.C. Many city-states formed along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in Mesopotamia. Each had individual: -Government and Rulers -Laws -Religion Sumer became one of the most powerful, and most influential. Developed writing, and codified law, aggressively expanded their territory As they expanded their culture diffused throughout the region and created more cultural homogeneity. City-States Formed Along the Rivers Sumerian Religion Sumerians were polytheistic. Anthropomorphic deities which reflected their environment and societies. The picture above shows a ziggurat. Ziggurats were temples used to worship the pantheon of gods and demonstrate the divine nature of the ruler. Ziggurats were built in the center of the city. They had steps which ‘gods descended to the Earth’ Sumerian CitiesTechnologies Burned oil lamps for light Gained metallurgy (iron making) from the Hittites. Used to improve farming tools Sumerians plumbing- Clay pipes that were buried underground and for military purposes carried their waste away. Inventions like plumbing wouldn't come around for another thousand years in other parts of the world! A Sumerian City Sumerian city streets were so narrow that you could hardly get a cart through them. Sumerian houses faced away from crowded streets. Instead, they faced onto courtyards where families ate and children played. Narrow Streets Courtyard Area Warfare As populations grew, resources were stressed and material wealth increasedled to warfare Metallurgy was developed by the Hittites of Northern Mesopotamia, making warfare more deadly and effective Built city walls, began to train specialized soldiers. Civilizations with the most technology had the highest populations and success in expanding their territory. Gender and Slavery in Sumer • Began to be viewed as “property” along with cattle and goods • Half of all women were slaves by Akkadian times • Who was enslaved and why? • How was slavery viable during this period? • Sumerian women were allowed to be priestesses, highly respected position. • Were able to “bear witness” in legal cases • Once Sumer was overtaken by Babylon, women lost nearly all rights. Value was solely in procreation Sumerian Writing Scribes used a sharp point called a stylus to etch words into clay tablets. - This form of writing is called Cuneiform. Pictographic writing system, later replaced by Phoenician alphabet The Downfall of the Sumerians Each of the Sumerian city-states began fighting each other. Conflict over access to resources like land and water when populations grew. Constantly warfare weakened the city-states By 1759 BCE, Sumer was conquered by another group of people - the Babylonians, who were from the north. Sumerian advancements were inherited and improved upon Sumerians Writing first began in Sumerian cities. The first schools were set up in Sumer over 4,000 years ago. -Sumerian schools taught boys the new invention of writing. Graduates worked as scribes Sumer is the region in red where the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers meet. Sumerian Mythology Sumerian Pantheon included: High God- Enlil, son of An and Ki (Sky and Earth) He rapes the goddess Ninlil (air godess) which produces Nanna, the moon god Inanna- Godess of warfare, female fertility, sex/love Enki- God of freshwater, male fertility and knowledge (Anthropomorphism) ziggurat Gods Other divine beings • Kings and Queens were considered divine • Humans were thought to be made as servants to gods and godessesjustified absolute rule of Nobility and servitude of peasantry • • • • • • • • • • Prayer to Ishtar- Goddess of fertility: Gracious Ishtar, who rules over the universe, Heroic Ishtar, who creates humankind, who walks before the cattle, who loves the shepherd... Without you the river will not open the river which brings us life will not be closed, without you the canal will not open, the canal from which the scattered drink will not be closed... Where you cast your glance, the dead awaken, the sick arise; Epic Of Gilgamesh • Earliest example of creative literature • Tells us about the culture and society of Sumer, other surviving writings focus on taxes, grain stores ect. • Social reconstruction through creative writing- what can the Epic of Gilgamesh tell us about the human condition in Sumer? • Read in separate groups: Chapter1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6&7 • Using evidence from the text, create 4 reconstructive theories inferring what Sumerian life would have been life • Character values, religion, social class/ structure, occupation, grief, ritual, environment, ect. • Then compare your social reconstruction with other groups • http://courses.missouristate.edu/josephhughes/katabasis/rea