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UNIT 2 | CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS: THE RISE OF STATES & EMPIRES (AKA STARTED FROM THE BOTTOM NOW WE HERE) UNIT 2 | OVERVIEW, UNIT OBJECTIVES, ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS: How does religion affect the development of society? Why do civilizations rise and fall? When they fall, what impact do they have on history? As states and empires increased in size and contacts between regions multiplied, religious and cultural systems were transformed. Religions and belief systems provided a bond among the people and an ethical code to live by. These shared beliefs also influenced and reinforced political, economic, and occupational stratification. Religious and political authority often merged as rulers (some of whom were considered divine) used religion, along with military and legal structures, to justify their rule and ensure its continuation. Religions and belief systems could also generate conflict, partly because beliefs and practices varied greatly within and among societies. TIMELINE: 600 BCE - 600 CE UNIT OBJECTIVES •Describe origin stories of the major religions that began to emerge during this era. How did they unite classical cultures? How did they spread to other lands? Analyze how adoption of religious practices affected gender roles. •Define and explain the concept of “empire”. Locate the major empires of the period and analyze their relative importance. Give reasons for the rise of large, enduring empires during this era. Analyze major differences and similarities between these empires. •Analyze the importance of trade expansion in this period. Describe changes resulting from new cultural encounters. UNIT 2 | CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS: THE RISE OF STATES & EMPIRES (AKA STARTED FROM THE BOTTOM NOW WE HERE) UNIT 2 | CONTENT 1 LESSON 2.1 OUTLINE 40 LESSON 2.2 OUTLINE 4 Opening | EQ Notebook 43 Opening | EQ Notebook 6 Activity | Origin Stories 45 Watch | Crash Course World History #5 – 22 Watch | Crash Course World History #6 – The Persians & Greeks Buddha and Ashoka 49 Watch | Crash Course World History #8 – 26 Watch | Crash Course World History #7 – Alexander the Great 2000 Years of Chinese History 53 Read | An Age of Greek and Persian Power 30 Read | The Three Belief Systems of China 62 Watch | Crash Course World History #10 – 36 Watch | Crash Course World History #11 – The Roman Empire. Or Republic. Christianity from Judaism to Constantine Or...What Which Was it? 39 Closing | EQ Notebook 66 Watch | Crash Course World History #11 – Fall of the Roman Empire 69 Read | A Tale of Three Empires 75 Closing | EQ Notebook ADDITIONAL RESOURCE • Watch | Crash Course Literature # 202 – Fate, Family, and Oedipus Rex 2 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.0 | OVERVIEW UNIT ESSENTIAL QUESTION: How does religion affect the development of society? A development related to the spread of writing, was the appearance of several belief systems that embraced people of differing languages and cultural traditions, what we often call “world religions.” The great majority of people in that era practiced local religions, that is, systems that centered on local gods and goddesses, sacred places in nature, astrology, magic, and pronouncements of shamans— individuals who mediated between the natural and supernatural worlds. In large states and empires, religious life tended to be diverse, though rulers could seldom resist encouraging their subjects to think of them as individuals with supernatural powers or even as divine beings. With the exception of Islam, all major world religious emerge in this era. Why? 1 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.0 | OVERVIEW | Learning Outcomes, Vocabulary, & Outline LEARNING OUTCOMES OUTLINE 2.1.1 | OPENING •Describe changes resulting from new cultural encounters. EQ Notebook 2.1.2 | ACTIVITY •Analyze the growth and explain the rise of large empires during this era. Origin Stories •Identify the world religions and belief 2.1.3 | WATCH systems that flourished during this era. Crash Course World History #6 – Buddha and Ashoka 2.1.4 | WATCH Crash Course World History #7 – 2000 Years of Chinese History 2.1.5 | READ The Three Belief Systems of China 2.1.6 | WATCH Crash Course World History #11 – Christianity from Judaism to Constantine 2.1.7 | CLOSING EQ Notebook 2 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS VOCABULARY Belief System – A set of principles or tenets which together form the basis of a religion, philosophy, or moral code. Confucianism – A system of philosophical and ethical teachings founded by Confucius and developed by Mencius, a Chinese philosopher who believed that rulers should provide for the welfare of the people and that human nature is intrinsically good. Religion – Human beings’ relation to that which they regard as holy, sacred, absolute, spiritual, divine, or worthy of especial reverence. It is also commonly regarded as consisting of the way people deal with ultimate concerns about their lives and their fate after death. In many traditions, this relation and these concerns are expressed in terms of one’s relationship with or attitude toward gods or spirits; in more humanistic or naturalistic forms of religion, they are expressed in terms of one’s relationship with or attitudes toward the broader human community or the natural world. *Vocabulary definitions taken from oxforddictionaries.com & britannica.com 3 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.1 | OPENING | EQ Notebook PURPOSE Each unit of the Crash Course World History Course (CCWH) ideas, this activity asks them to look at the big ideas through is guided by what we call an essential question. The Essential the lens of the Essential Question. At this point, students Question Notebook (EQ Notebook) is an informal writing won’t have much background to bring to bear on the issue resource for students to track their learning and understanding just yet. This early exercise helps to bring to the fore what of a concept throughout a unit. Students will be given they know coming into the unit. an Essential Question at the beginning of a unit and asked speculation. Students will then revisit the notebook in order HOW DOES RELIGION AFFECT THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIETY? to answer the Essential Question with evidence they Students should quickly jot down some ideas for how trade have gathered throughout the unit. This provides students and culture are related. They can do this in the context of the an opportunity to track their learning and to prepare them unit of study, or relate it to their own lives. to provide a response based on prior knowledge and for future activities. To help students focus on the important PROCESS Ask students to think about this question and respond ATTACHMENT to it on their EQ Notebook Worksheets. • Essential Questions Unit 2 Notebook Worksheet 4 NAME CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY COURSE TIME UNIT 2 | EQ Notebook Worksheet Answer the unit essential Lessons 2.1.1, then again in Lessons 2.1.7. In your answer, be sure to include ideas such as historical context and how themes through history change over time. Use specific examples to support your claims or ideas. ESSENTIAL QUESTION | How does religion affect the development of society? LESSON 2.1.1 LESSON 2.1.7 HOW HAS YOUR THINKING CHANGED? 5 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.2 | ACTIVITY | Origin Stories – Big History Project PURPOSE These origin stories are important for a number of reasons: stories answer and the motivations of humans in asking these They’re entertaining, instructive, and also useful, because they types of questions. These readings will prepare students to help us better understand the kinds of questions that origin study the religions of this era. PROCESS As a class, read the “Modern Scientific” origin story Once all the groups have finished, have students and complete the information on the Origin Story circulate around the room and fill in the other Comparison Worksheet for this article. There are sections of the worksheet (or have each group put seven other origin stories in this unit: Chinese, its information on the board for other students Judeo-Christian, Iroquois, Mayan, Greek, Zulu, and to copy). Ask students to look at the information Efik. Each group of students will read one article on the worksheet. Are there any significant and report back to the class. You’ll need to decide similarities or differences among the stories that if you want to use all seven stories, which will leap out at them? Does the information they’ve require seven groups, or a smaller selection of the written on their worksheets provide any insight into stories, which will require fewer groups. the reasons why people create origin stories? Assign students to a group and assign each group ATTACHMENTS an origin story. Students should read their story • Origin Stories Readings and then discuss as a group how they would fill • Origin Story Comparison Worksheet in the column for their origin story on the Origin Story Comparison Worksheet. They should fill in the appropriate column as they discuss the story. 6 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Modern Scientific: The Big Bang — Cynthia Stokes Brown This version of modern science’s origin story is condensed and interpreted from a great body of historical and scientific information. In the beginning, as far as we know, there was nothing. able to maintain themselves and reproduce. For 3 billion Suddenly, from a single point, all the energy in the Universe years these one-celled creatures reproduced almost exactly, burst forth. Since that moment 13.8 billion years ago, but not quite. They gradually changed in response to their the Universe has been expanding — and cooling down environment. as it gets bigger. LIFE BECOMES MORE COMPLEX Gradually energy cooled enough to become matter. One But they also changed their environment. They learned electron could stay in orbit around one proton to become to burn energy from the Sun, and they released oxygen an atom of hydrogen. Great clouds of hydrogen swirled into the atmosphere. The oxygen formed an ozone layer around space until gravity pulled some atoms so close around Earth that protected life from the Sun’s rays. together that they began to burn as stars. Stars swirled together in giant clusters called galaxies; now there are Eventually cells stuck together to form creatures with galaxies numbering in the billions. many cells. Plants and animals came out of the sea onto land and became ever more complex and aware, until After each star burned up all its matter, it died in a huge about 100,000 years human beings evolved from a shared explosion. The explosion generated so much heat that some ancestor with the species of apes. Humans could talk atoms fused and got more and more complex, forming in symbols and sing, dance, draw, and cooperate more than many different elements, including gold and silver. One giant the other animals could. Humans learned to write and star, our mother star, exploded and scattered clouds of gas to accumulate their learning so that it kept expanding. containing all the elements needed to form living beings. Humans increased in skills and in numbers until there About 5 billion years ago gravity pulled these atoms into were too many people and too few big animals in some places. a new star, creating the Sun. The leftover pieces of matter stuck to each other and formed eight planets, which Then humans learned to grow their own food and herd revolve around the sun. their own animals. Some animals learned to cooperate with humans. This gave humans new sources of food and work The third planet out, Earth, became our home. It was the energy, and they could live in larger and larger groups. These perfect size — not too big, not too small — and the perfect groups expanded into cities andempires, using more and distance from the Sun, not too far or too close. A thin crust more of the resources of Earth. Humans collaborated and formed over Earth’s hot interior, and the temperature was learned collectively in more complex ways; they traveled, just right for water to form on parts of the surface. Gradually traded, and exchanged inventions, creating vast civilizations the chemicals in the water formed inside of membranes and of astonishing beauty and complexity. got more complex until single-cell living organisms appeared, 7 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY Humans were always looking for more energy for their use. About 200 years ago we learned to use the energy from coal — trees that grew more than 300,000 years ago, then were buried underground. Humans learned to burn oil — animal remains buried long ago under the sea. Using these fossil fuels, humans began to change their climate quickly, as the gases released from burning these fuels ascended into the Atmosphere. Now humans are in a predicament — our population is increasing rapidly, fossil fuels are running out, we are pushing many plants and other animals into extinction, and we are changing the climate. What are we humans going to do next? Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 8 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Mayan Origin Story — Cynthia Stokes Brown This origin story was told by the Mayans, who lived in the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico from around 250 CE to 900 CE. It’s the beginning of a long, complex story called the Popol Vuh (literally the “council book”), first translated into alphabetic text from Mayan hieroglyphics in the 16th century. Now it still ripples, now it still murmurs, still sighs, and and the Grandmother Xmucane, to help decide how to form is empty under the sky. There is not yet one person, not one a person. The Grandparents said it is well to make wooden animal, bird, fish, or tree. There is only the sky alone; the carvings, human in looks and speech. So wooden humans face of earth is not clear, only the sea alone is pooled under came into being; they talked and multiplied, but there was all the sky. Whatever might be is simply not there. nothing in their minds and hearts, no memory of their builder, no memory of the Heart of Sky. There were makers in the sea, together called the Plumed Serpent. There were makers in the sky, together called the Then there came a great destruction. The wooden carvings Heart of Sky. Together these makers planned the dawn of life. were killed when the Heart of Sky devised a flood for them. The earth arose because of them. It was simply their word It rained all day and all night. The animals came into the that brought it forth. It arose suddenly, like a cloud unfolding. homes of the wooden carvings and ate them. The people were Then the mountains were separated from the water. All at overthrown. The monkeys in the forest are a sign of this. once great mountains came forth. The sky was set apart, and They look like the previous people — mere wooden carvings. the earth was set apart in the midst of the waters. [The story continues with the final people being made Then the makers in the sky planned the animals of the from corn, an important crop that enabled the Mayans mountains — the deer, pumas, jaguars, rattlesnakes, and to move from being a hunting-and-gathering society guardians of the bushes. Then they established the nests to a more complex civilization.] of the birds, great and small. “You precious birds; your nests are in the trees and bushes.” Then the deer and birds were Source: told to talk to praise their makers, to pray to them. But the Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” birds and animals did not talk; they just squawked and https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. howled. So they had to accept that their flesh would be eaten by others. The makers tried again to form a giver of respect, a creature who would nurture and provide. They made a body from mud, but it didn’t look good. It talked at first but then crumbled and disintegrated into the water. Then the Heart of Sky called on the wise ones, the diviners, the Grandfather Xpiyacoc 9 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Zulu Origin Story – David Baker The Zulu are a proud African people, famous throughout history for their fierceness and bravery in fending off invaders. Archaeologists tell us they traveled to the lush green lands of southeastern Africa many centuries ago from the huge lake regions to the north. Their creation story has many versions, passed down by word of mouth from generation to generation. It tells of how the ancestors of all plants, animals, and humanity began from a single source. At first, there was nothing but darkness. Earth was a lifeless glowing stone, and flung them into the sky. These were the rock. But in that darkness dwelt a god, Umvelinqangi, whose Sun and Moon. Light came into the world. voice was like thunder and who, when angered, would shake the world with earthquakes. Umvelinqangi created a single The Great One also plucked from the reeds fierce lions and tiny seed. He sent it to the Earth. This seed was the very first other beasts that would travel the lands hunting prey. life, from which all other life descended. It landed in the soil He harvested magical creatures, some good and some bad. and sprouted into a long reed. The reed dropped more seeds, One was the snake-like goddess of the rivers, Mamlambo, which fell off and grew into even more reeds. rumored by some Zulu to drown people, eat their faces, and suck out their brains. This continued until they covered a massive swamp to the north, the land called Uthlanga. At the end of one reed, there Another goddess was Mbaba Mwana Waresa, a beautiful grew a man. His name was Unkulunkulu, known as “the first woman who created rain and rainbows, and who invented ancestor” and “the Great One.” Very small at first, he grew farming and gave the Zulu the gift of beer. One of the final so large and heavy that he snapped off the end of the reed. acts of the Great One was the most tragic. He plucked the Walking across the land of Uthlanga, he noticed men and first chameleon off a reed and sent it to give humans the women were sprouting at the ends of the other reeds. following message: “Men must not die.” By the words of the He picked them from the reeds. These people were the first Great One, humans would become immortal. Unfortunately, humans, the ancestors of all nations, and they spread across the chameleon was slow and lazy in his journey. The Great the Earth. It was from Uthlanga that the ancestors of the Zulu One grew impatient and picked a different lizard from a reed. journeyed south to the fertile lands they inhabit today. This lizard was fast and quickly arrived to give word to the The Great One continued to walk among the reeds. He saw humans. But the lizard did not bear the same instructions. many forms of life growing at the end of them. He gathered Instead the lizard uttered the words, “Men must die.” And the fish and flung them into the rivers. Fields and forests so from that day, humans became mortal. It is said that began to grow, so he harvested birds and antelope, and they chameleons change color because they are so ashamed darted off into the wild. He picked cattle so they could be their ancestor was not fast enough to spare humankind used by humans. He plucked off a ball of fire and a round the invention of death. 10 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY The Great One was so powerful in all he created, many Zulu suspect he was the god who sent the seed to Earth in the first place and that he used it to transform himself into flesh and blood. But Zulu histories have differing versions of the story. The one thing of which the Zulu are certain is that all life– including humanity — has a single common ancestor. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 11 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Chinese Origin Story: Pangu and the Egg of the World Cynthia Stokes Brown This origin story comes from Chinese culture. It was first written down about 1,760 years ago, roughly 220-265 CE, yet it must have been told orally long before that In the beginning was a huge egg containing chaos, a mixture When Pangu died, his skull became the top of the sky, his of yin and yang — female-male, aggressive-passive, breath became the wind and clouds, his voice the rolling cold-hot, dark-light, and wet-dry. Within this yin and yang thunder. One eye became the Sun and the other the Moon. was Pangu, who broke forth from the egg as the giant His body and limbs turned into five big mountains, and his who separated chaos into the many opposites, including blood formed the roaring water. His veins became roads and Earth and sky. his muscles turned to fertile land. The innumerable stars in the sky came from his hair and beard, and flowers and Pangu stood in the middle, his head touching the sky, trees from his skin. His marrow turned to jade and pearls. his feet planted on Earth. The heavens and the Earth began His sweat flowed like the good rain and the sweet dew that to grow at a rate of 10 feet a day, and Pangu grew along nurtures all things on Earth. Some people say that the fleas with them. After another 18,000 years the sky was higher and the lice on his body became the ancestors of humanity. and Earth was thicker. Pangu stood between them like a pillar 30,000 miles in height, so they would never again join. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 12 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Greek Origin Story: The Titans and The Gods of Olympus Cynthia Stokes Brown We know the Greek origin story from some of the earliest Greek literary sources that have survived, The Theogony and Works and Days, by Hesiod. This oral poet is thought to have been active sometime between 750 and 650 BCE, within decades of when the Homeric epics, The Iliad and The Odyssey, took the form in which we know them. Archaeological findings support the creation story recorded in Hesiod’s work; pottery from the eighth century BCE depicts the gods and goddesses he describes. Before Hesiod told this patriarchal version, in which the first woman is the cause of much trouble, Pandora, whose name means “gift giver,” was known in oral tradition as a beneficent Earth goddess. In the beginning there was Chaos, a yawning nothingness. When Zeus was grown, he fed his father a drugged drink, Out of the void emerged Gaia (the Earth) and other divine which caused Cronus to vomit, throwing up Rhea’s other beings — Eros (love), the Abyss (part of the underworld), children and the stone. Zeus then challenged Cronus to war and the Erebus (the unknowable place where death dwells). for the kingship of the gods. At last Zeus and his siblings, Without male assistance, Gaia gave birth to Uranus (the sky), the Olympians, were victorious, and the Titans were hurled who then fertilized her. down to imprisonment in the Abyss. From that union the first Titans were born — six males: Zeus was plagued by the same concern as his father had been Coeus, Crius, Cronus, Hyperion, Iapetus, and Oceanus, and and, after a prophecy that his first wife, Metis, would give six females: Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Rhea, Theia, Themis, birth to a god greater than he, he swallowed Metis. But she and Tethys. After Cronus (time) was born, Gaia and Uranus was already pregnant with Athena, and they both made decreed no more Titans were to be born. Cronus castrated him miserable until Athena, the goddess of wisdom, civilization his father and threw the severed genitals into the sea, from and justice, burst from his head — fully grown and dressed for which arose Aphrodite, goddess of love, beauty and war. Zeus was able to fight off all challenges to his power and sexuality. Cronus became the ruler of the gods with his sister- to remain the ruler of Mount Olympus, the home of the gods. wife, Rhea, as his consort. The other Titans became his court. Because Cronus had betrayed his father, he feared that One son of the Titans, Prometheus, did not fight with fellow his offspring would do the same. So each time Rhea gave Titans against Zeus and was spared imprisonment; he was birth, Cronus snatched up the child and ate it. Rhea hated given the task of creating man. Prometheus shaped man this and tricked him by hiding one child, Zeus, and wrapping out of mud, and Athena breathed life into the clay figure. a stone in a baby’s blanket so that Cronus ate the stone instead Prometheus made man stand upright as the gods did and of the baby. gave him fire. Prometheus tricked Zeus, and to punish him, 13 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY Zeus created Pandora, the first woman, of stunning beauty, wealth, and a deceptive heart and lying tongue. He also gave Pandora a box she was commanded never to open, but eventually her curiosity got the best of her, and she opened the box to release all kinds of evil, plagues, sorrows, and misfortunes, and also hope, which lay at the bottom of the box. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 14 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Judeo-Christian Origin Story: Genesis — Cynthia Stokes Brown This biblical story comes from Genesis, the first book of the Old Testament, which is the sacred source book of both Judaism and Christianity. In Genesis, this story is followed immediately by a second creation story in Chapter 2, in which humans are created first, followed by plants and animals. These stories were written down in the first millennium BCE and evolved into the form in which we know them around 450 BCE, about 2,460 years ago. GENESIS: CHAPTER 1 In the beginning, when God created the heavens and the And God said, “Let there be lights in the dome of the sky Earth, the Earth was a formless void, and darkness was over to separate the day from the night, and let them serve as the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering signs to mark sacred times, and days and years, and let them over the waters. And God said, “Let there be light,” and there be lights in the dome of the sky to give light on the earth.” was light. God saw that the light was good, and he separated And it was so. God made two great lights — the greater light the light from the darkness. God called the light “day,” and to govern the day and the lesser light to govern the night. the darkness he called “night.” And there was evening, and He also made the stars. God set them in the dome of the sky there was morning — the first day. to give light on the Earth, to govern the day and the night, and to separate light from darkness. And God saw that it was good. And there was evening, and there was morning And God said, “Let there be a dome between the waters — the fourth day. to separate water from water.” So God made the dome and separated the water under the dome from the water above it. And it was so. God called the dome “sky.” And there was And God said, “Let the water teem with living creatures, and evening, and there was morning — the second day. let birds fly above the Earth across the dome of the sky.” So God created the great creatures of the sea and every living And God said, “Let the water under the sky be gathered thing of every kind that moves in the teeming water, and to one place, and let dry ground appear.” And it was so. every winged bird of every kind. And God saw that it was God called the dry ground “land,” and the gathered waters good. God blessed them and said, “Be fruitful and increase in he called “seas.” And God saw that it was good. Then God number and fill the water in the seas, and let the birds increase said, “Let the land produce vegetation: seed- bearing plants on the Earth.” And there was evening, and there was morning — the fifth day. and trees on the land that bear fruit with seed in it, of every kind.” And it was so. The land produced vegetation: plants bearing seed of every kind and trees bearing fruit with seed And God said, “Let the land produce living creatures of every in it of every kind. And God saw that it was good. And there kind: the livestock, the creatures that move along the ground, was evening, and therewas morning — the third day. and the wild animals, each of every kind.” And it was so. God 15 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY made the wild animals of every kind, the livestock of every Then God said, “I give you every seed-bearing plant on the kind, and all the creatures that move along the ground face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with of every kind. And God saw that it was good. Then God said, seed in it. They will be yours for food. And to all the beasts “Let us make humankind in our image, in our likeness, so that of the earth and all the birds in the sky and all the creatures they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, that move along the ground — everything that has the breath over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all of life in it — I give every green plant for food.” And it was the creatures that move along the ground.” So God created so. God saw all that he had made, and it was very good. And humankind in his own image, in the image of God he created there was evening, and there was morning — the sixth day. them; male and female he created them. God blessed them Thus the heaven and the Earth were finished, with all their and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; multitudes. And on the seventh day God rested from all the fill the earth and subdue it. Rule over the fish in the sea and work that he had done in creation. God blessed the seventh the birds in the sky and over every living creature that moves day and hallowed it because on it God rested from all the on the ground.” work that he had done in creation. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 16 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Iroquois Origin Story: The Great Turtle — Cynthia Stokes Brown This story comes from the Iroquois people in North America. In the 1400s they formed a federation of five separate tribes in what is now New York state. The Iroquois did not use writing, so they told this story orally until settlers from Europe wrote it down. The first people lived beyond the sky because there was no of the earth to put on his back, to make an island for the Earth beneath. The chief’s daughter became ill, and no cure woman to live on. could be found. A wise old man told them to dig up a tree and lay the girl beside the hole. People began to dig, but as they The swans led the animals to the place where the tree had did the tree fell right through the hole, dragging the girl with it. fallen. First otter, then muskrat, and then beaver dived. As each one came up from the great depths, he rolled over Below lay an endless sheet of water where two swans exhausted and died. Many other animals tried, but they floated. As the swans looked up, they saw the sky break and experienced the same fate. At last the old lady toad a strange tree fall down into the water. Then they saw the volunteered. She was under so long that the others thought girl fall after it. They swam to her and supported her, because she had been lost. But at last she came to the surface she was too beautiful to allow her to drown. Then they and before dying managed to spit out a mouthful of dirt swam to the Great Turtle, master of all the animals, who on the back of the Great Turtle. at once called a council. It was magical earth and had the power of growth. As soon When all the animals had arrived, the Great Turtle told as it was as big as an island, the woman was set down on it. them that the appearance of a woman from the sky was a sign The two white swans circled it, while it continued to grow until, of good fortune. Since the tree had Earth on its roots, at last, it became the world island as it is today, supported he asked them to find where it had sunk and bring up some in the great waters on the back of the Great Turtle. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www. bighistoryproject.com. Web. 17 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | Origin Story Readings – Efik Origin Story: Abassi, God of the Universe — David Baker The Efik people live in southern Nigeria, for many centuries dwelling near the regions around the Cross River. They traditionally worshipped the god Abassi as a supreme creator. Their belief system was very relaxed. They had no formal priesthood or organized religious institutions. Worship and ritual were carried out on an individual or family level. Their creation story is a tale of humans defying the gods in order to achieve greater power and wisdom. Before Abassi there was nothing. Abassi was god of the or farm. They were also forbidden to marry and have children, Universe, and giver of life, death, and justice. He was so because a large nation of people might one day challenge powerful that he could create life, heal the sick, and even the power of Abassi. raise the dead. Some say that Abassi was the Sun, and they worshipped it as it rose and set every day. Abassi lived For a while, this plan worked. The humans returned to the sky in the sky with his wife, Atai. She was a wise goddess, every day to take their meals. However, one day, the woman who often gave Abassi good advice. decided she was sick of being fed like a helpless child. She went out into the fields and began to farm. When the time Abassi created the stars, the Earth, and all the wildlife came for dinner, she defiantly refused to return to the sky upon it. He also created two humans, a man and a woman. with the man. These humans lived with Abassi and Atai in the sky. They were very innocent and had little knowledge. Abassi and The next day, the man visited the woman in the fields and Atai looked after them, protected them, and even fed them, saw she was growing her own food. He decided to help her. because they did not know how to feed themselves. Before long, the man and woman fell in love. They did not One day, the humans were looking down from the sky at the return to the sky again. Many years went by and they had Earth. They decided they wanted to live there. But when many children. When those children were old enough, they they asked Abassi if they could leave the sky and live on the joined their parents working in the field. They all continued Earth, he forbade it. The Earth was a place with many to learn the secrets of the Earth and teach them to each secrets where many things could be learned. Abassi feared other. The humans tried to hide their children from the sight that the humans would one day match his wisdom, or even of Abassi, but the god saw them. He grew very angry. surpass it. He blamed his wife, Atai, because she had convinced him to let the humans live on Earth. Abassi feared that one Atai proposed a compromise. The humans could go live on day, the humans would have learned so much that they would Earth, but they had to return to the sky every day to have surpass his wisdom. He also feared they would grow their meals. The humans were forbidden to learn to hunt so numerous that they would surpass his power. 18 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY But Atai had a plan. In order to prevent the humans from growing too powerful, she sent evil into the world in the form of death and discord. The evil was so strong that the man and woman immediately died. Their children have suffered the ills of the world and argued among themselves ever since. But because their mother defied the gods, the humans have continued to learn the secrets of the Earth. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 19 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY WORKSHEET | ANSWER KEY | Origin Stories – Big History Project Use this chart to highlight the differences - and any similarities - between the origin stories you read. MODERN SCIENTIFIC MAYAN ZULU CHINESE GREEK JUDEO-CHRISTIAN IROQUOIS EFIK SOURCE OF THE WORLD Big Bang Makers in the sky and sea The darkness Chaos within a huge egg Chaos within a void God forms Heaven, Earth, light and dark First people lived beyond the sky. Chief’s daughter falls through a hole in the sky. World is created by Abassi, from nothing ORIGINATOR OF THE WORLD – Plumed serpent Umvelinqangi Pangu Gaia, Eros, Erebus God Great turtle in an endless sheet of water Abassi, God of the Universe HOW THE EARTH FORMED Left over matter dispersed during the formation of our sun Like a cloud unfolding Umvelinqangi created it out of the darkness.He created life from a tiny seed that he sent to Earth. Pangu died. Gaia births Uranus God made water, sky, ground, vegetation, creatures Old lady toad spits out a mouthful of dirt on the back of the turtle Abassi created it, as well as the stars and all life. AGE OF THE EARTH 13.8 Billion Years Old – – – – – – – FIRST LIFE FORMS One-celled organisms Deer, pumas, jaguars, rattlesnakes The seed Umvelinqangi sent to Earth was the first life. From the reed that grew from that seed came more reeds, out of which more life forms grew. Fleas, lice of Pangu Titans All living creatures Swans, muskrat, beaver, toad, turtle Origin story doesn’t go into detail. It’s possible that all wildlife was created at once. 20 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY WORKSHEET | ANSWER KEY | Origin Stories – Big History Project (Cont’d) HOW HUMANS FORMED RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HUMANS AND PLANTS/ANIMALS Evolution and adaption over the course of 100,000 years Derived from corn on the third attempt Unkulunkulu grew out of one reed and picked the humans from the reeds that they grew from. Fleas and lice on his body became human ancestors Prometheus / Athena made man. Zeus made first woman. Created in God’s image Dirt grows to form the world island supporting the daughter Abassi created the first man and woman. They defied Abassi and married and had children. Humans dominate and jeopardize the Earth’s stability Hunt, gather, praise the gods All life stems from one common ancestor. Yin yang, find balance All subservient to the gods Rule over nature Respectful of the nature which supports humanity All are subservient to Abassi. The Earth has many secrets for humans to learn. Source: Big History Project. “Unit 1 - What is Big History? Origin Stories.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 21 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.3 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #6 Buddha and Ashoka PREVIEW In which John relates a condensed history of India, post-Indus the political and social structure of Indian history. India’s Valley Civilization. John explores Hinduism and the origins of history is hard to cover in 11.5 minutes and John Green Buddhism. He also gets into the reign of Ashoka, the Buddhist explains why in this Crash Course video, which explains emperor who, in spite of Buddhism’s structural disapproval the big moments in early Indian history from the Vedas of violence, managed to win a bunch of battles. to Buddhism’s migration into China. PURPOSE Crash Course videos should be used as an introduction In Crash Course World History #6, students learn why Indian to new ideas and concepts, an instruction to core ideas history is somewhat difficult to wrap into one short video. of the unit, and should serve as a reinforcement of previously They will also explore some of the main religious beliefs learned events. of Hinduism and Buddhism and how these faiths tie into PROCESS LINK As with all of the videos in the course, assign students to watch the video before class. The first time through, •Crash Course World History #6 – have students just try to capture the gist of the video. Buddha and Ashoka The next time, have them try to determine important facts and information. Remind students of John’s fast- Video questions for students to answer during talking and play the video with captions. Pause and their viewing. rewind when necessary. As students watch the video, have them how faith plays a role in a place’s political and social structure. 22 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.3 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: It is an area with a long history with 1. (0:43) Why is the history of India so complex? different cultures and a land area that was divided into a number of territories. Also, a lot of what we know about modern India comes from British sources during colonization, which, of course, means that there is a great deal of historical bias in these accounts. 2. (1:31) Who took control of India after the disappearance SAMPLE ANSWER: The Aryans migrated into the area from of the Indus Valley Civilization in 1750 BCE? How do we the Caucuses and they left behind religious texts, one of which know about them? is called the Vedas. SAMPLE ANSWER: A grouping of social classes (hierarchy) into 3. (2:40) What is the caste system? What is the divine explanation for this social system? four main classes. The justification for the system comes from the Vedas and its description of the division of Purusha – the universe-pervading spirit. His mouth became the Brahmins (priests) because they spoke with the gods. His arms became the Kshatriyas – the warriors. His thighs represent the Vaisyas – merchants and artisans who provide for the priests and warriors. Finally, his feet became the Sudras – laborers and farmers. These castes became the basis for Hinduism. SAMPLE ANSWER: Dharma is one’s role in life and society. 4. (3:34) One of the main concepts of Hinduism is dharma – what is dharma? Everyone in the caste system must obey this concept and fulfill their duty in their caste. SAMPLE ANSWER: Samsara is the cycle of rebirth or 5. (4:24) What is samsara and how does it connect to dharma? reincarnation. If you fulfill your dharma in this life then you might improve your dharma or your placement in the caste system in your next life. 23 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS SAMPLE ANSWER: Moksha – to release yourself from the 6. (4:46) What is the ultimate goal of samsara? caste system, which also ties into karma, or the concept of what goes around comes around. If you are a good person then you will be rewarded with good things and the same if you are a bad person then bad things will be your “reward”. SAMPLE ANSWER: Siddhartha Gautama – an Indian prince – 7. (6:28) How and why did Buddhism begin? left his royal life to try to find out how to end suffering, in particular to end life under the caste system. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Four Noble Truths: 1) All life is suffering. 8. (6:59) What were the Buddha’s main teachings? 2) The cause of suffering is desire. 3) To end this suffering, you must free yourself from desire. 3) In order to stop desiring everything under the sun, the Buddha said you had to follow the Eightfold Path (eight ways to live your life the “right” way). SAMPLE ANSWER: Buddhism was actually attractive to 9. (8:02) Why was Buddhism so appealing to members of members of all castes but the lower castes in particular were India’s lower castes? drawn to the fact that there is no caste system. Anyone who follows the Eightfold Path may be able to achieve nirvana in this life rather than having to be reborn over and over again. SAMPLE ANSWER: Ashoka was a leader from the Mauryan 10. (10:39) What was so great about Ashoka? Dynasty (269-232 BCE) who converted to Buddhism, built stupas (mound-like monuments to the Buddha) and pillars proclaiming his benevolent rule and the practice of dhamma, which basically stated that everyone should treat each other with respect. SAMPLE ANSWER: It almost died out but eventually became 11. (11:48) What eventually happened to Buddhism in India? intertwined with Hinduism. Buddhism also migrated to China where it is still a hugely popular faith but a little different from the Buddhism of Siddhartha Gautama. 24 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.3 | WATCH | Conceptual Thinking Have students answer the following questions in order for them to make connections across different concepts and think more critically about the information presented in the video. 1. What are some of the benefits of having a caste system, especially if you are trying to create an orderly society? What are some of the drawbacks of this system? 2. How do the teachings of Buddha compare to those of Christianity? 25 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.4 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #7 2000 Years of Chinese History PREVIEW PURPOSE In which John introduces you to quite a lot of Chinese In Crash Course World History #7, students examine the history by discussing the complicated relationship between long, vibrant history of China, what has allowed this culture the Confucian scholars who wrote Chinese history and to thrive for over 2000 years, and how this area became the emperors (and empress) who made it. Included is a brief the first modern state. introduction to all the dynasties in Chinese history and an introduction to Confucius and the Confucian emphasis on filial Crash Course videos should be used as an introduction piety, the role the mandate of heaven played in organizing to new ideas and concepts, an instruction to core ideas China, and how China became the first modern state. of the unit, and should serve as a reinforcement of previously learned events. PROCESS LINK As with all of the videos in the course, assign students to watch the video before class. The first •Crash Course World History #7 – time through, have students just try to capture 2000 Years of Chinese History the gist of the video. The next time, have them try Video questions for students to answer during to determine important facts and information. their viewing. Remind students of John’s fast-talking and play the video with captions. Pause and rewind when necessary. As students watch the video, have them consider who writes history and why it’s important to know the sources for the history we know. 26 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.4 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: China had a centralized government and 1. (0:54) Why does John Green refer to China as the first modern state? a large team of bureaucrats, who executed the wishes of the rulers of that government. SAMPLE ANSWER: A dynasty is a system of government in 2. (1:44) What is a dynasty? which the right to rule is passed down through the family line. In the case of China, this meant that the emperors ruled over the area and as long as the family produced heirs then that family usually retained the power. SAMPLE ANSWER: A dynasty can end if there are no heirs but 3. (1:59) How can a dynasty end? as John Green tells us, this was pretty well assured in China where the emperor had numerous concubines. Most Chinese dynasties were overthrown after a rebellion or war. SAMPLE ANSWER: The first Chinese dynasty was the Shang 4. (3:07) What was the first real dynasty of China? When did the dynastic period end and why? as the Xia dynasty was more fiction than fact. After numerous dynasties rose to power, ruled, and then fell, there was a rebellion in 1911 that put an end to the entire Chinese dynastic system. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Mandate of Heaven was a political 5. (4:58) What was the Mandate of Heaven? and philosophical concept that dates from the Zhou dynasty. Many historians think this idea was created by the Zhou to get rid of the Shang because before the Zhou, China didn’t even have a concept of Heaven. If the emperor behaved in a proper, upright manner and protected his (or her) people then he (or she) had the right to rule but if they didn’t live up to this then they could be overthrown by a new ruler who was acting on divine intervention. 27 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS SAMPLE ANSWER: This dynasty gave China its name. China 6. (6:03) What did the Qin dynasty accomplish? was reunified under a single emperor and this dynasty ended the Warring States period. The Qin also had a reputation for brutality, which the next dynasty – the Han – used to explain why the Qin had to be defeated. SAMPLE ANSWER: As a benevolent ruler who followed 7. (6:32) How did Chinese historians portray the Han emperor Wen? Confucian principles and therefore, retained the right to rule under the Mandate of Heaven. Harsh punishments and executions declined and the government encouraged learning (stopped burning books). SAMPLE ANSWER: A political philosophy created by Confucius, 8. (8:18) What is Confucianism? who was a minor official during the Warring States period. While his views were largely ignored during this period, later emperors followed his conservative theory that the ruler should be wise and of upright, moral behavior. Confucianism rests on the idea that everyone has a place in society (the social hierarchy) and in relationship to other people. Five key relationships are part of this philosophy but the most important was that between father and son (the concept of filial piety). The goal of this relationship was that both father and son would be “superior men” or junzi. It was especially important for the emperor to behave in this way because he was seen as the father to the entire country. SAMPLE ANSWER: One must study the history of sage 9. (10:47) Why did Confucius emphasize emperors and learn from them and a good junzi had to the study of history? understand and appreciate beauty in history, poetry, and painting. Emperors, as well as all Chinese, had to have proper behavior (ren) and venerate their ancestors (li). By studying the past, present and future emperors could learn from the behavior of those in the past because if emperors failed their people due to poor behavior then that could also cause natural disasters and rebellions, which could be seen throughout the history of China according to Confucian historians. 28 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.4 | WATCH | Conceptual Thinking Answer the following question to make connections across different concepts and think more critically about the information presented in the video. 1. Why is it important to analyze sources when studying history? 29 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.5 | READ | The Three Belief Systems of China – World History For Us All PURPOSE This activity explores the three main traditional belief belief system, their specific differences, and their importance systems, that is, religions or philosophies of China: in the historical development of China. Students will Confucianism, Taoism (Daoism), and Buddhism. It provides understand the significance of belief systems in helping background on each of these systems, including how, to establish a sense of belonging and building social when, where, and by whom they were developed and cohesion, focusing on China in the premodern era. Students diffused throughout China. Using translations of primary will also be encouraged to reflect on the impact that their sources, students will examine the major tenets of each own belief systems have on their lives. PROCESS Have students read the provided article. Host Potential follow-up questions: a discussion of themes following their completion • How does a new religion or belief of the reading. system begin? • How did the religions/belief systems ATTACHMENT in the article reach China? • The Three Belief Systems of China • How does each group view the world? • What are the main goals of the practices? How should followers treat each other? • How would you describe each religion/belief system in five (5) words or less? 30 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | The Three Belief Systems of China – World History For Us All CONFUCIANISM • Older brothers-Younger brothers. Older brothers should Confucius was a sage, that is, a wise man. He was born in 551 BCE, during a period when China was divided into care for younger brothers. Younger brothers should many small states, each with its own lord. This time respect and obey older brother. • Husband-Wife. Married people should live in harmony. is known as the “Warring States Period” because the different A wife should obey her husband. states were always fighting with each other. There were • Friend-Friend. Friends should trust each other and treat many attempts to overthrow the lords because they were often cruel to the people they ruled. It was a period each other well. of great chaos (disorder) and suffering among the people. Do you notice a pattern? Those in power must take care Like other people during this difficult and dangerous time, of those who are weaker. Those who are weaker must Confucius looked for ways to improve society and make respect and obey those who are in power. Those who are it more peaceful. He believed that life would be better and equal should treat each other equally. The primary and safer if there was clear order, or harmony, in society. most important relationship is between parent and child. He also understood that rulers needed to govern more wisely Children who understand their roles and duties to their to avoid or reduce bloodshed. Confucius believed that parents will then be able to go into the world and understand people should not use family connections to obtain government their positions in society. It will be very difficult, however, positions as many people did during that time. Instead, for those who do not fulfill their primary duties (to their parents) he thought that government officials should be well-educated, to lead a successful life. talented, honest, and fair. Confucius believed that government officials should live lives of virtue (be virtuous) so that the These relationships are based on traditional Chinese values, people they ruled would follow their example. Therefore, such as respect for elders (older people) and ancestor worship, he developed a philosophy that established clear relationships which existed before the time of Confucius. This was an between people in all aspects of their lives. important reason why Chinese people were able to embrace the teachings of Confucius: they were already familiar with Relationships: many of these ideas. The teachings of Confucius were rooted • Parents-Children. Parents should love and care for their in things that the Chinese already believed in and practiced. children. Children should respect and obey their parents. The children’s respect and devotion for their parents is On the other hand, Confucianism also placed greater often called “filial piety.” importance on learning, or scholarship. According to Confucianism, people can become government officials • Ruler-Subjects. A ruler should care for the people he governs. The people he rules (the subjects) should obey a to help rule the land if they study hard, are just and fair, ruler who takes care of them. and can pass difficult exams. Under his philosophy, it is not 31 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY as important which family you are born into. It is much more TAOISM (ALSO CALLED DAOISM) important how smart and just you are. Therefore, Confucianism We do not know if Laozi was a real person or not. The name gives everyone the opportunity to become more powerful. in Chinese means “Old Philosopher” or “Old Master.” This name may actually have represented several different writers The main writings of Confucius are in the Analects, the sayings who contributed to the Daodejing, or The Way and Integrity of Confucius. In addition to his own words, the ideas of Classic, which was the earliest set of teachings associated Confucianism were developed by many other people who with Taoism. This person or persons lived during a period were the disciples of Confucius. These people accepted when China was divided into many small states, each with and spread his teachings. The most famous of these was its own lord. This time is known as the “Warring States Period,” Mencius. He was born almost 100 years after Confucius because the different states were always fighting, or warring, died. He tried to convince rulers in China that they should with each other and their lords. There were many attempts accept the teachings of Confucius. to overthrow the lords because they were often cruel to the people they ruled. It was a period of great chaos and suffering In Confucianism, memorizing the sayings of Confucius among the people. was one of the most important rituals. That way, if someone spoke the first part of a saying of Confucius, the other Like other people during this difficult and dangerous time, people in the group (Confucians) would be able to complete it. Laozi looked for ways to improve society and help comfort If they could not, they would not be considered to be part people. According to legend, he wanted to leave the problems of that group of “well-educated” people or “leaders.” in China in order to live out the end of his life in peace and quiet in Central Asia (west of China). A border guard asked Some of the sayings of Confucius were about the five him to write down his teachings before leaving China, and relationships, but many others were examples of the so Laozi composed the Daodejing, which lays out the main way people should behave in order to keep harmony in society. ideas of what later became known as Taoism. These sayings often talked about people who were superior (better than other people) or inferior (worse than other people). According to Taoism, people have problems because they do not understand the natural world they live in and how Here are two examples of famous sayings of Confucius: it behaves. Therefore, the basic goal of Taoism is for people • “What is a superior person? One who acts before he to understand the Tao (the way) of nature and behave according speaks, and afterwards speaks according to his actions.” to it. Those who follow the Tao achieve mental clarity, power, • “Good government results when those who are near are and “inner peace.” made happy, and those who are far are attracted to it.” It is difficult to describe the Tao in words. In fact, when we Source; put things from nature into words, we remove ourselves from Rothblatt, Joel. “Big Era Four: Expanding Networks of Exchange and the experience of reality, according to Taoism. Therefore, Taoists Encounter 1200 BCE - 500 CE. Belief Systems in China: Confucianism, Daoism, (people who practice Taoism) say that instead of using words, and Buddhism 581 BCE-1368 CE.” World History for Us All. PDF file. the best way to experience nature is by observing it and being 32 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY in tune with it. For example, when we watch waves at the In Taoism, meditation and tuning into nature are the most beach, we do not judge waves and say, “This one is right important rituals. Taoists also memorize the main writings and beautiful” or “That one is wrong and ugly.” Nature of Taoism, especially the Daodejing and Zhuangzi. That way, is just what it is; it does not make mistakes. There is no if someone begins speaking the first part of a saying from “good” or “bad” in nature. These are ideas that people made one of these books, the other people in the group (Taoists) up to describe how things affect them. are able to complete it. If they cannot, they are not considered to be part of that group of Taoists. Therefore, it is easier to explain Taoism with the yin yang symbol. Many people (especially in Western countries) tend Examples of two famous Taoist sayings: • “Who can make the muddy water clear? to separate ideas in nature into opposites like good and evil, Let it be still and it will gradually become clear.” black andwhite, or life and death. Taoists see nature as being • “That which goes against the Tao will come whole (the complete outside circle of the yin yang symbol), to an early end.” and everything inside of it being connected and as part of the whole. The “yin” is represented by black, and also represents water, the moon, and Earth; also quiet, soft and feminine Source qualities. The “yang” is represented by white, and also Rothblatt, Joel. “Big Era Four: Expanding Networks of Exchange and represents fire, the Sun and heaven, as well as the dynamic, Encounter 1200 BCE - 500 CE. Belief Systems in China: Confucianism, Daoism, hard and masculine qualities. Nature is always moving and and Buddhism 581 BCE-1368 CE.” World History for Us All. PDF file. flowing, and the yin and yang work together. For example, black and white are only seen in relation to the other, part BUDDHISM of each other, and flowing into each other. Siddhartha Gautama was born a prince in Northern India. According to legend, it was predicted at Siddhartha’s The Taoist belief system was accepted in China in part because birth that he would become either a great ruler or a great it reflected earlier philosophies and legends. For example, teacher. His father, the king, wanted Siddhartha according to a very famous legend in China, one of the mythical to succeed him as ruler. For this reason, his father tried founders of China faced a problem about how to deal with to prevent him from seeing or experiencing anything a huge dam that was leaking. Rather than trying to block it, sad, which might cause him to become religious and teach he formed channels to “naturally” drain the water away, others. Therefore, Siddhartha enjoyed his early years thus creating China’s landscape. in the palace in luxury without knowing about things such as old age, sickness, or death. Eventually, the young Aside from Laozi’s writings in the Daodejing, the philosophy prince decided to go outside of the palace. There, for the of Taoism is based on the ideas of other people who accepted first time, he saw an old person with wrinkled skin and spread the teachings of Taoism. The most famous of these who had difficulty walking. Siddhartha understood that was Zhuangzi (or Master Zhuang), who was born perhaps he himself would also become old. He also saw a sick 100 years after Laozi died and who wrote Zhuangzi. person and a dead person. All this made Siddhartha feel 33 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY much suffering. During another trip, he saw a holy man who According to Buddhism, the “Eightfold Path” means to lead appeared to be happy and at peace. Siddhartha learned that a good life. People who follow this path are freed from this person had given up his home and everything he owned. suffering and gain happiness. These steps are: The holy person was trying to find wisdom and peacefulness Right understanding. It is important to be certain that you by living a pure and simple life. understand the teachings of the Buddha correctly. 1. Right thought. Think thoughts that are pure and good. From then on, Siddhartha searched for a way to end suffering 2. Right speech. Speak words that are truthful and not harmful. and become happy. He decided to follow the path of a holy 3. Right action. Treat people well, as you would like person. He gave up everything he owned. He left his wife to be treated. and young child and a life of luxury in the palace. He traveled around India for years, but he still did not find a way to end 4. Right work. Do not harm others as you earn a living. suffering. Finally, he decided to sit under a tree and meditate 5. Right effort. Keep trying to become a better person; stop bad habits. (become quiet and relaxed and clear his mind of thoughts) 6. Right mindfulness. Be mindful (or aware) of what you are until he became enlightened (understood the truth about the world and such things as why there is suffering and how doing and what is going on around you; always think to end it). After meditating for several hours, he became about how you live. 7. Right meditation. Meditate correctly each day to clear enlightened and became known as the “Buddha,” or the one your mind of desires and be able to find peace and truth. who knows the truth. In order to share the truths he found with others, the Buddha When and why did Buddhism arrive in China? Buddhism became a teacher. (Remember: this is one of the career probably first entered China along the “silk roads,” that is, paths predicted for him at birth and the one that his father the system of trade routes that connected China to lands did not want him to take.) There are two main beliefs farther west as far as the Mediterranean sea and Europe. of Buddhism, that is, the teachings of the Buddha and Trade on the silk roads goes back thousands of years. By about his followers. 100 BCE, Buddhist missionaries began traveling on the routes along with traders. Trade routes opened contact and One is the “Four Noble Truths,” which the Buddha discovered communication between people and places. In addition when he meditated beneath the tree. These truths are: to goods, people and ideas spread along the trade routes. 1. Life is full of suffering from birth to death. By 68 CE, a Chinese Han emperor asked some advisers 2. People suffer because they desire (try to get) things to visit India to learn more about this “western religion,” that do not last, for example, money and possessions. 3. The way to end suffering is to stop desiring things. that is, Indian religion. They returned to China with 4. The way to get rid of desire is to follow Buddhist monks. New religions and beliefs often become popular during difficult times when people are searching the “Eightfold Path.” for answers to why there is suffering. When dynasties were 34 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY ending in China there was much unrest, and the Chinese tended to embrace Buddhism more. For example, at the end of the Han dynasty, Buddhism became more popular. Source: Rothblatt, Joel. “Big Era Four: Expanding Networks of Exchange and Encounter 1200 BCE - 500 CE. Belief Systems in China: Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism 581 BCE-1368 CE.” World History for Us All. PDF file. 35 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.6 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #11 Christianity from Judaism to Constantine PREVIEW comparisons to Emperor Augustus, to the spread of the In which John Green teaches you the history of Christianity, faith following his death. We’re examining this through from the beginnings of Judaism and the development of the lense of history, not theology, so by no means are we monotheism, right up to Paul and how Christianity stormed discussing Jesus’ divinity. We’re instead using this time the Roman Empire in just a few hundred years. Along the to examine what was happening in the world during this way, John will cover Abram/Abraham, the Covenant, the era and why were conditions right for the son of a Jewish Roman Occupation of Judea, and the birth, life, death and carpenter to develop such a loyal following and become legacy of Jesus of Nazareth. one of the most influential people on Earth. PURPOSE Crash Course videos should be used as an introduction In Crash Course World History #11, students examine to new ideas and concepts, an instruction to core the Christian faith, beginning with Judaism, through the ideas of the unit, and should serve as a reinforcement birth of Jesus of Nazareth in the Roman Empire and his of previously learned events. PROCESS LINK As with all of the videos in the course, assign students to watch the video before class. The first •Crash Course World History #11 – time through, have students just try to capture Christianity from Judaism to Constantine the gist of the video. The next time, have them try Video questions for students to answer during to determine important facts and information. their viewing. Remind students of John’s fast-talking and play the video with captions. Pause and rewind when necessary. As students watch the video, have them consider who writes history and why it’s important to know the sources for the history we know. 36 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.6 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Hebrews initially worshiped many 1. (1:00) Who did the Hebrews initially worship and how did they show their faith? gods and made sacrifices to them in order to bring good weather and good fortune. SAMPLE ANSWER: The idea that there is only one true god. 2. (1:10) What is monotheism? This concept was adopted as a key idea to Judaism, and would become important to the other great western religions. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Jews - in exchange for his faith, God 3. (2:15) Who are the “chosen people” and what’s the origin of this name? had chosen Abraham and his descendants to be a great nation. The “chosen people” has become a nickname for followers of the Jewish faith. SAMPLE ANSWER: Singularity - the Hebrew god doesn’t 4. (2:35) What are some of the characteristics of the Hebrew god? want you to put any other gods before him. He’s transcendent - he’s very involved in history; like destroying cities, bringing floods, determining outcomes of wars, and demands moral righteousness and social justice. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Roman Empire had absorbed 5. (3:31) At the time that Jesus was born, some 2000 years ago, who controlled the region of Judea? the land of the Israelites and Judea was under the control of Herod the Great, known for building the massive temple in Jerusalem. SAMPLE ANSWER: The poor and downtrodden, which was 6. (4:51) Jesus’ message of peace, love, and social justice was particularly resonant with what groups? pretty radical in its anti-authoritarian stance. SAMPLE ANSWER: Jesus was considered a rebel and was 7. (4:51) Jesus’ message of peace, love, and social justice was particularly resonant with what groups? executed in the normal manner of the time, by crucifixion. 37 LESSON 2.1 | THE DEVELOPMENT AND CODIFICATION OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS SAMPLE ANSWER: The Jews had a long tradition of believing 8. (6:05) Why would people of the era believe that Jesus was the Messiah? that a savior would come to them during a time of trouble. Judea under the control of Herod and the Romans was such a time. Additionally, Jesus embodied many of the common prophecies of the time. SAMPLE ANSWER: Both were called the Son of God; both 9. (7:25) What similarities do Jesus and Roman Emperor Augustus share? were sent to free the Earth from fear. SAMPLE ANSWER: Paul was a Roman citizen, which meant 10. (9:00) What attribute of Paul (Saul of Tarsus) made it possible to spread the message of Christianity? he could travel freely throughout the empire, allowing him to make his case to lots of different people. SAMPLE ANSWER: The faith happened to coincide with 11. (10:00) What other reasons might be responsible for the spread of Christianity during this era? the decline of the Roman Empire, which shared a common language. Also, Roman religion offered no promise of a peaceful afterlife, which Christianity did. Finally, Emperor Constantine allowed for the worship of Jesus and eventually converted to the faith himself. 38 LESSON 2.1 3.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION AND ANDEXPANSION CODIFICATION OF ISLAM OF RELIGIOUS & CULTURAL TRADITIONS LESSON 2.1.7 | CLOSING | EQ Notebook PURPOSE At the start of the unit, students looked at the essential HOW DOES RELIGION AFFECT THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOCIETY? question without much to go on. Now that the lesson is Now that students have spent some time with the material over, students will revisit the essential question. This time, of this unit, they should look back over the content covered students should cite specific passages and evidence from as well as any additional information they have come across, the content in the unit that provide insights into answering and write down any quotes or evidence that provide new the driving question. insights into the essential question you’ve assigned for Unit 2. Once they’ve finished, they should think about how this new information has impacted their thinking about the driving question, and write down their thoughts in their EQ Notebook. PROCESS Ask students to think about this question and respond ATTACHMENT to it on their EQ Notebook Worksheets. • Essential Questions Unit 2 Notebook Worksheet 39 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.0 | OVERVIEW UNIT ESSENTIAL QUESTION: Why do civilizations rise and fall? When they fall, what impact do they have on history? As the early states and empires grew in number, size, and population, they frequently competed for resources and came into conflict with one another. In quest of land, wealth, and security, some empires expanded dramatically. In doing so, they built powerful military machines and administrative institutions that were capable of organizing human activities over long distances, and they created new groups of military and political elites to manage their affairs. As these empires expanded their boundaries, they also faced the need to develop policies and procedures to govern their relationships with ethnically and culturally diverse populations: sometimes to integrate them within an imperial society and sometimes to exclude them. In some cases, these empires became victims of their own successes. By expanding their boundaries too far, they created political, cultural, and administrative difficulties that they could not manage. They also experienced environmental, social, and economic problems when they overexploited their lands and subjects and permitted excessive wealth to be concentrated in the hands of privileged classes. 40 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.1.0 | OVERVIEW | Learning Outcomes, Vocabulary, & Outline LEARNING OUTCOMES OUTLINE 2.2.1 | OPENING •Define and explain the concept of “empire”. Locate the major empires EQ Notebook of the period and analyze their relative 2.2.2 | WATCH importance. Analyze major differences Crash Course World History #5 – and similarities between these empires. The Persians & Greeks •Analyze the importance of trade 2.2.3 | WATCH expansion in this period. Crash Course World History #8 – •Describe changes resulting from new Alexander the Great cultural encounters. 2.2.4 | READ •Identify the world religions and belief An Age of Greek and Persian Power systems that flourished during this period. 2.2.5 | WATCH •Give reasons for the rise of large, Crash Course World History #10 – enduring empires during this era. The Roman Empire. Or Republic. Or...What Which Was it? 2.2.6 | WATCH Crash Course World History #11 – Fall of the Roman Empire 2.2.7 | READ A Tale of Three Empires 2.2.8 | CLOSING EQ Notebook 41 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES VOCABULARY Empire – Major political unit in which the metropolis, or single sovereign authority, exercises control over territory of great extent or a number of territories or peoples through formal annexations or various forms of informal domination. Republic – Form of government in which a state is ruled by representatives of the citizen body. Modern republics are founded on the idea that sovereignty rests with the people, though who is included and excluded from the category of the people has varied across history. Because citizens do not govern the state themselves but through representatives, republics may be distinguished from direct democracy, though modern representative democracies are by and large republics. The term republic may also be applied to any form of government in which the head of state is not a hereditary monarch. *Vocabulary definitions taken from oxforddictionaries.com & britannica.com 42 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.1 | OPENING | EQ Notebook PURPOSE Each unit of the Crash Course World History Course (CCWH) ideas, this activity asks them to look at the big ideas through is guided by what we call an essential question. The Essential the lens of the Essential Question. At this point, students Question Notebook (EQ Notebook) is an informal writing won’t have much background to bring to bear on the issue resource for students to track their learning and understanding just yet. This early exercise helps to bring to the fore what of a concept throughout a unit. Students will be given they know coming into the unit. an Essential Question at the beginning of a unit and asked to answer the Essential Question with evidence they WHY DO CIVILIZATIONS RISE AND FALL? WHEN THEY FALL, WHAT IMPACT DO THEY HAVE ON HISTORY? have gathered throughout the unit. This provides students Students should quickly jot down some ideas for how trade an opportunity to track their learning and to prepare them and culture are related. They can do this in the context of the for future activities. To help students focus on the important unit of study, or relate it to their own lives. to provide a response based on prior knowledge and speculation. Students will then revisit the notebook in order PROCESS Ask students to think about this question and respond ATTACHMENT to it on their EQ Notebook Worksheets: • Essential Questions Unit 2 Notebook Worksheet 43 NAME CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY COURSE TIME UNIT 2 | EQ Notebook Worksheet Answer the unit essential Lessons 2.2.1, then again in Lessons 2.2.8. In your answer, be sure to include ideas such as historical context and how themes through history change over time. Use specific examples to support your claims or ideas. ESSENTIAL QUESTION | Why do civilizations rise and fall? When they fall, what impact do they have on history? LESSON 2.2.1 LESSON 2.2.8 HOW HAS YOUR THINKING CHANGED? 44 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.2 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #5 The Persians & Greeks PREVIEW In which John compares and contrasts Greek civilization 5th century BCE, the Persian Empire was pretty nice place and the Persian Empire. Of course we’re glad that Greek to live. Additionally, through the outsider perspective of civilization spawned modern western civilization, right? Herodotus, who was Greek, students will discover historical Maybe not. From Socrates and Plato to Darius and Xerxes, bias. On the Greek side of things, their culture and approach John explains two of the great powers of the ancient world, to society is a legacy that can still be seen today. However, all without the use of footage from 300. most of the Greek city-states believed in slavery and citizenship was limited to males. Finally, students examine PURPOSE if the “right” side (the Greeks) won the Persian Wars, In Crash Course World History #5, students examine the value which established the western tradition of democracy and of comparative history and how the contributions of the cultural flourishing that gave us the Classical age. Persians and the Ancient Greeks have influenced our own history as well as how we have come to learn history. Crash Course videos should be used as an introduction to new Students will learn about Persian rule, why their leader was ideas and concepts, an instruction to core ideas of the unit, and considered “King of Kings” and why if you had to live in the should serve as a reinforcement of previously learned events. PROCESS As with all of the videos in the course, assign students LINK to watch the video before class. The first time through, • Crash Course World History #5 – have students just try to capture the gist of the video. The Persians & Greeks The next time, have them try to determine important facts and information. Remind students of John’s fast- Video questions for students to answer during talking and play the video with captions. Pause and their viewing. rewind when necessary. As students watch the video, have them consider who are the writers of history and how do we know their perspectives are valid? Additionally, what might have happened had the Greeks not defeated the Persians in the Persian Wars? 45 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.2 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: King Cyrus the Great founded the 1. (1:45) Who were Cyrus the Great and Darius I and what did they do for the Persian Empire? Achaemenid dynasty in 539 BCE and conquered most of Mesopotamia. He also freed the Jews from the Babylonian Captivity and allowed them to return to their homeland. Darius I was Cyrus’ son, who extended the Persian Empire from the Indus Valley in the east, Egypt in the west, and Turkey in the North. SAMPLE ANSWER: When the Persians took over an area, they 2. (2:02) Why was the Persian ruler known as the King of Kings? allowed the conquered kings and elites to keep their power as long as they pledged allegiance to the Persian king and paid taxes. So in essence the Persian king became the king of other kings. SAMPLE ANSWER: Zoroastrianism is probably the first 3. (2:41) What is Zoroastrianism? Why don’t we hear more about their practices than Christian ones? monotheistic faith and it was adopted by the Persians. Zorastrianism introduced the world to the concept of good versus evil and also forbade slavery. The Persians were not terribly concerned about spreading their faith through the conversion of conquered people; however, Christians, especially those during the Middle Ages and the Age of Exploration, were set on converting others to the faith. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Ancient Greeks are really the basis 4. (3:33) What were some of the major accomplishments of the Ancient Greeks? of Western culture from architecture, philosophy, literature, poetry, and music to science, mathematics, and politics; the influence of their culture is evident throughout history. In fact, the Greeks gave the West the first history and the first democracy (Athens). 46 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES SAMPLE ANSWER: Aristophanes – famous Greek playwright 5. (5:03) Why does Aristophanes get both a good and bad rap these days? and satirist – is still remembered today for the 11 out of 40 plays that have survived and he’s known as the father of comedy. However, students today don’t really get his humor and think he’s rather boring to read. SAMPLE ANSWER: This was the “golden age” of Ancient 6. (5:43) What were some of the characteristics of Greek culture and politics in the 4th century BCE? Greece and the building of the Parthenon, which is probably the most famous ruin of the ancient world if you don’t count the pyramids. The Greeks during this time were divided into a collection of city-states that were fiercely independent, which meant that each city-state had its own government. These governments ranged from a direct democracy in Athens to monarchies and dictatorships. The Greeks also owned a ton of slaves and treated women pretty poorly. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Persian Wars began because a group 7. (6:23) Why did the Greeks view of citizenship and allegiance to Greece as a whole change after the of Ionian city-states rebelled against Persian rule so Persia Persian Wars? decided to attack the mainland of Greece. When they did this, the Greeks decided to band together and fight as a whole against the Persians. When the Greeks defeated the Persians, they began to view themselves as Greeks rather than just Athenians or Spartans. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Athenians became one of the most 8. (7:46) Why did Athens experience a “golden age” after the Persian Wars and what did this eventually lead to? powerful city-states, and the de facto Greek capital, after the wars. As a result, the arts, building, and philosophy flourished in the city. Rivalries over resources and power emerged between Athens and Sparta, which eventually led to the Peloponnesian War. SAMPLE ANSWER: Bully because when the people of Melos 9. (9:09) Why do the Peloponnesian War and the Melian dialogue make Athens both a bully and a loser? didn’t want to fight on the Athenians’ side against the Spartans, the Athenians killed the men and enslaved the women and children. Losers because at the end of the Peloponnesian War, Athens is defeated by Sparta. 47 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES SAMPLE ANSWER: Pro: Athens prospered and their culture 10. (11:48) What eventually happened to Buddhism in India? flourished, which gave us the legacy of the Classical Age including philosophy, architecture, and democracy. Cons: Democracy is great but empires as a whole have lasted much longer. Life in Athens was great if you were a male citizen but was pretty bad if you were a slave or a woman. The struggle for power after the Persian Wars led to the Peloponnesian War and the eventual collapse of Greek civilization once they were taken over by Alexander the Great’s father and then later by the Romans. LESSON 2.2.2 | WATCH | Conceptual Thinking Have students answer the following question in order for them to make connections across different concepts and think more critically about the information presented in the video. 1. Why might it be problematic for people trying to learn about Persian history to have a Greek historian as our main source of evidence? 48 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.3 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #8 Alexander the Great PREVIEW In which you are introduced to the life and accomplishments failed at accomplishing. Through his conquests, Alexander of Alexander the Great, his empire, his horse Bucephalus, spread Greek ideas, culture, language and architecture the empires that came after him, and the idea of Greatness. as far east as the Indus Valley. Along with him came empire Is greatness a question of accomplishment, of impact, or are builders: scientists, doctors, artisans, and philosophers. people great because the rest of us decide they’re great? However, Alexander’s strengths were tied more to his military mind than empire building. So, was he great? PURPOSE In Crash Course World History #8, students are introduced Crash Course videos should be used as an introduction to new to the life and times of Alexander the Great, from his conquests ideas and concepts, an instruction to core ideas of the unit, and to his legacy while also discussing the issue of deeming should serve as a reinforcement of previously learned events. someone from history to be “great.” He defeated the Persian Empire, something both the Spartans and the Athenians had PROCESS As with all of the videos in the course, assign students and centuries that followed his death. What examples to watch the video before class. The first time through, from present times can students reference that might have students just try to capture the gist of the video. be similar? The next time, have them try to determine important facts and information. Remind students of John’s fast- LINK talking and play the video with captions. Pause and • Crash Course World History #8 – rewind when necessary. As students watch the video, Alexander the Great have them consider how we view people and their legacy following their deaths. Perhaps Alexander’s Video questions for students to answer during greatest feat was his hero-like status in the decades their viewing. 49 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.3 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: Modern historians tend to recognize 1. (1:58) Why is it problematic to refer to certain rulers as “the Great”? that while a ruler might be great to some people, he might be other people’s idea of terrible. SAMPLE ANSWER: Alexander of Macedon (356-323 BCE) 2. (2:32) Who was Alexander the Great? was the son of King Philip II of Macedon, the man responsible for conquering and uniting the Greek city-states after the Peloponnesian War. He was said to have tamed a horse no one else could ride by himself at which time his father said he was destined for greatness and Macedonia was too small of an empire for him. Alexander was also an accomplished general and he greatly increased the size of his empire before dying prematurely at the age of 32. SAMPLE ANSWER: He states that this is an extension of 3. (2:54) Why does John Green say that it’s difficult to judge someone’s greatness based on his or her the idea that history is the record of the deeds of great men, accomplishments? which leaves out half the population (women). Also, some people cannot take credit for other historic events that were important such as the Black Plague. SAMPLE ANSWER: Alexander conquered a lot of territory, 4. (3:35) What is the first reason for Alexander’s “greatness”? destroyed the Persian Empire, and extended his from Egypt to India. He was also a really good general. SAMPLE ANSWER: Alexander was really good at tearing 5. (4:18) What wasn’t Alexander very good at and what became of his empire? things down but not so great at building things to replace them. As a result, his empire was divided into three different empires upon his death, with each one being ruled by one of Alexander’s generals (Antigonids in Greece and Macedonia, Ptolemies in Egypt, and the Seleucids in Persia). All of these dynasties lasted far longer than that of Alexander’s. 50 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES SAMPLE ANSWER: Alexander had an enormous impact on the 6. (5:53) What was Alexander’s second greatness, according to John Green? world after his death. Future generals and rulers looked to Alexander as the epitome of an amazing military leader and empire builder. He introduced the Persian idea of absolute monarchy to the ancient world and built a number of cities along his warring route that would become quite “great” after his death, including Alexandria in Egypt. He also gave his empire a common language – Greek – which meant that trade and overall conversations were made easier by this. Greek was even the chosen language for the New Testament, which was written about 500 years after his death. SAMPLE ANSWER: John Green says that maybe people 7. (7:31) What was Alexander’s third greatness? Alexander is great because of the legend that surrounds him, or the exaggeration of that legend. Accounts of his life were written after he died so historians could embellish the facts a bit. He died when he was 32, was tutored by Aristotle, and chased the Persian king around the Middle East just so he could kill him. He supposedly died of a fever but this didn’t sound very macho so later historians added that he might have died from alcohol poisoning or from someone trying to assassinate him. SAMPLE ANSWER: Over a thousand years after Alexander’s 8. (9:29) How do Napoleon and Pompey help Alexander’s greatness? death, Napoleon invaded Egypt because he was obsessed with him and wanted to do what Alexander had done. The Roman general Pompey was also fascinated with Alexander, which meant that Alexander became the “great” because so many people after his death thought he was great. SAMPLE ANSWER: Since men are usually given the title 9. (10:28) Why is the study of greatness troubling? of great throughout history, it implies that history was made primarily by men and that history is about celebrity and legend rather than actual accomplishments. 51 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.3 | WATCH | Conceptual Thinking Answer the following question to make connections across different concepts and think more critically about the information presented in the video. 1. Why does John Green admit that both Crash Course World History and world history textbooks in general tend to marginalize women? Why do they do that? 52 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.4 | READ | An Age of Greek and Persian Power PURPOSE This reading explores the founding and expansion of Greek which contributed to the spread of Greek ideas and customs civilization, but also several other important developments far east of the Aegean Sea. Students will read about the that occurred about the same time. Yes, the 400 years from empires outside of Greece and will examine how trade was 600 to 200 BCE included the flourishing of the Greek a major force in the integration of ideas and culture. civilization and the Golden Age of Athens. Those developments, As the number of cities, so too did the demand for goods, however, took place on a much larger stage that what is which expanded land and sea trade routes. now Greece. A succession of empires greatly contributed to the Mediterranean region’s integration and expansion, especially through the conquests of Alexander the Great, PROCESS Have students read the article and instruct them •How was trade handled? What was traded to pay particular attention to the development and through what means? of empires. Host a discussion of themes following •Other than goods, what else was exchanged their completion of the reading. during the foundation of new empires? Potential Questions & Discussion Points: ATTACHMENT • What aspects of society and culture flourished during the development of new lands and empires? •An Age of Greek and Persian Power Article • What administrative challenges did these empires face? 53 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | An Age of Greek and Persian Power: The Persian (Achaemenid) Empire, 550–330 BCE BACKGROUND ADMINISTRATION The Persians, a group of Indo-European speaking tribes The vast Persian Empire was the most culturally diverse from Inner Eurasia, arrived on the Iranian plateau sometime empire that had ever existed. It linked the east with the west between 1500 and 1000 BCE. About 550 BCE, Cyrus II, the and ruled cities where people of every class and culture leader of the Achaemenids, which was one of these Persian rubbed shoulders and ideas. It was a huge crucible of cultural clans, successfully revolted against the Medes, the Persians’ and social cross-fertilization. To rule it, the Persians had overlords, who controlled upper Mesopotamia. to invent new administrative tools. FORMATION It was Darius I who, building on the administrative systems It took Cyrus less than a decade to conquer the Medes. He then inherited from the Assyrians and Babylonians, reorganized the moved on to seize control of the Anatolian Peninsula and the empire. He established twenty provinces (called satrapies), Greek city-states nestled along the peninsula’s western edge. each with its governor, military commander, and treasurer, Syria was next and in 539 Babylon fell as well. who reported separately to the king. In addition, there was a separate system of inspectors known as the King’s Eyes When conquering Babylon, Cyrus had promised to treat it or the Kings Ears. These inspectors had their own armies and fairly and not to destroy either its institutions or its culture. could move against even a military commander if necessary. At the same time, he returned to various groups the goods The system was so effective in preventing rebellion, which the Babylonians had taken from them as a sign of corruption, and harsh rule that it was copied again and again, conquest. Cyrus also freed the Hebrews, who had been even in modern times. enslaved in Babylon. He allowed them to return home. Later he helped them rebuild their temple in Jerusalem. This Darius also introduced the Babylonian calendar, known for policy of local cultural independence won for him a reputation its accuracy, and set up granaries to assure a constant as a fair ruler. supply of food for his troops. He built elaborate underground irrigation systems as well. In the far reaches of what is now Meanwhile, other Persian forces moved northeast into the rich Iran, these irrigation systems turned deserts into gardens. lands of Bactria-Sogdiana where they captured most of the trade centers on the Silk Routes that led to Inner Eurasia. RELIGION After Cyrus’ death, his son, Cambyses, added Egypt to the The Persian ruling class followed the religion of Zoroastrianism. empire‘s holdings. In 322 BCE, Cambyses died. Darius (522- This religion taught that there were two deities, Ahura 486 BCE), a strong military leader, seized control. He soon Mazda, the god of light and truth and Ahriman, the god pushed the Persian borders to the Indus River valley in the of darkness and evil. These two gods were in constant east. The Persians now controlled the largest empire the struggle, a struggle that Ahura Mazda would eventually win. world had ever seen. Zoroastrians believed that after the final battle, there would 54 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY be a Judgment Day and everyone who had ever lived would wide, from the Nile to the Red Sea. Completed in 500 BCE, be judged and sent either to heaven or hell. These ideas are it connected Memphis, then the capital of Egypt, to Babylon believed to have influenced Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. by sea. Today, there are Zoroastrians communities in Iran and India, where they are called Parsis or Parsees. Communities also DECLINE/FALL exist in other parts of the world including the United States. During Darius’ reign, the Greek city-states at the western The Achaemeinds did not force Zoroastrianism on their subjects. edge of the Anatolian Peninsula rebelled. They were As rulers of an empire that embraced more cultural encouraged by Athens. Darius successfully squashed the communities than had any other before them, they wisely rebellion, and two years later he sent an expedition to allowed their subjects much cultural freedom. discipline Athens and the other unruly Greek city states. The Persian army was defeated at the battle of Marathon Persian kings saw themselves as ruling by the will of the in 490 BCE. Darius died before he could launch another god Ahura Mazda who cared for the well-being of all. In an attack; but his son Xerxes advanced on Greece with inscription on a rock in Behistun, written in 519 BCE, Darius a huge expeditionary force. Xerxes managed to burn Athens. proclaims that “by the favor of Ahura Mazda I am King; Ahura He was defeated, however, when the Athenian general Mazda bestowed the kingdom upon me.” Themistocles lured the Persian fleet into a trap at the Battle of Salamis in 480 BCE. After this humiliation, the Persians TRADE chose to deal with the Greeks through diplomacy, siding with Darius encouraged trade and economic development in a one, then another of Athens’ enemies. number of ways. He standardized weights and measures and established a coinage system based on gold and silver. He The next 150 years of Persian history saw slow decline under also built banking houses. (The word “check” is derived from a series of ineffectual rulers. Rebellions multiplied. By 359 a Persian word.) BCE, Phillip II of Macedonia had seen the empire’s weakness and planned an invasion. He was murdered before he could When Darius came to power, a network of roads connecting launch the plan, but his son Alexander carried it forward. In 330, the urban centers in Southwest Asia already existed. Darius Alexander earned his title “the Great” with the defeat added a royal road from Susa in the Persian homeland to of Darius III the last emperor of the Achaemenid dynasty. Sardis in the western part of Anatolia, a distance of some 1500 miles. A system of relay stations made it possible for Source: a rider carrying mail to ride the distance in six to nine days Eppley, Felicia. “Expanding Networks of Exchange and Encounter 1200 BCE – rather than the usual three months. Officials and merchants 500 CE. An Age of Greek and Persian Power 600 – 200 BCE.” World History traveling on the imperial roads to do the emperor’s business For Us All. PDF File. carried passports entitling them to free food and lodging along the way. Perhaps Darius’ most ambitious undertaking was the building of a canal, 140 km long and 50 meters 55 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | An Age of Greek and Persian Power: The Athenian Empire, 454–404 BCE BACKGROUND Greece was a collection of city-states sprinkled across the tip not leave the League without unanimous consent of the of the Balkan Peninsula, on islands of the Aegean Sea, along members, which meant that Athens could prevent any city- the western edge of the Anatolian Peninsula (Ionia), and on state from dropping out. the rim of the Black Sea. In the sixth century BCE, the Ionian city-states belonged to Persia, which conquered them along Xerxes died in 456 BCE and with him the threat from Persia. with the rest of the Anatolian Peninsula. In 494 BCE, however, Nevertheless, Pericles (495-429), the powerful, charismatic these city- states revolted, spurred on by Athens. Darius, the leader of Athens, refused to allow any state to leave the Persian emperor quickly squashed the uprising, and two League. In fact, he forced more city-states to join. States that years later, sent an army to get even with Athens. In spite did not cooperate were subject to occupation by Athenian of having a force several times larger as the Athenian troops. In 454 BCE, the League’s treasury was moved to Athens. army, the Persians suffered defeat on the plains of Marathon The Delian League had become the Athenian empire. in 490 BCE. At its imperial height in the 440s BCE, Athens controlled 172 tribute-paying city-states. Darius died before he could have another go at the Athenians. But in 480 BCE his son Xerxes launched a second attack. ADMINISTRATION The Athenian navy, however, outfoxed and outmaneuvered Athens, the champion of individualism and the independent the Persian fleet at the Battle of Salamis. Xerxes watched city-state, had become the oppressor. While probably no the defeat of his navy from his throne high up on the coastal Athenian would have admitted to owning subject states, plain overlooking the battle site. He quickly marched home Athens certainly treated the states as though they were in humiliation. The following year, the Greeks defeated the private property. Uncooperative states had their land seized remnants of the Persian army at Platea. and handed out to Athenian colonists. Governments in uncooperative states were overthrown and replaced. Taxes FOUNDING were collected regularly and often raised. With no external Although the Persians had been defeated, they remained enemy threatening the empire, the funds piled up in the a threat to the Greeks. In 478, 104 Greek city-states created Athenian treasury. an alliance, the Delian League, under Athenian leadership, agreeing to contribute ships or cash to Athens in exchange Therefore, it was not long before these taxes from member for building and maintaining a navy. Although the League states, whose citizens were mostly farmers, traders, and was run by a council of representatives from member states, herders, were being used support projects in Athens. This the Athenians, as the leading city-state, determined how money financed the art, architecture, and literature of what much each state would be taxed—how many ships it would historians call the Golden Age of Athens. In 447 BCE, funds contribute or how much money it would pay. Members could from the League’s treasury paid for the construction of the Parthenon. Completed in 432, it was built on the Acropolis, 56 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY where the Persians had destroyed temples in 480 BCE. DECLINE/FALL Phidias (490-430), one of Greece’s greatest sculptors, created In the wars against Persia, Athens and Sparta had been allies. the Parthenon’s monumental statue of Athena. It was about Now they turned against one another. The increase in thirty-nine feet high and made of gold and ivory. The figure Athenian wealth and power, both political and commercial, of Athena held a spear in her left hand and a six-foot high alarmed the Spartans and their allies. In 460 BCE, the First statue of Nike, the goddess of Victory, in her right hand. Peloponnesian War broke out. In 445 BCE a 30- year peace treaty was signed, but the peace didn’t last. In 431, the The arts, including drama, also flourished under the Athenian fighting resumed. In 404, The Spartans won and imposed empire. Aeschylus, Aristophanes, Euripides, and Sophocles, humiliating terms on Athens. All but a few of its ships had four of Greece’s most important playwrights, wrote during to be surrendered. Athenian democracy was replaced by this period. So did the historians Herodotus (c. 490-c.425 BCE) a Council of Thirty, an oligarchy, loyal to Sparta. In addition, and Thucydides (c. 460/455-c. 300 BCE). Athenian property was plundered and many citizens were exiled. The Athenian Empire had come to an end. Needless to say, subject city-states were not happy about underwriting the glory of Athens. They did, however, benefit Source: to some extent from the arrangement, enjoying a period Eppley, Felicia. “Expanding Networks of Exchange and Encounter 1200 BCE – of relative peace and prosperity. 500 CE. An Age of Greek and Persian Power 600 – 200 BCE.” World History For Us All. PDF File. RELIGION All of the city-states of the Athenian empire shared generally the same culture, so religion was never an issue. By 500 BCE, however, the old polytheistic religion of Zeus, Hera, and Athena, had ceased to be used for much more than public ceremony. Into this spiritual void came mystery religions such as the Egyptian cult of the goddess Isis. These cults had elaborate rites and restricted memberships. At the same time, thinkers like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle used reason to develop systems of rational thought, philosophies that spread widely in later centuries. TRADE The Athenian navy cleared the Aegean of pirates. This was a benefit to all of the merchants of the empire because it allowed for an increase in trade. The downside was that Athens closely controlled trade so as to benefit itself. 57 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | An Age of Greek and Persian Power: Alexander’s Empire, 330–323 BCE BACKGROUND Macedonia was a small woodland kingdom north of Greece. and Babylonia, conquering as he went. He faced the Persians It was peopled by Greek-speaking warrior-aristocrats in three major battles and won each against huge odds. who ruled over farmers and herders. Athens and the other He forced Emperor Darius III (336-300 BCE) to flee for his culturally sophisticated city-states to the south tended to life. He then occupied the great Persian capitals, and regard Macedonians as uncivilized and their land as a source moved into the empire’s northeastern provinces, taking of timber, gold, and horses. In 358 BCE, Philip II became the possession of stretches of the trans-Eurasian silk routes. Macedonian king. He had become familiar with Greek life, In 326 BCE, he turned southeast and pushed his exhausted culture, and military tactics during the three years he spent troops across the Hindu Kush Mountains into the Indus as a hostage in Thebes. While he had no use for democracy, valley. There, he subdued one local ruler after another. When he admired Hellenic (Greek) ceremony and cultural refinement. he asked his troops to go on beyond the Indus, they refused. He saw that they could be pushed no further and agreed When he returned to Macedonia, Philip created a new kind to head home. In 330 BCE, Alexander was in possession of army, one with soldiers who served year-round. He trained of a gigantic Indo-Mediterranean empire. his forces in Greek military tactics and armed them with thirteen foot spear-tipped pikes. Then he advanced on the ADMINISTRATION Greek city-states, including Athens. He destroyed Thebes Alexander was undoubtedly a conqueror and destroyer. For and Sparta, spared Athens, and declared himself supreme example, he demolished the Greek city of Thebes, and he leader of a unified Greco-Macedonian (that is Greek and allowed his solders to reduce the Persian capital of Persepolis Macedonian) federation of states. to ruins, killing the men, enslaving the women, and carrying off the city’s treasure. Alexander, however, was also a builder. FOUNDING He was enamored of Greek culture and an admirer of the Philip intended to attack Persian-ruled Anatolia next, but Persian’s skill at administering an empire. At the practical he was assassinated before he could take action. He was level, he kept Persian bureaucratic organization, sometimes succeeded by his son, Alexander, barely twenty years old. substituting Macedonians in key positions. He extended Alexander had been educated by the Greek philosopher the Persian system of satraps (provinces) to the lands he Aristotle and trained in politics and war by his father. He was conquered in non-Persian areas south of the Hindu Kush. tireless in battle, a stickler for details, and conscious of his image. He was adored by his soldiers and almost everyone Everywhere, he established new cities in the Greek style else who met him. and filled them with ex-soldiers mostly Greek and Macedonian, who settled down and formed an elite class. Most of these In 334 BCE, Alexander attacked Persia at the head of an army Greeks married local women and reared half-Greek, half- of 35,000 Macedonians and Greek allies. In the course of the Persian children who grew up speaking Greek. Alexander next eleven years, he moved through Anatolia, Syria, Egypt, himself wed Roxana, the daughter of a prince of Sogdiana, 58 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY an ancient territory that generally corresponds to the modern DECLINE/FALL nation of Uzbekistan. Alexander also held a gigantic marriage After Alexander took the Indus valley in 325 BCE, he looked ceremony, wedding thousands of his soldiers to Persian women. southeastward toward the Ganges River. By this time, his army had been away from home for almost ten years. Even TRADE his toughest Macedonian warriors were exhausted. They Alexander traveled with a court that included scientists, refused to go further, and Alexander decided to turn for home. doctors, architects, artisans, merchants, and surveyors. In the He got as far as Babylon, where in June 323 BCE he died. region between the Hindu Kush and the Indus, his surveyors He appears to have died of a fever complicated by a number laid out a road that facilitated trade in the area long after of factors: wounds he had suffered in the course of battles, Alexander had left. Later, the Mauryan Emperors of India overwork, a hunting trip in mosquito-ridden swamps, and extended the route to the Ganges and beyond. The route a heavy night of drinking. He lingered for four days, and is still used today. when his generals desperately urged him to name an heir, he is said to have replied that it would go to the strongest. RELIGION In fact, after his death, his generals almost immediately set Alexander’s mother once told him that his real father was to warring against one another, resulting in the division not Phillip but Apollo. At the time, the pronouncement did of the empire into three major military states. Alexander not appear to give Alexander divine ambitions. When he got asked to be buried in Egypt, and reportedly his body was to Egypt, in 331, however, he went to consult the oracle of taken there in a golden sarcophagus (coffin). But no one Amon, the Creator God, in the Lybian Desert. There the knows where the conqueror’s remains were laid. priest told the king that he was the son of Amon-Zeus, a name combining the chief Egyptian and Greek gods. Shortly Source: after, Alexander had himself recognized as the Pharaoh, Eppley, Felicia. “Expanding Networks of Exchange and Encounter 1200 BCE – whom Egyptians considered to be divine. 500 CE. An Age of Greek and Persian Power 600 – 200 BCE.” World History For Us All. PDF File. As his victories mounted and his legend grew, Alexander seemed to become more convinced of his divine roots. At one point, he required that his subjects prostrate themselves (lie face down) before him. His Greek court and soldiers refused to do this, so he dropped the issue. He did, however, promote his relationship to the gods by putting his own likeness on the front of coins and the image of Zeus wielding a thunderbolt on the back. During his lifetime, several religious cults devoted to his worship appear to have arisen, though they disappeared shortly after he died. 59 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | An Age of Greek and Persian Power: The Ptolemaic Empire, 323–30 BCE BACKGROUND After conquering as far east as the Indus River valley, from their kingdom, the financial minister became the most Alexander the Great returned to Babylon in today’s Iraq, powerful administrator. Virtually everything taxable was where he did in June 323 BCE. As he lay on his deathbed, taxed—houses, goods people bought, goods they sold, his generals desperately urged him to name an heir. farmlands, vineyards, orchards, and gardens. Furthermore, He is said to have replied that it would go to the strongest. licenses were required for fishing and trading as well as In fact, after his death, his generals almost immediately for keeping bees and pigs. (Part of a tax collector’s job was set to warring against one another, resulting in the division to keep up the morale of his victims so that they would not of the empire into three major military states, the Seleucid simply abandon their land or jobs.) In addition, the empire centered on Iran and Iraq, the Antigonid monarchy government controlled trade, mines, quarries, salt production, centered on Macedonia and Greece, and the Ptolemaic and any commodity which produced oil—linseed, safflower, kingdom centered on Egypt. and caster. They also enforced strict controls on the production of linen, papyrus, and beer. At the same time, they expanded FOUNDING cultivatable land with irrigation and introduced new crops After almost fifty years of civil wars, three of Alexander’s such as cotton and improved varieties of wine grapes. former generals emerged victorious. One of the big winners was Ptolemy, who got Egypt, perhaps the richest prize. In Alexandria, on the Mediterranean, was the major Egyptian addition he and his successors were able to grab the island city and port. Founded by Alexander, it was the heart of the of Cyprus and coastal lands of Anatolia and the Levant (today Ptolemaic administration. Its population was a cosmopolitan Syria, Lebanon, and Israel). During the 300 years of their reign, mix of Greeks, Macedonians, Jews, and native Egyptians. none of Ptolemies spoke Egyptian except for Cleopatra VII, It was one of the intellectual centers of the Hellenistic, that the last one, who died in 30 BCE. is, Greek-like cultural world. It was here that Ptolemy I, who collected scrolls obsessively, founded the great museum and ADMINISTRATION library. Eventually, the library had some 500,000 scrolls. The Ptolemies ran Egypt as though it were a private estate. The Ptolemies recruited the best minds of the day, creating Non-Egyptian soldiers (Greek, Macedonian, and Anatolian) the first “think tank”. It was here where Aristarchus of were hired to fight the Ptolemaic wars and keep the Egyptian Samothrace theorized that the sun was the center of the subjects line. Greeks had been in Egypt as traders for several universe and where Eratosthenes of Cyrene used simple centuries. Now they became part of the exclusively Greek geometry to calculate, with amazing accuracy, the earth’s ruling class, which excluded even upper-class Egyptians. circumference. It was at Alexandria that Ptolemy I began construction of the gigantic Pharos lighthouse, which became one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. The Ptolemy’s divided their kingdom into provinces, each of which was subdivided into areas and villages. Because the Ptolemies’ chief concern was the extraction of wealth 60 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY TRADE DECLINE/FALL Trade expanded under the Ptolemies. Their foreign holdings By 200 BCE, the glory days of the Ptolemaic Dynasty were along the edges of the Mediterranean enriched the empire waning. When facing a struggle in 217 with the Seleucid king, with timber, metals, pitch, wine, and precious metals. Antiochus III, the Ptolemies found themselves in a financial In addition, they built roads from the Nile to new ports on the bind. Without funds to hire mercenaries, they were forced to Red Sea. The new ports were arm some 200,000 Egyptian troops. The cost of the war led to increasing money problems and peasant unrest. Between designed to facilitate the importation of elephants, major 207 and 186 BCE, Upper Egypt broke away and was governed military weapon in that era. These ports also handled spices by separate Pharaohs of Nubian origin. The Ptolemies’ lack from the Arabian Peninsula and India, spices that were of concern for the population, widespread corruption, civil crucial to religious sacrifice and mummification. Taking unrest, a disastrous foreign policy, and near economic collapse advantage of the seasonal winds (monsoons) which blew contributed to the decline of the empire. It had no resources across the Arabian Sea, mariners and merchants built up to ward off the growing power of Rome to the west. It is not trade lines between India and the Mediterranean world. surprising that the Roman Emperor, Octavian, seized Egypt from Cleopatra, the last of the Ptolemies, in 30 BCE. RELIGION Although the Greeks brought their gods with them to Egypt, Source: the Ptolemies carefully respected the traditional Egyptian Eppley, Felicia. “Expanding Networks of Exchange and Encounter 1200 BCE – gods. Ptolemy I became the Pharaoh, the god-king. He called 500 CE. An Age of Greek and Persian Power 600 – 200 BCE.” World History himself Ptolemy I, Sotor, or Savior. After his death, his son For Us All. PDF File. Ptolemy II established a joint religious cult for his father and mother as savior gods. Cults were established for subsequent Ptolemaic rulers as well, sometimes even while they were alive. At death, the bodies of these Hellenistic pharaohs were mummified and buried in sarcophagi (coffins) covered with Egyptian hieroglyphs. At the same time, those following other religions were not harassed. While the Ptolemies controlled Palestine, the Jews, for example, enjoyed a period of peace. Jews living in Alexandria were allowed to build a synagogue in that city, and, under Ptolemy II, they translated Jewish Scripture into Greek. (Many of the Jews in Alexandria spoke Greek rather than Hebrew.) Only under the vicious Ptolemy IV (221203) were they persecuted. 61 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.5 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #10 The Roman Empire. Or Republic. Or... Which Was it? PREVIEW PURPOSE In which John Green explores exactly when Rome went from In Crash Course World History #10, students examine Rome’s being the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire. Here’s a hint: transition from city-state to kingdom to republic to empire it had something to do with Julius Caesar, but maybe less and Julius Caesar’s critical role in the transition. Traditionally, than you think. Find out how Caesar came to rule the empire, historians divide Ancient Roman history into three main what led to him getting stabbed 23 times on the floor of the periods but the end of the Republic and the beginning of the senate, and what happened in the scramble for power after Empire are questionable and therefore debatable when his assassination. John covers Rome’s transition from city- discussing power shifts in Roman history. As was the case state to dominant force in the Mediterranean in less than 12 of Alexander the Great, empire building and military minutes. Well, Rome’s expansion took hundreds of years, strength go hand-in-hand. he just explains it in under 12 minutes. The senate, the people, Rome, the caesarian section, the Julian calendar and our old Crash Course videos should be used as an introduction to new friend Pompey all make appearances, but NOT the Caesar ideas and concepts, an instruction to core ideas of the unit, and Salad, as Julius had nothing to do with it. should serve as a reinforcement of previously learned events. PROCESS As with all of the videos in the course, assign Roman Republic and the United States. Historians students to watch the video before class. The first debate whether or not the Republic can be time through, have students just try to capture the considered a democracy. What do you think? gist of the video. The next time, have them try to determine important facts and information. Remind LINK students of John’s fast-talking and play the video • Crash Course World History #10 – with captions. Pause and rewind when necessary. The Roman Empire. Or Republic. As students watch the video, have them consider the Or... Which Was it? connections between the political systems of the 62 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.5 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: The patricians were the wealthy 1. (1:33) Who were the patricians and plebeians? From which group were Roman senators chosen and why? aristocrats of Rome while the plebeians were everyone else. What were the duties of the Roman Senate? Senators were chosen from the patrician class because they had the money and power. The Roman Senate was the legislative body of the Roman government so they made laws, advised consuls, and set policy for the consuls. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Roman Senate chose two consuls 2. (2:03) Why did Rome need consuls and what were their job limitations? every year to act as the chief executives of Rome. There were two of them in order to have a balance of power and also so that one could go to war while the other took care of domestic issues. The consuls only served for one-year terms and after a senator had served as consul then he was forbidden from serving again for 10 years (although these rules were often bent). SAMPLE ANSWER: If Rome was in danger, either domestically 3. (2:41) Why did they also need a dictator and who was the model of a good dictator? or from outsiders, then one person would take charge of the Republic to guide them out of danger. Cincinnatus, a Roman general, was the epitome of a good dictator because he came out of retirement to help Rome and then when Rome was out of danger, he returned to his home and gave up his power. SAMPLE ANSWER: He was from the patrician class and 4. (3:15) Why was Gaius Julius Caesar destined to go into government? served in the army and the Senate. He eventually decided to run for consul after proving to be a powerful general and governor of Spain. 63 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES 5. (3:49) Who made up the first triumvirate and SAMPLE ANSWER:Caesar, Crassus, and Pompey were why did these men decide to work together? the first triumvirate. Each needed the other’s support in order to gain control of the Roman government. Caesar was a popular general, Crassus was one of the richest men in Rome, and Pompey, also a general, was very powerful. SAMPLE ANSWER: When Crassus died in battle, Pompey 6. (4:56) Why was Caesar recalled to Rome from Gaul? What did Caesar end up doing when he returned to Rome? maneuvered to take control of Rome for himself, which angered Caesar. In order for Pompey to be the sole ruler of Rome then he had to get rid of Caesar. Pompey worked with the Senate to accuse Caesar of corruption and recalled him to Rome. Caesar organized his army (legion) and crossed the Rubicon River, the boundary between the area he controlled and Rome, which basically meant he was declaring war on Rome (Pompey and the Senate). Pompey fled and Caesar became both dictator and consul of Rome. SAMPLE ANSWER: Pompey fled to Egypt and Caesar chased 7. (5:41) Why did Caesar go to Egypt? Who did he meet there and why was this important to the history him in order to kill him but one of the co-rulers of Egypt, of Rome? Ptolemy, had his people kill him first. Caesar thus supported Ptolemy’s sister-wife, Cleopatra, in their power struggle for control of Egypt. Cleopatra became the last pharaoh of Egypt, sided with Marc Antony in the struggle for Rome after Caesar’s death, and paid the ultimate price for it. SAMPLE ANSWER: Caesar instituted reforms to help the 8. (6:03) What reforms did Caesar make after becoming consul/dictator of Rome? soldiers and ordinary people of Rome. He provided land for pensions for his soldiers, restructured the debts of these ordinary citizens of Rome, and changed the calendar, which looks a lot like the one we use today. SAMPLE ANSWER: Caesar was stabbed by the senators 23 9. (6:39) What eventually happened to Caesar and why? Why wasn’t the Republic reestablished after this? times and died on the Ides of March (March 15, 44 BCE). The Roman Senate was hoping the Republic (and their power) would return but Caesar’s reforms were extremely popular with the people, who then backed a second triumvirate 64 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES SAMPLE ANSWER: Mark Antony (Caesar’s best friend and 10. (7:07) Who made up the second triumvirate and what became of Rome? a general), Octavian (Caesar’s nephew/adopted son), and Lepidus (the other guy whose name no one ever remembers) became the second triumvirate. They fought over control of Rome and Octavian won, became the emperor of Rome, |and changed his name to Augustus (Revered One), while the Senate became a rubber stamp of approval for his policies. SAMPLE ANSWER: Consuls/generals such as Marius and 11. (11:38) What evidence does John Green use to say that the Roman Republic ended long before Caesar Sulla, who came to power long before Caesar, governed Rome and Augustus came to power? as dictators would have. When Rome began conquering far off regions such as Spain and northern Egypt after the Punic Wars, it had to incorporate a diverse collection of people who then had to be loyal to Rome. Green argues that the Roman Republic died because much of the power was in the hands of one man who also controlled the Roman army, and you need a strong army if you are going to continue to expand your borders (empire). LESSON 2.2.5 | WATCH | Conceptual Thinking Answer the following question to make connections across different concepts and think more critically about the information presented in the video. 1. What elements of the Roman Republic can we find in American culture and government today? 65 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.6 | WATCH | Crash Course World History #12 Fall of the Roman Empire PREVIEW PURPOSE In which John Green teaches you about the fall of the In Crash Course World History #12, students examine the Roman Empire, which happened considerably later than you decline of the Western Roman Empire. Once Rome stopped may have been told. While the Western Roman Empire fell expanding in the 2nd century CE, loyalty to the empire began to barbarians in 476 CE, the Byzantines in Constantinople to fail as citizens of the empire were burdened with high continued the Eastern Empire nicely, calling themselves taxes and debt. The rise of Christianity contributed as one Romans for a further 1000 years. Find out what Justinian and of the factors that led to the death of the empire along with the rest of the Byzantine emperors were up to over there, the reliance on mercenaries. Other causes that played a role and how the Roman Empire dragged out its famous Decline in the fall of Rome were a series of rather awful emperors well into medieval times. In addition to all this, you’ll learn during the 3rd century CE when 21 men ascended to power about ancient sports riots and hipster barbarians, too. in the course of 50 years, along with an increase in plagues brought forth by trade exchanges along the Silk Road. The Western Roman Empire serves as a prime example of how great empires come to an inevitable end, though it did flourish for another thousand years before the Ottoman Turks conquered it in 1453 CE. PROCESS As with all of the videos in the course, assign to fail. Are empires pushed or pulled into collapse? students to watch the video before class. The first And in what ways is the Roman Empire still alive today? time through, have students just try to capture LINK the gist of the video. The next time, have them try to determine important facts and information. •Crash Course World History #12 – Remind students of John’s fast-talking and play Fall of the Roman Empire the video with captions. Pause and rewind when Video questions for students to answer during necessary. As students watch the video, have them their viewing. consider what causes and forces bring an empire 66 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.6 | WATCH | Key Ideas – Factual Use these questions and prompts at the appropriate stopping points to check in with students and ensure they are getting the key concepts covered in the video. SAMPLE ANSWER: “Barbarians at the gates.” - The city 1. (:30) What is the “traditional” view of how the Roman Empire fell? of Rome was conquered by barbarians (Goths) in 476 CE. SAMPLE ANSWER: The decision to incorporate Germanic 2. (2:20) What decision led to the decline of the Roman legions? warriors into the Roman army. SAMPLE ANSWER: 41 different men claimed to be emperor, 3. (3:45) In the 49-year span from 235 to 284 CE, how many people were or claimed to be emperor of Rome? while only 21 actually were emperor. SAMPLE ANSWER: John was referencing the Eastern Roman 4. (5:10) Earlier in the video, John claims the Roman Empire survived until the 15th century CE - what does Empire, commonly known as the Byzantine Empire, although he mean by this? not by the people who lived in it who called themselves Romans, whose capital was Byzantium, a city on the Bosphorus Strait that Constantine will later rename Constantinople. SAMPLE ANSWER: Nicea in 325 CE. 5. (6:20) Where and when did Constantine hold the first church council for Christianity? SAMPLE ANSWER: That they followed Roman law. Eastern 6. (8:00) During the Thought Bubble, John lists a number of similarities between Eastern and Western Roman Empire. Roman Empire’s codification of Roman laws was one What, perhaps, is the most consistently Roman aspect of of its greatest achievements and still has huge influence Byzantine society? on law in Europe. SAMPLE ANSWER: The Hagia Sophia or Church of Saint 7. (9:00) What building became a symbol for the wealth and opulence of the Eastern Roman Empire? Wisdom, which had the world’s largest dome that wouldn’t be rivaled for another 500 years upon its completion. SAMPLE ANSWER: She fought to protect their rights in divorce 8. (10:00) How did Emperor Justinian’s wife, Theodora, expand the rights of women in the empire? and property ownership matters, and even had a law passed that adulterous women should not be executed. 67 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES SAMPLE ANSWER: The two sides had different forms 9. (10:30) In what major way were the Byzantines not like the rest of the Roman Empire? of Christianity they followed. The Byzantine branch of Christianity is called Eastern or Greek Orthodox. SAMPLE ANSWER: There are doctrinal differences like 10. (11:00) What are the main differences between the two sides of the Christian churches? the dates of Easter are different between the sides, and there are political differences like who oversees the church. In the west, the Pope rules over the church - in the east, there is a patriarch appointed by the emperor. 68 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.7 | READ | A Tale of Three Empires – Bridgette Byrd O’Connor PURPOSE Empire building and maintenance is a complicated process. will read about the Roman Empire in the Mediterranean, By 300 CE, the great empires of the Afro-Eurasian ancient Han Dynasty in China, and Gupta Empire in India, will world were in trouble. The article defines what it means compare struggles each empire faced, and will determine to be an empire and examines how empires fall. Students the forces that ultimately brought the empire to fall. PROCESS Have students read the article and instruct them Potential Questions & Discussion Points: to pay particular attention to the challenges and • What’s needed to keep an empire balanced struggles each empire faced. Host a discussion and flourishing? of themes following their completion of the reading. • Are the forces that bring an empire down from the inside, outside or both? What ATTACHMENT instances can students reference to support • A Tale of Three Empires their claims? 69 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY READING | A Tale of Three Empires — Bridgette Byrd O’Connor In order to understand the fall of an empire, we must first Maintaining an empire was a monumental task and one that define the concept. I’m sure many of you are familiar required finesse and balance. Rulers wanted to extend their with the definition of a kingdom, which is usually a small empires in order to increase their tax revenues but geographic region ruled by a monarchy and composed they couldn’t tax their citizens too much or they would face of a rather homogenous group of people. These people a revolt. Therefore, they had to carefully determine the share a common culture and can reasonably get along level of taxes so that no one group was taxed too much. with each other without too many issues. You could think If rulers had to increase taxes by a considerable sum then of a kingdom like your immediate family where your they often decided it would be best to conquer more territory. parents rule over you and your siblings. An empire is a little However, conquering more land meant they needed more different in that it encompasses a larger area and while money, which became a vicious cycle until it was too much it may still be governed by one ruler, it also has a number to maintain. Rights of citizenship were also extended to the of local officials or bureaucrats, who have the power conquered people in order to make them feel like they were to maintain order in the empire but also report back to the truly part of the empire. Once again, this was yet another central government. Empires are also composed of people balancing act as rulers didn’t want to extend too much power who have different cultures, customs, and languages, which to the conquered peoples but also wanted to give them makes it hard to keep everyone happy and orderly. enough so that they wouldn’t rebel. Empire building and maintenance was a complicated process! Once you factor One of the greatest accomplishments of these large empires, in all of these issues, it’s not surprising that even the most which existed in various forms from the ancient world organized empires eventually came to an end. through the early 20th century, was organization. Empires had to make sure that their laws were carried out and By 300 CE the great empires of the Afro-Eurasian ancient that they could collect taxes from their citizens, and as a result, world were in trouble. These empires long provided their they often connected the empire by creating roads and citizens with stability in the form of large armies for establishing communication systems. These roads would not protection, an increase in the trade of goods and ideas, and only connect the empire and allow for the swift transport governments that enforced laws and justice. It wasn’t all of military personnel and supplies but they also enhanced roses and chocolates though because these empires did have trade. The communication posts, which usually functioned their issues just as any large empire would. However, as ancient pony expresses, eventually developed into border it was better to live under Roman rule, the Han dynasty towns that grew into large cosmopolitan cities. In order for in China, or the Gupta Empire in India than to be a resident all areas of the empire to trade efficiently and effectively, of one of those in-between periods that saw civil war and a common currency was established, which further uncertainty. While the Han dynasty collapsed in 220 CE, increased trade and wealth. the Western Roman Empire did not fall until 476 CE, and the Gupta Empire faded out by 550 CE. However, two of these empires were in trouble long before that. 70 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY HAN DYNASTY, CHINA China has been a large and populous region for thousands well. Competing factions were vying for power at court while of years and consequently, it has also had to deal with military generals were attempting to increase their power as outsiders attempting to invade the area for just as long, well. As a result, the dynasty fell in 220 CE when the generals which was the main reason they built that “great” wall. decided to divide the empire amongst themselves. The Han dynasty (206 BCE to 220 CE) entered into an agreement with these nomadic tribes that lived on its WESTERN ROMAN EMPIRE northern borders. The dynasty would pay them in The Roman Empire had grown substantially from the end of return for peace and this agreement worked for many Augustus’ reign in 14 CE to the death of Trajan in 117 CE and years until one of these nomadic groups got greedy. stretched from modern day Britain to Syria. As the Romans Instead of dividing the payment from the Han amongst were increasing the territory of the empire, the government all the nomads, one group kept it all for themselves. made sure to extend Roman citizenship to conquered lands This, of course, angered the other nomadic tribes and but also allowed the conquered people to keep many of their they attacked both the Han and the nomadic traitor. local traditions. This was an incredibly smart way to govern As a result, each nomadic group negotiated individual as all people had the opportunity to become citizens of the payments and costs increased to the point that the Roman Empire and therefore achieve a semblance of equality Han could not keep up. While the government had issues under the law while also maintaining their local customs and with external forces, there were internal forces that also religious beliefs. The Roman government also benefitted weakened the dynasty. Peasant farmers were experiencing from the expansion of the empire since they could now collect an economic crisis and were forced to sell their property taxes from a large population and increase the size of their to wealthy landlords. These aristocrats were exempt from army with new recruits. While this appears to be a win-win paying taxes, which meant that the peasant farmers lost situation for all involved, the empire soon became too large their land and the government lost tax revenue. The Han to govern effectively. dynasty appeared to be losing money at a rapid rate but then their luck really took a turn for the worse. Protecting the vast borders of the empire was a logistical nightmare and the Roman government soon found it easier In 153 CE, locusts destroyed a large portion of China’s to pay off the Germanic tribes that were known to raid the farmland while the Yellow River also began to flood border towns of the Roman Empire. While this arrangement, uncontrollably due to years of deforestation and erosion. which was similar to the Han dynasty’s bribery of the nomadic These natural disasters crippled the ability of the Han tribes surrounding China, appeased the Germanic tribes for to provide for its people. Add a generous helping of infectious a period of time, the Huns soon ended this peace. The Huns diseases, which were brought to China via the Silk Road were a nomadic tribe that lived predominantly in Central Asia trade routes, and we have a recipe for dynastic disaster. and Eastern Europe. Most students of history remember Had the Han dynasty been controlled by a powerful ruler, them because of their leader Attila the Hun, who united he or she might have been able to make policies to get China the Huns under his leadership and set about warring with out of this mess. However, the Han court was a mess as neighboring nomadic tribes such as the Goths raping, 71 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY pillaging, plundering, and burning as his troops moved from on the decline and fall of the Roman Empire, includes the rise city to city. As Attila and his men moved farther and farther of Christianity as one of the factors that led to the death west, the Germanic tribes that lived on the edges of Roman of the empire along with the reliance on mercenaries, and Empire began to move into Roman territory. The Romans the rise of the Praetorian Guard, who were the bodyguards generally accepted the Germanic refugees until some of the of the emperor but also responsible for the deaths of at least generals in the area began treating the Germanic people two emperors. Other causes played a role as well including poorly. As revenge for this mistreatment, the Germanic tribes a series of rather awful emperors during the 3rd century CE attacked the Romans and killed approximately two-thirds when 21 men ascended to power in the course of 50 years of the army including Valens, the emperor of the Eastern along with an increase in plagues brought forth by trade Roman Empire. The once great Roman army had been exchanges along the Silk Road. horribly defeated, and this provided inspiration and courage for other Germanic tribes and the Huns to attack the borders The Western Roman Empire serves as a prime example of of the Roman Empire. While the Germanic attacks on the how great empires come to an inevitable end. Once the Western Roman Empire ultimately led to the empire’s empire expands to a size that is hard to manage and cracks defeat, there were many other factors that contributed to the begin to appear in the internal structure of the government western empire’s demise. and economy then the empire cannot sustain itself. The Eastern Roman Empire with its capital at Constantinople continued The decline of the Roman Empire began long before the for almost another thousand years before the Ottoman Turks “official” fall of the western portion in 476 CE. Once Rome conquered it in 1453 CE. Constantine, the emperor who stopped expanding in the 2nd century CE, ordinary citizens succeeded Diocletian in 306 CE, built a new capital in the of the empire were burdened with high taxes and many farmers eastern portion of the empire and named it Constantinople were in debt, while aristocratic landlords became wealthier. (present day Istanbul). Constantinople, and its surrounding This, of course, is a recipe for internal disaster. Loyalty to the area, was much wealthier than the western empire due in empire began to fail, borders were harder to control, and the large part to its location along the trade route connecting the government began relying on mercenary soldiers to defend Black Sea and Asia to the Mediterranean and Europe. The its interests. Mercenaries or soldiers for hire are generally city marked the end of the major Silk Road trade route that loyal to money rather than to the empire or nation they are extended from China to the Mediterranean, but more on hired to protect. The emperor Diocletian, who reigned from that later. For now, we shift our attention back to India and 284 to 305 CE, attempted to institute reforms to save the empire one of its most successful dynasties, the Gupta. including appointing a co-emperor, Maximian, in 286 CE and finally dividing the empire into a tetrarchy seven years THE GUPTA EMPIRE, THE “GOLDEN AGE” OF INDIA later. Diocletian, however, is probably best known for his The Gupta Empire began rather late when compared to the persecution of Christians, who were considered traitors under Han and Roman empires. Founded in 320 CE by Chandra Gupta I, Roman law because they refused to worship the emperor and who united a large section of modern day India by conquering the Roman pantheon of gods. Edward Gibbon, an eighteenth- the smaller kingdoms that had risen to power after the fall of century British historian famous for writing a lengthy work the Mauryan and Kushan empires. These small kingdoms 72 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY had grown extremely wealthy due to their location in the empires succumbed to these nomadic tribes so too did the middle of the Silk Road trade routes. Those empires that Gupta. A little more than 200 years after its founding, the existed simultaneously with the Gupta in India, such as the Han Gupta empire broke apart into regional kingdoms. and Rome, desired Indian spices and cotton. Once Chandra Gupta I consolidated his power, his empire benefitted from COMPARING EMPIRES the wealth that trade provided as well as the protection of The main theme connecting these empires together was the natural boundaries of the Himalayas and the Hindu Kush obviously the problem of the nomadic tribes attacking their not to mention the fact that the Gupta Empire had the borders. Ernest O’Roark and Eileen Wood sum up this theme added protection of a huge army complete with elephants. quite nicely: Due to the relative stability of the dynasty over the course Competition among various groups of herding peoples for of the next century, the Gupta rulers focused more on becoming diminishing land and resources, combined with the comparative patrons of the arts and sciences rather than the conquest wealth of the settled empires they bordered, led nomadic of new territories, which is why this period of Indian history confederations to first raid, then invade their neighbors. This is often referred to as the “Golden Age”. This stability was, set off a chain reaction of events that, when combined with in part, generated by the fact that the Guptas allowed some internal weaknesses, helping bring down the Han and the of the conquered rulers to keep their power in exchange for Romans, while the Gupta simply fell victim to their their loyalty to the Gupta dynasty, and of course it didn’t hurt conquests directly. (6) to have that huge army to back you up either. Gupta rulers paid artists, writers, and mathematicians to create amazing Disease was another common factor in the fall of the works. These scholars made significant contributions to empires as all were linked to the Silk Road trade routes. Indian society including the use of the numbers 0 through 9 While these routes were responsible for sharing goods and the decimal system along with numerous plays and ideas across thousands of miles and very different and one of the most renowned pieces of Indian literature, cultures, they also brought new diseases. Many of these the Kama Sutra. Aryabhatiya, the man responsible for diseases killed thousands of people but they also allowed creating the number system we all use today, discovered for immunities to build up over time and therefore gave some astronomical principles that would take a century the people of Afro-Eurasia a huge advantage when they set for his European counterparts to discover such as the fact sail across the Atlantic in search of new trade routes. that Earth is spherical and rotates on its own axis. The Gupta also created an empire based primarily on Hinduism Internal struggles also played a role in the demise of these while also allowing Buddhists to worship freely. The caste civilizations and this will be a recurring theme throughout system was strengthened under Gupta rule, which makes history including some of the most famous revolutions of sense considering they believed primarily in Hinduism. the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. If a small portion The peace and prosperity of the empire soon began to fade of society becomes wealthy at the expense of a larger and as the dynasty struggled with increasing attacks by nomadic poorer portion of society then conflict will ultimately be groups from Central Asia. Therefore, just as the Han and Roman the result. Those in poverty see the wealth and success 73 CRASH COURSE | WORLD HISTORY of the elite, which inspires and fuels revolutions. Finally, the stability that these empires gave the area surrounding the Silk Road allowed for the expansion of trade, wealth, and the sharing of information. However, once these empires fell, wars increased and trade became more localized. It would take another 900-to-1000 years for new empires to gain control of the area and promote a revival of the Silk Road. Sources; O’Roark, Ernest and Eileen Wood. “Landscape Teaching Unit 5.1: Centuries of Upheaval in Afroeurasia, 300-600 CE.” World History for Us All. PDF file. Big History Project. “Unit 7: Agriculture and Civilization.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. Big History Project. “Unit 8: Expansion and Interconnection.” https://www.bighistoryproject.com. Web. 74 LESSON 2.2 | THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATES AND EMPIRES LESSON 2.2.8 | CLOSING | EQ Notebook PURPOSE At the start of the unit, students looked at the essential students should cite specific passages and evidence from question without much to go on. Now that the unit is almost the content in the unit that provide insights into answering over, students revisit the essential question. This time, the driving question. PROCESS Ask students to think about this question and respond or evidence that provide new insights into the to it on their EQ Notebook Worksheets: Why do essential question you’ve assigned for Unit 2. civilizations rise and fall? When they fall, what impact Once they’ve finished, they should think about how do they have on history? this new information has impacted their thinking about the driving question, and write down their Now that students have spent some time with the thoughts in their EQ Notebook. material of this unit, they should look back over the content covered as well as any additional information ATTACHMENT they have come across, and write down any quotes • Essential Questions Unit 2 Notebook Worksheet 75