Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
1 The Earth and its Peoples -Chapter 3 Spice Chart Social While elite groups shared similar values and enjoyed a relatively high standard of living the peasants who constituted the majority of the population may have seen some improvement in their standard of living, but far less than the wealthy elite. There was a persistent flow of Kassites (people from the Zargos Mountains to the east) into Babylon and by 1460 B.C.E. they had come to political prominence. They embraced Babylonian language and culture and married into the local population. Horses arrived in western Asia around 2000 B.C.E. Horses increases the speed of Political In the seventeenth century B.C.E. both Mesopotamia and Egypt succumbed to outside invaders. This allowed many smaller states to prosper. By 1500 B.C.E. Mesopotamia was divided into two distinct political zones: Babylonia in the south and Assyria in the north. The city of Babylon rose to political prominence under the dynasty of Hammurabi in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. During their 250 years in power, the Kassite lords of Babylonia defended their core area and traded Intellectual Most societies of the Eastern Hemisphere entered the Iron Age by the early first millennium B.C.E. Iron offered many advantages over bronze such being more readily available and forming harder, sharper edges. The Hittites were the first to use iron. The Hyksos used military technologies that gave them an advantage in warfare, such as faster chariots and the composite bow which had a greater range and velocity than a simple wooden bow. Cultural The Late Bronze Age has been referred to as a “cosmopolitan era” meaning that it was a time of widely shared cultures and ideas. Economic Extensive diplomatic relations fostered the flow of goods and ideas between different nationstates. This became a period of greatly increased trade as a result. During the second millennium B.C.E. Mesopotamian culture spread across most of western Asia. The Elamites and the Hittites adopted cuneiform. Mesopotamian myths and styles of art were widely imitated. The city of Ashur anchored a key trade route across the northern Mesopotamian plain and onto the Anatolian Plateau. The Assyrians exported textiles and tin in exchange for silver from Anatolia. The New Kingdom in Egypt was a period of innovation. Egypt became diplomatically The Pharaoh Akhenaten attempted to change the Egyptian polytheistic religion The Hittites exploited Anatolia’s rich deposists of copper, silver and iron to gain influence in 2 travel and communication between people of great distances and revolutionized military tactics as well as trade. for raw materials but did not pursue territorial conquests. In Mycenaean cities, there was a fortified and enclosed palace/administrative complex which served to carry out operations of state as well as a place of refuge in time of danger. Nearby lay the tombs of rulers. Large houses belonging to aristocrats lay outside the walls. The peasants lived on the lower slopes and in the plain below, close to the land they worked. Around 1200 B.C.E. for reasons historians largely do not understand large numbers of people were on the move. The Hittites rose to power in Anatolia from around 1700 to 1200 B.C.E. They were known for their horse-drawn chariots and their superior iron metallurgy. These two advantages in tandem gave them military superiority. The Egyptian New Kingdom was an aggressive expansionist states, extending its control into SyriaPalestine and south into Nubia. These territories linked to the states of western Asia and Egypt was exposed to foreign fruits and vegetables, new musical instruments, and new technologies such as an improved potter’s wheel and weaver’s loom. The Minoans and Mycenaeans each had their own written language known as Linear A and Linear B respectively. These languages used pictorial signs to represent syllables and are recognizably early forms of Greek. into a monotheist religion devoted to the sun god Aten. He also attempted to create a new style of art. After his death, his religious reforms were removed and the old cultural system was reinstated. The Minoans created colorful frescoes, built details sculptures and depicted plants and animals on vases. international commerce. The Mycenaeans borrowed from Minoan culture adopting their styles and techniques of architecture, pottery making and fresco and vase painting. Numerous Aegean pots found throughout the Mediterranean and Middle East which once contained wine and olive oil show evidence of an extensive trade network. Due to their lack of key natural resources such as metals and timer, the Minoan and the Mycenaean civilizations were heavily dependent on trade. 3 acted as a buffer zone in case of an attack. While Greek legends tell that the Minoans controlled much of the Greek mainland, there is little evidence of their political control exceeding the island of Crete. Other possible exports include weapons and other crafted goods, as well as slaves and mercenary soldiers. The Aegean peoples depended on imports of amber, grain and metals to sustain their economy.