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Western Asian Civilizations Chapter 2 Section 1,3, and 4 River Civilizations 1. The first civilizations developed in River Valleys 2. Why? 1. use the river for irrigation, transportation and to support the city population with drinking water. Between the Two Rivers 1. Mesopotamia or the Fertile Crescent is the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern day Iraq SUMERIA The First Cities 1. 2. About 3,200 BCE, the first Sumerian cities emerged in the southern part of Mesopotamia They lacked timber and stone in their environment. So what did they build with? 1. Instead they used clay and earth to make brick which were the building blocks of their society Architecture • Mud bricks were the building material • Walls, Why? – Protection • Uruk had six miles of walls, with guard towers – 50,000 people by 2700 BCE • Ziggurats – Step pyramids • Religious purpose Local Geography 1. Due the open geography of the Fertile Crescent, it became a major trade area 2. With help from wheeled vehicles (a new invention) the Sumerians were able to trade with people as far away as India Government • City-state – What do you think this is? • System in which city controls the countryside around it • Theocracy – Priest and Priestess held lots of influence/power Leadership 1. Due to constant battles for control of the land and water in the desert many turned to warleaders for protection 2. Eventually these warleaders became hereditary rulers 3. He was seen as chief servant of the gods Social Hierarchy 1. Each city-state had a distinct system of ranks for each person. 2. The highest class included the ruling family, leading officials, and high priests 3. The small middle class was made up of lesser priests, and scribes, some merchants, and artisans 4. At the base of society (meaning lowest class) was the majority of the people- peasant farmers. 5. Sumerians often owned slaves A. Most slaves were captured in war while others were forced into slavery to pay debts Women in Sumeria 1. 2. 3. In the earliest Sumerian myths, a mother-goddess reflected the honored role of mothers in their communities As large city-states emerged with warrior leaders at their head the female goddesses were replaced with male gods Women had few rights Sumerian Religion 1. Sumerians were polytheistic A. 2. 3. 4. 5. Polytheistic- believing in many gods They believed that the gods controlled every aspect in life, especially in nature They believed that the gods acted much like people. They had the same faults as humans and the same redeeming qualities To the Sumerians keeping these divine beings happy was the highest duty Ziggurats were built to honor the gods (or chief god of their city-state) and offered sacrifices to them there Sumerian Innovations 1. Writing 1. Cuneiform A. During this period the Sumerian develop writing that grew out of a system of pictographs priests used to record goods brought to the temple 2. Mathematics 3. Calendars Cycles in the Middle East 1. As nomadic people crossed the middle east in Mesopotamia they would often time conquer the city-states 2. Some looted and went on their way 3. Others stayed and consolidated their power to bigger empires Akkadians • Sargon – 2340 BCE – Created first empire • Large political unit – Tend to be diverse • Lasts until 2100 BCE Hammurabi, the Law Giver 1. Around 1790 BCE Hammurabi became king of Babylon (a Mesopotamian empire) 2. He had his artisans inscribe the law on pillars for all to see. Criminal Law 1. Hammurabi was the first to codify criminal law. 2. The laws put specific punishments with specific crimes 3. The laws limited personal vengeance and encouraged social order. Some Laws of Hammurabi 3. If any one bring an accusation of any crime before the elders, and does not prove what he has charged, he shall, if it be a capital offense charged, be put to death 14. If any one steal the minor son of another, he shall be put to death. 22. If any one is committing a robbery and is caught, then he shall be put to death. Warfare and the Spread of Ideas 1. 2. 3. 4. Later empires shaped the area in different ways Often times, victors would uproot the defeated or they would force their new beliefs on the defeated Through this system they brought new skills to new places This is called cultural diffusion Indo-Europeans • Language group • Came to dominate vast parts of Europe and Asia • http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/com mons/4/4f/IndoEuropeanTree.svg • Probably located in the Asian Steppe region – Dry short grasslands The Hittites 1. 2. 3. 4. Around 1400 BCE a less advanced people the Hittites push out of Asia Minor (Turkey) into Mesopotamia The Hittites heated iron ore and pounded the impurities out before plunging it into cold water. They are the first to use Iron Tools They are a short lived empire. The Phoenician Sea Traders 1. 2. 3. 4. The Phoenicians were a seafaring people hailing from the coast of the Mediterranean Sea They are were important as traders because of their ability to make purple dye They also set up the first colonies They also contributed the alphabet A. B. C. They alphabet allowed symbols to represent sounds rather than ideas, concept, or words This later developed through the Greeks into the alphabet we use today Hurray for the Phoenicians! Israelites • We will talk about them later The Persians 1. After several empires including Babylon and the Assyrians came and went the Persian empire came to power Conquest begins under Cyrus (the Great) 2. 1. 2. 3. 4. 559-530 BCE Shows restraint to conquered peoples Under the Darius between 521 and 486 BCE the empire grew His empire was important in that he set up a system of weights and measures and moved Persia from a barter economy to a money economy 1. These advances helped promote a united empire Zoroastrianism • Persian religion • Founded by Zoroaster – Born 660 BCE • The “true religion” – Monotheistic • One god • Struggle between good and evil – Humans had free will to choose good or evil