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Mesopotamia Mesopotamia Mesopotamia Mesopotamia means: “land between two rivers” Civilization developed between the Euphrates and the Tigris Rivers By 3000 B.C. a number of cities are established by the Sumerians Role of the Environment Created in a region that agriculture is possible- IMPORTANCE? – Irrigation and drainage possible- HOW? – Forced people to work together and formed communities Role of the Environment Rivers supplied basics for existence – food – water – sanitation Also provided for shelter – How? – basics of building? Role of the Environment Problems with living near a river valley? – Destroyed by frequent floods that ravaged entire cities – restrained political development (Sumer was a geographical maze) – Communication amongst the various isolated cities was very difficult Invention of Writing Origins of Writing probably go back to the ninth millennium B.C. 4th millennium- realized that drawing tokens was easier than making tokens Result was the development of cuneiform: – “wedge-shaped” – pictographic system Cuneiform Sumerian Society Sumer was different from all other earlier civilizations – – – – – Advanced cities Specialized workers Complex institutions Record keeping Advanced technology Developed city-states Food surplus increased population expanded trade expansion of Sumerian society Sumerian Society Polytheistic Wrote myths (Epic of Gilgamesh) Had social classes – Priests and kings were at the top – Slaves were at the bottom Women probably couldn’t attend school but had many other rights Advances in mathematics – Number system based on 60 (60 seconds=1 minute) Sumerian Inventions Wagon wheel Potter’s wheel (shape containers) Number system 12 month calendar Metal plow Sail Some of the earliest known maps New architecture From Sumerians to Babylonians The Sumerian city-states eventually fell to foreign invaders (2000s BC) The Akkadians: – Semites- nomadic people from the Arabian Peninsula that migrated to Mesopotamia – Sargon I (2300-2200 BC) unites all Mesopotamian cities (creates first empire) – Under Sargon I • Akkadians adopted Sumerian religion • Akkadians adopted Sumerian farming Babylonian Empire Amorites (2000-1600 BC) Located in modern day Syria Conquered many parts of old Sumeria (including Babylon) Hammurabi--created a law code with harsh punishments Borrowed heavily from Sumerian culture After Hammurabi’s death Babylon declined Hittites Began to conquer Asia Minor (2000 BC) A strong army with chariots Conquered Babylon in 1595 BC) Borrowed from Mesopotamian and Egyptian culture Had a law code less harsh than Hammurabi’s Lasted until about 1200 BC Assyrians Started to gain strength about 900 BC Powerful army Treated conquered people cruelly Large empire with good roads Collapsed about 612 BC Chaldeans Defeated the Assyrains in about 612 BC Descended from Hammarabi’s Babylonians At its height during the rule of Nebuchadnezzar (605-562 BC) – Spent a lot of money on Babylon – Built Hanging Gardens Empire collapsed in 539 BC after being defeated by the Persians Persians Were Indo-Europeans Cyrus (conquered from the Nile to the Indus) Darius I – Administered the empire using satraps (governors) – Tolerant to those who were conquered – Increased trade and built roads – Lost to the Greeks in 480 BC Pyramids on the Nile Geography of Egypt The Nile river flows from south to north for over 4100 miles Egypt's first settlements were along the riverbanks in a narrow strip following the fertile soil. The change from soil to desert was so abrupt that one could see it. The Nile flooded every July, and when the water receded in October, it left Geographical Challenges Unlike the Mesopotamians, the Egyptians’ Nile was regular as a clock. Problems were still present: – If the waters were too low one year, the amount of silt was reduced and thousands starved – If water was a few feet higher than usual, homes and crops would be destroyed – The desert on both sides of the Nile hindered travel and interaction with other Upper & Lower Egypt Halfway up the Nile is a waterfall/rapids area called a cataract, which renders the river impassible. It also creates Upper and Lower Egypt The river was navigated both with and against the current by the Egyptians with widesailed ships – this allowed Egypt to become a kingdom, instead of the city states of Mesopotamia. Egypt Unites a Kingdom By 3200BC, Egypt was divided into 2 distinct kingdoms – Upper and Lower Egypt. King Narmer was responsible for uniting the two kingdoms. – To symbolize this unification, Narmer combined the white crown of Upper Egypt with the Red crown of Lower Egypt into one. – He established his capital, Memphis, at the spot where Upper & Lower Egypt met. He became the first in 2600 years of 31 dynasties Pharaohs Rule as Gods In Mesopotamia, rulers are representatives of the Gods. In Egypt, the rulers ARE gods and are descendants of them. This rule of religion is called a theocracy. The Pharaoh was responsible for the well being of the kingdom. Since they were gods, they were responsible for the sun rising, the Nile flooding, and the Pyramid Building Egyptians believed that since a pharaoh was basically a god, he ruled after death as well. His spirit, or ka, wandered the earth and partook in the same earthly pleasures as the king did while he was alive. Since the kings ruled forever, their tombs had to be palaces – kings of the Old Kingdom built pyramids to rest in. Egyptian Culture Osiris Isis The early Egyptians were polytheistic, with the main gods being Re, the god of the sun and Osiris, the god of life, death, and fertility. The most important goddess was Isis, who represented the ideal mother and Afterlife Due to the fact that their life was not nearly as harsh as the Mesopotamians thanks to the regularity of the Nile, the Egyptians had a positive view of the afterlife. They believed that life continued after death – The ka roamed the earth, and needed someplace to return to at night, hence the process of mummification and sarcophagi in tombs. If a tomb was destroyed the person was doomed to walk the earth forever. – To get into the underworld, your heart was weighed against a feather by Anubis, the god of the underworld. If your heart was too heavy with misdeeds, One ofsoul the main he would eat it and your as functions of Anubis was to release the human body at death from the uncleanness that possessed it. He washed the body, embalmed it, well. If the feather was heavier, perfumed it with myrrh, wrapped it with clean linen and received it at the door you could pass to the of the tomb – to the Egyptians he was "Lord of the Cleansing Room." Mummification – how’d they do it? Greek historian Herodotus explains it thusly: First, they draw out the brains through a nostril with an iron hook… Then, with a sharp stone they make an incision in the side, and take out all of the bowels… Then, having filled the belly with pure myrrah, cassia, and other perfumes, they sew it up again; and when they have done this steep it in natron [a mineral salt], leaving it under for 70 days… At the end of 70 days, they wash the corpse, and wrap the whole body in bandages of waxen cloth. Life in Egyptian Society Classes were not lucked in position – you could move up through marriage, and even some slaves could win advancement as a reward for exemplary work. Reading and writing were mandatory for moving up, though. Women held many of the same rights as men – own and trade property, propose marriage, or seek divorce. If divorce was Pharaoh and Royal Family Upper Class: Landowners and Gov’t Officials Middle Class: Merchants and Artesian Workers Lower Class: Farmers and laborers Hieroglyphics Pictures originally stood for an idea, but as time passed on, symbols took their places, and they started to stand for sounds and ideas. They were first written on stone & clay, but as time went on the Science and Technology in Ancient Egypt They created a calendar to help keep track of the time between floods. This was based on the number of days between the risings of Sirius, or the Dog Star. It was 365 days, divided into 12 months of 30 days each, with an additional 5 days for holidays and feasts. It fell short of the true solar year by only 6 hours. Also, numbers were used, though there was no concept of zero. Their medicine was excellent for the time, with knowledge of how to take a pulse, splint Invaders Control Egypt The Old Kingdom’s power declined around 2180 BC, with a period of contention until the Middle Kingdom (2040-1640 BC) restored order. They improved trade and irrigation. In 1640 the Hyksos, or “rulers of foreign lands” invaded from Palestine and ruled Egypt from 1630-1523 BC. After this period the New Kingdom arose, which will be discussed later, in Harappans Indus Valley The Harappan culture existed along the Indus River in what is present day Pakistan. It was named after the city of Harappa. Harappa and the city of Mohenjo-Daro were important centers of the Indus valley civilization. This Indus Valley “civilization” flourished around 4000-1000 B.C. Early Harappan-Ravi Phase 3300-2800 BC This distinctive, regional culture which emerged is called Early or Pre-Harappan. Trade networks linked this culture with related regional cultures and distant sources of raw materials, including lapis lazuli and other materials for bead-making. Domesticated crops included peas, sesame seeds, dates and cotton. Domestic animals also used, such as the water buffalo. Mud brick for building. Natural Resources The Indus Valley contained numerous natural resources that were an important part of Harappan civilization. Resources included: – Fresh water and timber. – Materials such as gold, silver, semiprecious stones. – Marine resources. Major Cities: Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa The cities are well known for their impressive, organized and regular layout. They have well laid our plumbing and drainage system, including indoor toilets. Over one thousand other towns and villages also existed in this region. Mohenjo-Daro This shows the high western mound made up of a massive mud brick platform and brick houses of the Harappan period ( 2600 to 1900 B. C.). On top of the Harappan structures is a Buddhist period stupa made of mud brick that dates to the first century A.D. The Great Bath The "great bath" is the earliest public water tank. The tank measures approximately 12 meters north-south and 7 meters wide, with a maximum depth of 2.4 meters. Two staircases lead down into the tank from the north and south and small sockets at the edges of the stairs are thought to have held wooden planks or treads. At the foot of the stairs is a small ledge with a brick edging that extends the entire width of the pool. Great Bath Economy-Trade The Harappan civilization was mainly urban and mercantile. Inhabitants of the Indus valley traded with Mesopotamia, southern India, Afghanistan and Persia for gold, silver, copper, and turquoise. Economy-Agriculture The Mesopotamian model of irrigated agriculture was used to take advantage of the fertile grounds along the Indus River. Earthen walls were built to control the river's annual flooding. Crops grown included wheat, barley, peas, melons, and sesame. This civilization was the first to cultivate cotton for the production of cloth. Several animals were domesticated including the elephant which was used for its ivory. Collapse of Harappan “Civilization” The de-urbanization period of the Harappan Civilization saw the collapse and disappearance of the urban phenomena in the South Asia. The theme for this period is localization. Architectural and ceramic forms changed along with the loss of writing, planned settlements, public sanitation, monumental architecture, seaborne and exotic trade, seals, and weights. (McIntosh, 2002) Four Theories of Collapse Archaeologists have offered four explanations for the collapse of the Harappan “Civilization”. Three are based on ecological factors: intense flooding, decrease in precipitation, and the dessication of the Sarasvati River. The fourth hypothesis is that of the Aryan Invasion, proposed by Sir R. E. Mortimer Wheeler and Stuart Piggott. – Image in text of “massacre” thought to support this hypothesis. Later interpreted as “peaceful” mass burial. Fourth largely abandoned in the 1940s in favor of a combination of factors from ecological disasters. Ancient China degree of isolation distance from Middle East youngest Primary Phase culture in the Old World Early History legendary outline three principal Neolithic Cultures later tradition: the Hsia dynasty – no traces first historical civilization: the Shang dynasty The Shang Dynasty Yellow River – near the frontier traditional date: 1500 B.C. invaders eventually absorbed Political theory the mandate of Heaven universal monarch – favors consolidation – xenophobic Emperor is the Son of Heaven feudal monarchy The Period of Warring States 771 B.C. dozen-plus states balance of power until 500’s period of consolidation by warfare – warfare chronic The Period of the Warring States, ca. 500 B.C. Intellectual development response to crisis and uncertainty Confucianism – a sort of philosophy Taoism – a sort of religion The Good Old Days breakdown of “traditional family values” no trust or confidence in government – filled with thieves, liars, and murderers no respect for the ancestors “Why do the wicked flourish?” Confucius (ca. 551-479 B.C.) poor family well-educated in the “classics” ambitious (wanted to be a bureaucrat...) couldn’t get honest work...so he became a teacher Confucius, con’t wrote nothing--his followers wrote about him difficult to separate myth from fact the Analects – his “sayings” The Analects looked back to the “good old days” but favored some new ideas along with the old rejection of the idea of in-born nobility proper training, education, and aptitude make a “gentleman” – not simply birth into a certain family Marks of gentility goodness, wisdom, courage moderation of outer and inner emotions knowledge of traditional rites dissociation from all men who did not practice these things – simple satisfaction in the practice of virtue for its own sake Circumstances favoring his ideas lack of mythopoetic urge lack of a strong religious tradition and experience lack of prophets lack of anthropomorphic gods The Zhou (Chou) and Qin rise of the Qin new technology gave land to peasants new military draft new bureaucracy The Qin and the Legalist tradition ideology of rule absolute power of the ruler people existed to serve the state destroy Confucian philosophy? The First Emperor Qin Shihuangdi (r. 221-210 BCE) founds new dynasty as “First Emperor” Dynasty ends in 207, but sets dramatic precedent Basis of rule: centralized bureacracy Massive public works begun – Incl. precursor to Great Wall Shi Huangdi united China in 221 B.C. ruled by the Legalist theory massive conscription for labor China under the Qin dynasty, 221-207 B.C.E. Resistance to Qin Policies Emperor orders execution of all critics Orders burning of all ideological works Some 460 scholars buried alive Others exiled Massive cultural losses Han dynasty rebellion of peasants a successful failure ruled for 400 years new bureaucracy emphasis on centralization – weakening of the aristocracy imperial expansion destruction of the Legalists Population Growth in the Han Dynasty 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 220 BCE 9 CE Population (millions) General prosperity Increased agricultural productivity Taxes small part of overall income Produce occasionally spoiling in state granaries