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Key Terms Period 1: c. 8000 BCE – c. 600 BCE Chapter 1 1. 2. 3. Homo sapiens modern or “consciously thinking” humans, with increasingly large brains featuring well developed frontal regions evolved about 200,000 years ago variants include Neanderthal (100,00 to 200,000 years ago) and the more advanced CroMagnon (60,000 to 100,000 years ago) by about 50,000 years ago had evolved vocal chords and a separate mouth cavity with a tongue, which enabled them to develop spoken languages and communicate ever more complex and inventive messages and ideas ancestors came from Africa and had by 15,000 years ago migrated to and peopled all habitable regions of the world Paleolithic era the Old Stone Age (c. 2.5 million years ago to about 8000 BCE) predates agricultural societies, as humans were hunter-gatherers using stone and bone tools such as spears, bows, arrows, fishhooks, harpoons and pots extended families grew into clans, sometimes merging with neighboring clans to form more sophisticated tribes with chiefs and religious figures, such as shamans warfare was common, and weapons included rocks, clubs, knives, spears, axes religion was polytheistic, with rituals featuring human or animal sacrifice to gods, goddesses and spirits art emerged, including cave paintings and the flute as a musical instrument men hunted and women gathered, and gender equality was the norm Neolithic era the New Stone Age (c. 8000 BCE to about 3000 BCE) sometimes referred to as the Neolithic Revolution, but era was a long transition from hunter-gatherer to farming lifestyle, featuring the domestication of animals and crops the point at which world population begins to increase markedly and “civilization” begins to emerge, with five basic features: 1) advanced cities; 2) advanced technology; 3) complex institutions; 4) specialized labor; 5) recordkeeping sedentary agricultural societies enabled the accumulation of wealth, which led to the emergence of a hierarchy of social classes and a reduction in the role and status of women earliest agricultural societies appeared in southwest Asia and spread to Africa, India, Europe and Asia; agricultural techniques likely developed independently in East Asia and Mesoamerica 4. 5. labor specialization in villages of increasing size, some people were now relieved of the need to participate in food production and began to specialize in other jobs three of the earliest and most common craft industries were pottery, metallurgy and textile (or cloth) production metallurgy systematic techniques of metalworking because it occurs naturally in many regions of the world and is easily malleable, copper was first hammered into jewelry and simple tools by 5000 BCE furnaces were used to melt copper and pour it into molds to make knives, axes, hoes and rudimentary weapons … and this template served later craftsmen as they became expert in working with gold, bronze, iron and other metals Chapter 2 6. 7. 8. 9. Mesopotamia “the land between the rivers” … the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, in modern-day Iraq earliest city-states, such as Ur and Babylon, appeared by about 5000 BCE in southern region of Mesopotamia, called Sumer Sumerians are believed to have invented the wheel, the sail and the plow water from the rivers – which flooded often and unpredictably – was central to the civilization, and large public-works projects, such as irrigation canals, were undertaken Sumerian city-states had a shared culture but separate governments, with their own rulers and gods Sumerians were polytheistic (worshipped more than one god), believing natural events were caused by the gods harsh life, frequent flooding and invasions transmitted to a religion of “rough” gods cuneiform earliest form of writing, c. 2900 BCE, originating in Mesopotamia featured wedge-shaped marks and pictographic symbols impressed onto wet clay, which was then dried in the sun or baked in an oven keeping records of commercial transactions and tax collections became more important as society became increasingly complex The Epic of Gilgamesh Mesopotamia’s greatest work of literature, c. 2000 BCE an epic poem of about 3,000 lines that explored issues of friendship, the relations between humans and gods, and the meaning of life and death Gilgamesh, the Mesopotamian hero, is confronted with terrifying visions of an afterlife featuring disembodied spirits of the dead stumbling around in the darkness for eternity, eating dust and clay ziggurats 10. stepped pyramid-like temples that Sumerians built to please their gods they housed temples and altars to the principal local deity the massive nature of these structures suggest they required as much as 1,500 workers laboring 10 hours a day for five years Hammurabi’s Code Sumerian rulers and promulgated laws perhaps as early as 2500 BCE, but the Babylonian ruler Hammurabi (reigned 1792-1750 BCE) set down an extensive written code of laws establishing a high standards of behavior and stern punishments relied on the principle of lex talionis (the “law of retaliation”), whereby offenders suffered punishments similar to their violations (“an eye for an eye”), and accounted for social standing, favoring the upper classes death penalty for murder, theft, fraud, false accusations, sheltering of runaway slaves, failure to obey royal orders, adultery, incest included civil laws regulating prices, wages, commercial dealings, marital relationships and the conditions of slavery concept of a written set of rules to govern society, as opposed to the arbitrary whims of rulers, would influence later civilizations 11. Bronze Age copper alloyed with tin produces bronze, a harder and stronger metal Mesopotamian metalworkers began making bronze implements about 4000 BCE immediate impact on military affairs as bronze was used to make more effective swords, spears, axes, shields and armor over time had an impact in agriculture as bronze-tipped plows were introduced 12. Iron Age around 1300 BCE craftsmen in Anatolia forged exceptionally strong iron tools and weapons, improving upon the brittle iron experiments that began in the fourth millennium BCE because iron deposits were much cheaper and more widely available than copper and tin (the ingredients of bronze), iron quickly became the metal of choice in Anatolia, Mesopotamia and beyond the Assyrian Empire made effective use of iron technology as they conquered lands from Mesopotamia through Syria, Palestine, much of Anatolia and Egypt 13. Patriarchal Society Defined as a society organized and run by men. Men make the rules and dominate in business and government. It is said to be a “man’s world”, men make the rules and dominate in all forums outside the home. A women’s main value is to support a man (behind every good man is a good woman), bear children and housekeeping duties. Women became aware of the discrimination and double standard imposed upon them by this male dominated society. This is because suddenly women became part of the workforce, but weren’t treated equally. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. Slaves A system under which people are treated as properly to be bought and sold, and are forced to work. Slavery was institutionally recognized by many societies. In more recent times slavery has been outlawed. In pre-industrialized societies, slaves and their labor were economically extremely important. Slaves and serfs made up around three-quarters of the world’s population at the beginning of the 19th century. Cuneiform One of the earliest known systems of writing. Emerging in Sumer in the late 4th millennium BC. The original Sumarian script was adapted for the writing of the Akkadian, Eblaite, Elamite, Hittite, Luwan, and the Ugaritite and Old Persian alphabets. Written on clay tablets. Was gradually replaced by the phoencian alphabet then by the 2nd century AD the script became extinct. Yahweh & Monotheism According to Judaic tradition, the patriarch Abraham, who lived near the Sumerian city of Ur, entered into a covenant with the god YHWH (which may have been pronounced Yahweh but was considered too holy to say aloud, and is sometimes rendered Jehovah). YHWH swore to make the Hebrews – if they obeyed his will – his “chosen people” and to lead them to the “promised land” of Canaan (present-day Israel). The modern Jewish nation-state of Israel was created in 1948 … but the story of its creation goes back about 4,000 years, beginning with the nomadic Hebrews (“Jews” and “Jewish” were not common terms until the ninth century BCE). The faith practiced by Hebrews – Judaism – is generally considered to have been the world’s first monotheistic religion (i.e., the first to devote itself exclusively to the worship of one god). Along with Christianity, which grew out of it, Judaism forms a key foundation of Western society’s ethical, intellectual and cultural legacy. Phoenician trade Expanded in the Mediterranean in the beginning of the last millennium BC. The Phoenician cities of Sidon and Tyre were famous for their purple dye, made from snails. Sidon also had a well-known glass industry. The Phoenicians also exported wine, oil, cedar and pine woods, textiles like fine linen, glass, metalwork, salt, and manufactured goods. Phoenician alphabet A non-pictographic consonantal alphabet. It was used for the writing of Phoenician, a northern Semitic language, used by the civilization of Phoenicia. It is classified as an abjad because it records only consonantal sounds. 19. 20. 21. Became one of the most widely used writing systems, spread by Phoenician merchants across the Mediterranean world where it was assimilated by many other cultures and evolved. Other famous and large alphabets originated from this first alphabet. Indo-European migrations Were a group of nomadic peoples who came from the steppes—dry grasslands that stretched north of the Caucasus. These primarily pastoral people herded cattle, sheep, and goats. Also tamed horses and rode into battle in light, two-wheeled chariots. They lived in tribes that spoke forms of a language that we call Indo-European. Ancestors of many of the modern languages of Europe, Southwest Asia, and South Asia. English, Spanish, Persian, and Hindi all trace their origins back to different forms of the original Indo-European language. horses domesticated by Indo-European speakers about 4000 BCE, vastly magnifying their power as they were now able to exploit the grasslands of southern Russia horses as transportation were much faster and efficient than cattle, donkey or humans and provided Indo-Europeans with a tremendous military advantage over peoples they encountered horses also gave Indo-Europeans the ability to expand and migrate into other parts of Europe and Asia (Aryans were one group that migrated down through India) war chariots a type of carriage drawn by horses used for war as well as more peaceable pursuits such as hunting or racing for sport, and as a chief vehicle of many ancient peoples, when speed of travel was desired rather than how much weight could be carried invented by the Hittites, an Indo-European people who migrated to the central plain of Anatolia (modern-day Turkey) Chapter 3 22. 23. Nile River valley the Nile River was fed by rain and melting snow from the east African mountains the world’s longest river starting at Lake Victoria, and ending at its delta in the Mediterranean Sea predictable flooding in sharp contrast to the unpredictable and destructive flooding of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in Mesopotamia … contributing to a different conception of the afterlife in Egypt compared to the hellish one in Mesopotamia Egypt at roughly the same time as Mesopotamia, Egyptian civilization emerged along the Nile River, the world’s longest 24. 25. narrow region along the banks supports lush vegetation amid surrounding deserts predictable flooding = stable agriculture, surplus unlike Mesopotamia, Egypt’s natural isolation fostered a unique culture with long periods of relative stability Egyptians were polytheistic, having an elaborate religion that included the idea of life after death. Egyptian Book of the Dead – the most important religious text, detailing what happens to the soul and how to reach a happy afterlife the afterlife was central to the most famous aspects of Egyptian civilization: mummification (the art of preserving bodies after death) and the building of gigantic tombs (including the pyramids, which were meant to provide resting places for pharaohs after they died) in addition to building great pyramids, Egyptians were talented makers of bronze tools and weapons they developed great knowledge of medicine, mathematics and astronomy … and devised the 365-day calendar that, with minor modifications, is still used today papyrus, a paper-like product that could be written on with ink, was invented in Egypt and exported in large quantities for scribes throughout the ancient world women had relatively high status in ancient Egypt – they could express themselves more freely than Mesopotamian women; could buy, sell, inherit and will property as they chose; could dissolve their marriages – but were still expected to be subservient to men Nubia Nubia is the name for the thousand-mile stretch of the Nile Valley covering land in modern-day Egypt and Sudan enters the historical record around 2300 BCE. Nubia is the only continuously inhabited stretch of territory connecting sub-Saharan Africa (the lands south of the vast Sahara Desert) with North Africa. for thousands of years it has served as a corridor for trade between tropical Africa and the Mediterranean. its land is a treasure-trove of natural wealth, with rich deposits of gold, copper and semiprecious stones. Egyptian craftsmen more than 4,000 years ago were already working with ivory and ebony wood – products of tropical Africa that must have come through Nubia noblemen stationed along the southernmost region of ancient Egypt led donkey caravans south in search of gold, incense, ebony, ivory, slaves, exotic animals dangerous missions, which must have entailed delicate negotiations with Nubian chiefs Nubia was traditionally seen as a derivative culture lying on the outskirts of Egypt, but scholars now emphasize its interactions with Egypt now there’s growing evidence that Nubian culture synthesized influences not just from Egypt but also from sub-Saharan peoples pharaoh an Egyptian monarch – king or later queen considered the living incarnation of the chief deity, the sun god Re (“ray”). 26. 27. the benevolent rule of the pharaoh and the Egyptians’ conception of a divine king as the source of law and order may explain the absence of an impersonal law equivalent to Hammurabi’s Code hieroglyphics the Egyptian writing system that consisted of a series of pictures (hieroglyphs) that represented letters and words we can read ancient Egyptian writing only because of the 19th-century CE discovery of the Rosetta Stone, a 2nd-century BCE inscription that gave hieroglyphic and Greek versions of the same text Bantu migrations the movement of early African peoples who shared certain cultural characteristics and spoke the Bantu family of languages they farmed, fished, had domesticated goats and dogs, and crafted pottery and cloth the Bantu migrations proceeded for 2,000 years or so as these people moved farther and farther south into areas of Africa formerly occupied by nomads around 1000 BCE they began producing iron tools, and they used these in conjunction with their slash-and-burn farming technique, in which a patch of forest is cut down and burned so that the ashes are mixed with the soil to create a fertile garden area ... this technique, though, leads to only short-term land fertility and thus necessitates further migration within a few years. around 500 BCE the Bantus were aided in their migration pattern by the introduction of banana cultivation (brought to Africa via the Indian Ocean trading network), which enabled them to expand into heavily forested areas the Bantu migrations from 400 BCE to 1000 CE took Africa’s population from about 3.5 million to 22 million as they spread agriculture throughout much of Africa today, more than 500 distinct but related languages can be traced back to the Bantus Chapter 4 28. Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro the two main archaeological sites of the Indus River Valley civilization, discovered in the early 20th century this mysterious ancient civilization (c. 2500-1500 BCE) stretched for more than 900 miles along the Indus River in the northwestern part of the Indian subcontinent, which is present-day Pakistan archaeologists have found as many as 1,500 communities that thrived along the Indus River, which was an excellent transportation system that provided access to the Arabian Sea two biggest urban sites, supporting 30-40,000 inhabitants: Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa, from which we get the term Harappan civilization (or society) all of what we know of this civilization comes from the archaeological record because its writing system of more than 400 signs has not been deciphered 29. 30. 31. in contrast to early Mesopotamian cities, which were jumbled mazes of irregular buildings made of sun-dried mud bricks, Harappan cities were more sophisticated, with a) buildings and streets laid out in precise grids, b) buildings constructed with oven-baked bricks cut in standard sizes, and c) extensive and modern-looking indoor plumbing, with showers and toilets with wooden seats, and pipes connecting each house to an underground sewer system although Harappan society remained primarily based on agriculture (harvested wheat, barley, rice, peas; took meat from cattle, sheep and goats; first to domesticate chickens), trading contacts were widespread throughout the Indus Valley, as the river provided excellent means of transportation cotton may have been cultivated as early as 5000 BCE, and fragments of dyed cloth from around 2000 BCE suggest textile industry Harappans obtained gold, silver, copper, lead, gems from neighboring peoples in Persia (through the Khyber Pass in the Hindu Kush Mountains) traded with Mesopotamians, mostly via watercraft along the Arabian Sea and through the Persian Gulf, as evidenced by Harappan seals on objects discovered in the TigrisEuphrates region Aryans a subgroup of peoples known as Indo-Europeans – nomadic peoples from the dry grasslands north of the Caucasus Mountains who spoke different forms of a language called Indo-European Aryans migrated down through the Khyber Pass of the Hindu Kush Mountains and into the Indian subcontinent around the time the Harappan civilization was crumbling a mainly pastoral people that herded cattle and used horses extensively; they did little but some agriculture the Aryan migration into India was NOT an organized invasion taller and lighter-skinned, the Aryans interacted and intermarried with the darker-skinned Dravidian population already there, laying the cultural and social foundations that would influence India to this day they also fought amongst themselves, and with the Dasas (another name for the speakers of Dravidian languages), pushing many into central and southern India, where their descendants still live (Dravidian speech prevails in the south today while Indo-European languages are spoken in northern India) The Vedas the sacred literature of the Aryans, brought to India originally only in the oral tradition as they had no writing four collections of prayers, magical spells and instructions for performing rituals first and most important was the Rig Veda, whose chief deity was a violent figure said to wield thunderbolts and lead Aryans into battle … thus reflecting the instability and turbulence of early Vedic society caste system evolved from the class system that Aryans brought with them, determining each person’s role in society 32. 33. 34. jati refers to the numerous clans, tribes, communities, and sub-communities that one is born into Indian-Aryan society also refers to their role(s) in each respective community can also be considered a subcategory of a caste complex rules regulated interactions of different jati sati religious and ritual burning of a deceased man’s wife along with the corpse of the male a demonstration of devotion to one’s husband women were expected to willingly leap into the flames, or otherwise be shunned 35. it became more strict in order to regulate the closer contacts between Aryans and nonAryans based initially on varna, a Sanskrit term meaning “color” and referring to skin color (later the term meant something akin to “class”), the four classes were: Brahmins (priests), Kshatriya (warriors and officials), Vaishya (merchants, artisans and landowners), and Shudra (peasants and serfs) The bottom class, Shudra, may have been reserved for Dasas, who were given menial jobs the Aryans didn’t want to do (dasa, in fact, came to mean “slave”) a fifth group was later added: the Untouchables – people excluded from the class system and to be avoided because their touch endangered the ritual purity of others (this because of their occupation: butchers, gravediggers, trash collectors, etc.) The Upanishads group of religious and philosophical manuscripts that is the foundation of Hindu religion the last several parts of the Vedas, which were collections of hymns, songs, prayers and rituals honoring the various gods of the Aryans Upanishad literally means “a sitting in front of” and refers to the practice of disciples gathering before a sage for discussion of religious issues teachings included the idea that each person participates in a larger cosmic order and forms a small part of the universal sole, known as Brahman moksha a state of perfect understanding, a release from the cycle of reincarnations (“the wheel of life”) and union with the divine force that animates the universe achieved through accumulation of positive karma Chapter 5 36. Yellow River aka the “Huang He” River in China, second largest river in Asia after the Yangtze, which lies to the south location where Chinese civilization first developed 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. Considered the “cradle of Chinese civilization” as well as “China’s sorrow” due to frequent flooding and course changes Zhou dynasty the longest lasting dynasty in Chinese history (c. 1027-221 B.C.E.) innovations in technology and trade: blast furnaces capable of producing cast iron, coined money, roads and canals decline due to conflicts with nomadic peoples such as the Huns and local rulers claiming independence Mandate of Heaven Chinese form of the “divine right of kings” the ruler (“Son of Heaven”) had been chosen by the supreme deity (“Heaven”) and would remain in his good graces so long as the ruler was a wise and just guardian of his people proof of this divine favor was in the pudding: prosperity and stability continuation of the dynasty … but corruption, violence, arrogance, natural calamities, insurrection meant divine displeasure (the mandate was lost) and a new dynasty would arise to claim the mandate Period of the Warring States time period during the chaotic fall of the Zhou Dynasty (480-221 B.C.E.) politically decentralized Chinese society with multiple communities fighting for dominance led to the birth of social and ethical belief systems such as Legalism, Daoism, and Confucianism in order to attempt to bring peace and stability to Chinese society ancestor veneration a pronounced cultural practice in China whereby graves and memories of departed ancestors are diligently tended to because their spirits are believed to have been passed into a realm of existence from which they have the power to support and protect their surviving families if the descendants display proper respect fostered a strong ethic of family solidarity and involved the patriarchal head of the family presiding at rites and ceremonies honoring ancestors’ spirits, sometimes offering sacrifices of food and drink at grave sites oracle bones earliest evidence of Chinese writing animal bones and tortoise shells on which priests would scratch questions for the gods answers interpreted depending on how the bones cracked when touched with a hot poker Book of Songs the most notable work of classic literature from the Zhou dynasty a collection of hundreds of poems that reflect conditions of the early Zhou era, though compiled much later 43. 44. some verses had political implications because they recorded the illustrious deeds of heroic figures and ancient sage-kings, but many offer insight into the daily lives of typical Zhou peasants and the development of moral thought valuable history because the subsequent Qin emperor destroyed most writings from the Period of Warring States as a possible challenge to his authority steppe nomads nomadic peoples that built pastoral societies in grassy steppe lands in Central Asia where lands were too arid to sustain large agricultural societies their grasses supported large herds of horses, cattle, sheep and goats, and powerful herding societies developed after the domestication of horses and the introduction of bronze metallurgy served as important trade links to agricultural societies to the east and west, introducing horses and horse-drawn chariots to regions that didn’t have them in exchange for grains and textiles, which they couldn’t produce for themselves became a persistent problem on the frontier of China, where tensions often flared as nomads launched raids on settled developments Yangzi River supported a major shift toward agriculture in China’s southern region irrigation systems were built to tap its large volume of water flow during the Shang and Zhou dynasties, which boosted population Chapter 6 45. 46. Mesoamerica the name for a region that stretches from central Mexico to northern Honduras a complex civilization arose there around 1200 BCE, independent of outside influences Olmecs the “mother civilization” of Central America, existing c. 1200-400 BCE agricultural surpluses included corn, beans and squash – foods unknown in the “Old World” – and historians now believe an extensive trading network thrived from what is now Mexico City to Honduras the Olmec homeland featured numerous streams and small rivers (which periodically flooded and provided fertile soil for farming), but the region’s lush jungle environment and heavy rainfall is a stark contrast to the major river valleys where civilizations first emerged in Eurasia and Africa the Olmecs were polytheistic, carved out Colossal Heads (up to 9 feet tall and weighing 20 tons each – no small feat considering they had no large draft animals) presumably in homage to their authoritarian leaders, and apparently had a social structure indicated by clothing and ornaments (i.e., the more elaborate the dress and decoration, the higher the social class) influenced later Mesoamerican civilizations, such as the Maya 47. 48. 49. 50. worshipped a variety of nature gods; Olmec sculptures prominently depict a half-human, half-jaguar spirit, which may have been a powerful rain god developed a writing system and calendar, but in the absence of metal technology, fashioned knives and such from obsidian Maya heirs to the Olmecs, from about 300 to 900 CE this civilization occupied a region in southern Mexico that included the Yucatan Peninsula, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras and El Salvador Mayan civilization was a collection of numerous city-states or kingdoms Mayan society featured kings and ruling families at the top, and a large class of priests who maintained an elaborate calendar and were the keepers of the society’s knowledge of writing, astronomy and mathematics merchants traded mostly in exotic or luxury goods (rare animal skins, cacao beans, finely crafted works of art) and served a political role as ambassadors to neighboring lands understood astronomy well enough to accurately predict eclipses of the sun and moon, and developed a solar-year calendar of 365.242 days (just 17 seconds shorter than modern calculations) that governed the agricultural cycle … and developed a separate 260-day ritual calendar that governed daily affairs Developed the most flexible and sophisticated American system of writing that included ideograms and symbols for syllables Built tiered temples similar in design to Egyptian pyramids and Mesopotamian ziggurats The Mayans began to desert their cities in the 800s, and this great civilization died out for reasons that are not clear ... possible explanations include epidemic disease, invasions from outsiders, ecological collapse and earthquakes Popol Vuh Mayan creation myth that held that the gods had created human beings out of maize and water (thus reflecting, like eastern societies, the central role of agriculture in their lives) ritual bloodletting a Mayan practice aimed at pleasing the gods, who expected honor and reverence from their human subjects the shedding of human blood was believed to guarantee rain for their crops of maize some bloodletting rituals centered on war captives who, before decapitation, were lacerated or removed of the tips of their fingers … but sometimes voluntary shedding of royal blood through self-sacrifice was practiced, showing the depth of Maya convictions Maya ball game inherited from the Olmecs used an 8-inch ball of solid baked rubber and stone-paved courts two men or teams of men would compete to force the ball through rings without using their hands apparently wildly popular, played for sporting purposes and sometimes with wagering, but it also figured into political and religious affairs 51. 52. high-ranking captives were sometimes forced to play, with the loser really losing big: alongside some ball courts were skull racks that bore the decapitated heads of losing players Austronesian peoples seafaring peoples from southeast Asia, speaking Austronesian languages whose modern linguistic relatives include Malayan, Indonesian, Filipino and Polynesian began exploring Oceania in large canoes equipped with outriggers for stabilization on the open waters of the south Pacific, by 3000 BCE visiting the northern coast of New Guinea introduced agriculture and herding to the region further migrations brought Austronesian peoples to Vanuatu and New Caledonia by 1500 BCE … to Fiji by 1300 BCE … to Tonga and Samoa by 1000 BCE … to Tahiti and the Marquesas by the late centuries of the first millennium BCE … to Hawaii by the early centuries CE … Easter Island by 300 CE and the large islands of New Zealand by 700 CE Lapita peoples the earliest Austronesian migrants to sail out into the Pacific Ocean and establish settlements in Pacific islands between about 1500 and 500 BCE maintained communication and exchange networks over a large region of Oceania, but thereafter the trade networks fell into disuse, probably because various Lapita settlements ahd grown large enough that they could supply their own needs and concentrate on the development of their own societies hierarchal chiefdoms were established, with leadership passed from chief to eldest son over time the chiefly and aristocratic classes became so entrenched and powerful they regarded themselves as divine or semi-divine, prohibiting common subjects from even gazing directly at them Period 2: c. 600 BCE – c. 600 CE Chapter 7 53. 54. Cyrus Persia’s first ruler, 550-530 BCE established the Persian practice of ruling in a tolerant, practical manner (e.g., showed respect to conquered Babylonians by having his son crowned king in accordance with native traditions) Darius ruled Persia for 36 years (522-486 BCE) extended Persian control eastward to Indus Valley and westward into Europe. put forts in Thrace (modern-day northeast Greece and Bulgaria) and by 500 BCE on doorstep of Greece 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. developed maritime routes and completed a canal linking Red Sea with the Nile. presided over vast empire with multitude of ethnic groups and different forms of political and social organization. is considered a second founder (after Cyrus) of the Persian Empire because of the innovative organizational structure he imposed Persepolis Persia’s magnificent capital, which served as an administrative center and, more importantly, a monument to the grandeur of the dynasty satrap a governor, usually related or connected by marriage to the royal Persian family, who ruled one of the empire’s 20 provinces satraps ruled locally, were tolerant of each subject peoples’ traditions, and had much autonomy … but inspectors (i.e., spies) were sent out to be the “King’s Eyes and Ears” and ensure the loyalty of the local officials among most important duties of the satraps: collect and send tribute (i.e., gold and silver) to the king Royal Road Persia’s famous Royal Road was constructed to facilitate fast communication across distant parts of the empire the road promoted trade, which in turn helped hold the empire together 1,677 miles long, with 111 post or relay stations and side roads branching off to distant parts of the empire relay stations were equipped with fresh horses for the king’s messengers, who could cover the entire length of the road in seven days if necessary … but normal travel by caravan could take up to three months Persian Wars pitted Persia against the Greeks, who in the sixth and fifth centuries BCE viewed the much larger Persian Empire as the great enemy their conflict was a decisive historical event across two centuries for the Greeks, but the Persians were probably more concerned about events further east the ultimate outcome, however, was profoundly important for the eastern Mediterranean and western Asia the notion of an East-West dichotomy traces to the Greek tradition Greek city-states united against their mutual enemy and were able, despite heavy losses, to hold Persia to a stalemate, which allowed the Greeks to maintain control of the Aegean Sea and set the stage for an era of peace and prosperity, which is often called the Golden Age of Pericles Lydians conquered by Cyrus the Great, but the Lydians are notable in world history because they were the first to coin money … an idea the Persians and others then took up, enabling a monetary system of consistent prices and the accumulation of vast wealth through savings 60. 61. Zarathustra Zarathustra was the founder of Zoroastrianism said to have been a priest, he became sick of the ritualistic sacrifices and went to start his own teaching Zoroastrianism a Persian religion called Zoroastrianism, founded on the teachings of the prophet Zoroaster, who may have lived anytime between 1700 BCE and 500 BCE (generally regarded as a historical figure and sometimes referred to as Zarathustra) Zoroastrianism was one of the great religions of the ancient world and is still practiced today (the relatively few followers are mostly in Iran and India). it may have exerted a major influence on Judaism, and later Christianity and Islam God and the Devil, Heaven and Hell, angels and demons, reward and punishment, the Messiah and the End of Time … all appear to be legacies of this belief system Chapter 8 62. 63. Confucius a Chinese scholar who lived from 551 to 479 BCE and wanted to restore the order and moral living of earlier times disciples collected his words in the Analects his doctrine of duty and public service became central to Chinese society and politics, and it also influenced Korea and Japan Most important concepts: Ren – appropriate feelings (sense of humanity, kindness, benevolence); Li – correct actions (sense of propriety, courtesy, respect, deference to elders); Xiao – filial piety, or respect for family obligation Confucius believed that administrators could rule through enlightened leadership, modeling these traits for the larger society Order is achieved when people know their proper role and relationship to others: 1. Ruler to subject. 2. Father to son. 3. Husband to wife. 4. Older brother to younger brother. 5. Friend to friend. Confucius drew a parallel between the family and the state: family hierarchy – father at the top, sons next, then wives and daughters in order of age; state hierarchy – ruler at the top, public officials as the sons, common people as the women Confucianism is an ethical belief system – a political and social philosophy – not a religion it arose within the unique culture of China, so its influence remained there (and in surrounding regions in East Asia) … but its flexibility was key (i.e., Buddhists could accept Confucianism, too) Mencius The most learned man of his day and the main spokesman for the Confucian school. 64. 65. 66. 67. Through the Warring States period he traveled in China giving advice to rulers on political issues. Strongly believed that human nature was basically good Placed special value on the virtue ren. Daoism belief system founded in China believed to have been founded by Laozi in the sixth century BCE literal translation of the Dao: the way, the way of nature, or the way of the cosmos. humans should exist in harmony Legalism along with Confucianism and Daoism, one of the three major belief systems to emerge during China’s “Axial Age,” which occurred during the Warring States Period of the late Zhou Dynasty authoritarian political philosophy human nature is essentially wicked and people can be kept in line only if compelled by prospect of severe punishment, instituted by a strong central government run by an absolute ruler practical matters sustained society: farmers and fighters were the ideal professions basis of the unified Qin dynasty, but resentment of its harshness led to wider acceptance later of Confucianism and Daoism Qin dynasty in the second half of the third century BCE, the Qin (pronounced “chin,” from which we get China) state of the Wei (way) Valley emerged victorious from the Warring States Period and created China’s first empire lasted just 15 years (221-206 BCE) but was important because it set the stage for a new dynasty, the Han (hahn), which ruled China from 206 BCE to 220 CE … beginning an imperial tradition of remarkably unified political and cultural heritage that lasted into the early 20th century Qin Shihuangdi the first emperor of the Qin Dynasty was none other than Qin Shihuangdi he ruled his empire as a stern, iron-fisted Legalist and through a centralized bureaucracy burned books (philosophy, ethics, history, literature … exempting only books on medicine, fortune-telling and agriculture) and eliminated rivals to his power with his policy of centralization, he importantly standardized the laws, currencies, weights, and measures of many different regions of China mandated the use of a standardized script for Chinese writing, which allowed people across linguistic boundaries to communicate in writing while still speaking different languages in their daily lives viewed merchants as parasites severely restricted and heavily taxed private commerce, and monopolized vital industries like mining, wine making and distribution of salt 68. 69. although later rulers denounced the overly authoritarian Legalism practiced by the Qin and instead enthroned Confucianism as the new state orthodoxy, they still kept key tenets of Legalism to administer the empire and control behavior among subjects Tomb of the First Emperor Shihuangdi was buried in a tomb with more than 15,000 terracotta soldiers to protect him after death excavated in the 1970s, the life-size terracotta sculptures include magnificently detailed soldiers, horses and weapons … and the grand scale on which this was done further suggests the first emperor’s power to command massive Chinese resources Han dynasty in 202 BCE, Liu Bang (LEE-oo bahng) outlasted his rivals in civil war (following the Shihuangdi and the fall of the Qin dynasty) and declared himself the first emperor of the Han Dynasty, which – except for a brief interruption between 9 and 23 CE – endured for more than 400 years a contemporary of the Roman Empire during the Pax Romana, the Han dynasty is so closely associated with the advancement of Chinese civilization that even today the Chinese sometimes refer to themselves as “the people of Han” and their language as “the language of Han” intensive agriculture (needed to feed increasingly large populations in China’s capital cities) spread into the Yangzi River Valley canals were built to connect the Yangzi with the Yellow River to the north so southern crops could reach northern capital cities main tax to fund government was percentage of a peasant family’s annual harvest; surplus grains also stored by government to be sold at reasonable prices during harvest shortages Chinese census figures: 2 CE 12 million households, 60 million people (estimated to be a trebling of the population since the beginning of the Han dynasty); but 140 CE 10 million households, 49 million people … vast majority living in east, beginning to shift demographically from the Yellow River Valley and North China Plain to the Yangzi River Valley in the south every able-bodied man donated one month of labor annually for public works projects – building palaces, temples, roads, fortifications, canals … working on imperial estates or in mines the state also demanded two years of service to the military Han Chinese gradually expanded, bringing into new regions their social organization, values, language and other cultural practices at the expense of the ethnic groups they displaced or absorbed the Han continued the Qin system of selecting government officials on the basis of merit rather than birth idea is to ensure competence among bureaucrat administrators. in 165 BCE, the first known civil service examination was given to candidates for positions in the bureaucracy – and according to tradition, an academy for training future civil servants in the tenets of Confucianism was soon set up and serving as many as 30,000 students 70. in theory, young men from any class could rise in the state hierarchy through merit … but in practice, sons of the gentry had an advantage in that they were most likely to afford and receive necessary educational prerequisites (hence, emergence of scholar-gentry) Han emperors allied themselves with the gentry – the class next in wealth below the aristocrats – so as to limit the political influence of the rural aristocracy, which was a threat to their centralized rule these moderately prosperous and often educated landowners were like the Roman equites Augustus favored made government more efficient still, the alliance with the gentry did not prevent the recurrence of economic inequities that characterized the last years of the Zhou: As the population exploded, average size of an individual farm plot shrank to 1 acre, barely enough for survival many peasants eventually forced to sell their land, become tenant farmers … and the land increasingly came to be concentrated in powerful landed clans that often owned thousands of acres worked by tenants and mustered their own military forces to bully free farmers into becoming tenants although these economic difficulties would eventually be a primary reason for the fall of the Han dynasty, in general the era was productive and prosperous. despite viewing private commerce with outright disdain and merchants generally as parasites, trade began to flourish along what came to be called the Silk Roads – the overland caravan routes leading westward into Central Asia and ultimately linking China with India and the Mediterranean by the Han era the Chinese were technologically superior to all other civilizations: innovations included techniques for making steel, paper and silk … and inventions including the crossbow, watermill, wheelbarrow, a two-bladed plow, the sternpost rudder and fore-and-aft rigging on ships for a time the Han government ran huge silk mills, competing with private weavers in making a luxurious cloth that was increasingly a high-demand product as far away as Rome the government established monopolies on the mining and distribution of salt, the forging of iron, the minting of coins and the brewing of alcohol Confucian ethics stressed the impropriety of women participating in public life several factors led to the fall of the Han Empire in 220 CE: 1) the cost of defending the frontier. 2) factional intrigues within the ruling clan. 3) official corruption and inefficiency. 4) the ambitions and influence of rural warlords, independent of imperial control, who emerged from the large landed estate owners. 5) the breakdown of military conscription, which forced the government to turn to foreign soldiers and officers lacking loyalty to the Han state. 6) uprisings of hungry and desperate peasants Han Wudi the “Martial Emperor,” who ruled the Han dynasty from 141 to 87 BCE … his long and energetic reign explains much of the dynasty’s success relied on Legalist principles to build an enormous bureaucracy and expand the empire to solve the problem of recruiting qualified people for government posts, he established an imperial university to provide a uniform system of public education 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. the university based its instruction on the tenets of Confucianism out of necessity: it was the only Chinese belief system developed enough to establish a curriculum initial enrollment began at 3,000 students but rose to more than 30,000 students during the later Han dynasty policy of imperial expansion led to invasions of northern Vietnam and Korea (which then had to pay tribute to Han China) and battles with the Xiongnu nomads Xiongnu nomadic people from the steppes of central Asia who spoke a Turkish language and presented a large problem to the Chinese on their frontier these nomads had lethal archery skills from horseback and were often militarily more than a match for the Chinese: when peaceful trade broke down, they would raid settled villages and take what they wanted early Han rulers tried to buy them off with gifts of silk, rice, alcohol and money – to no avail in the end, continuous military vigilance along the frontier burdened Han finances and worsened the economy filial piety Chinese moralists sought to enhance the authority of patriarchal family heads by emphasizing the importance of two things – 1) women’s subordination to their menfolk, and 2) filial piety, which is the idea that children should obey and honor their parents this social norm is mirrored in the larger Chinese society as citizens are expected to similarly obey and honor other superiors and political authorities silk textiles China’s most valuable export commodity was silk, the making of which – sericulture – was a closely guarded state secret for millennia dating back as far as the Neolithic era paper hugely important to subsequent world history, the manufacture of paper was an innovation of Chinese craftsmen of the early Han dynasty in earlier times, Chinese scribes had written mostly on bamboo strips and silk fabrics but also inscribed messages on oracle bones and bronze … then some time prior to 100 BCE craftsmen began to fashion hemp, bark and textile fibers into sheets of paper, which was less expensive than silk and easier to write on, thus encouraging more writing, scholarship and literature Yellow Turban Uprising a huge peasant revolt that raged throughout China and tested the resilience of the Han state in the second century CE rebels wore distinctive headgear, thus the “Yellow Turban” moniker outgrowth of the inequities of land distribution … rebels were desperate peasants with few opportunities to improve their lot but full of resentment toward the wealthy classes living in relative luxury Chapter 9 76. 77. 78. 79. Mauryan dynasty First state to bring centralized, unified government to most of the Indian subcontinent, 324-184 BCE founded by Chandragupta Maurya when he conquered then expanded the kingdom of Magadha, which had a wealth derived from agriculture, iron mines and its strategic location astride trade routes of the eastern Ganges Basin Mauryan India was characterized by a strong military – with infantry, cavalry, chariot and elephant divisions – and royal control of mines, shipbuilding and arms manufacturing an extensive trade network – anchored by cotton, a key Indian export – stretched all the way to Mesopotamia and the eastern parts of the Roman Empire taxes equal to one-fourth of the value of an annual harvest funded Mauryan kings and government, administrated by relatives and associates in districts based on traditional ethnic boundaries standard coinage fostered support for the government and military throughout the empire and promoted trade Chandragupta Maurya founder of the Mauryan dynasty, who may have been inspired by Alexander the Great’s foray into northwestern India (the Punjab region) in 326 BCE Kautilya Chandragupta’s advisor wrote the Arthashastra, which was a manual offering detailed instructions on the uses of power and the principles of the government, including the methods of administering the realm, overseeing trade and agriculture, collecting taxes, maintaining order, conducting foreign relations, and waging war advised Chandragupta to make abundant use of spies and pursue a foreign policy whereby “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” Ashoka best known of the Mauryan rulers, who reigned from 269 to 232 BCE and led the dynasty to its greatest heights Ashoka was a great warrior as a young man but later became sickened by the brutality of war After hundreds of thousands of people were killed, wounded or deported during his conquest of Kalinga, Ashoka converted to Buddhism and preached nonviolence, morality, moderation and religious tolerance until the time of the Mauryans, Aryan buildings were made of wood … but stone artisans arriving from the defeated Persian Empire were put to work by Ashoka in building three main types of religious structures: the pillar, the stupa and the rock chamber (carved out of mountainside cliffs and resembling Roman basilicas in the West) ten polished sandstone pillars remain standing today from the many erected during Ashoka’s reign 80. erected alongside roads to commemorate the events in the Buddha’s life and mark pilgrim routes to holy places, they weighed up to 50 tons and rose more than 30 feet, topped with a carved capital, usually depicting lions uttering the Buddha’s message the inscriptions on Ashoka’s so-called Rock and Pillar Edicts constitute the earliest decipherable Indian writing in the half century following Ashoka’s death, the Mauryan Empire weakened and collapsed, giving way to a succession of dominant foreign powers ruling in the northwest (present-day Pakistan, Afghanistan, Uzbekistan), who extended some influence east and south despite political fragmentation during the five centuries following the Mauryan era (the eastern Ganges reverted back to a hodgepodge of small principalities), economic, cultural and intellectual development remained dynamic, just as in archaic Greece and Warring States China despite political fragmentation during the five centuries following the Mauryan era (the eastern Ganges reverted back to a hodgepodge of small principalities), economic, cultural and intellectual development remained dynamic, just as in archaic Greece and Warring States China the network of roads and towns that had sprung up under the Mauryans fostered trade Indians became middlemen in the international trade routes (over land and, increasingly, by sea) linking China, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, East Africa and the Mediterranean. with no central government authority, merchant and artisan guilds became politically powerful and patrons of culture Gupta Dynasty (320-550 CE) founded by a man who called himself Chandra Gupta, who was no relation to the Mauryans, but he was clearly modeling himself after them also headquartered in the northeast, the Guptas were similar to their Mauryan predecessors (25% tax on agriculture, monopolies on mining of iron and salt) but not nearly as capable of imposing their will on people outside the empire’s core Gupta administrative bureaucracy and intelligence network was smaller, less pervasive governors of outlying areas free to exploit people the Guptas maintained power by producing a so-called “theater-state” – they persuaded others to follow its lead through the splendor and ritualistic ceremony of its capital and royal court advertisement for the benefits of association Gupta rulers supported astronomers, scientists and mathematicians … and Indian mathematicians around this time came up with one of the world’s great intellectual achievements – the concept of zero and the place-value system. the Indian method of arithmetic notation using a base-10 system (with separate columns for ones, tens, hundreds, etc.) was much more efficient than the numerical systems of the Egyptians, Greeks and Romans … and has come to be more widely used than even the alphabet derived from the Phoenicians the role and status of women deteriorated markedly during the Gupta era, as women were barred from such things as inheriting property and reading sacred texts, and child brides were married off as young as 6 81. 82. 83. whereas the Mauryans had been Buddhists, the Gupta monarchs were Hindus – though religiously tolerant, allowing Buddhist pilgrims from Southeast and East Asia to visit the birthplace of their faith although a lack of tax revenue to pay its army and the rising power of its regional governors may have contributed to the fall of the empire, the invasion of White Huns on the northwestern frontier was the main reason for the final collapse of the Gupta Empire in 550 Jainism a religion established around 500 BCE as a challenge to the Vedic order in India emphasized holiness of the life force animating all living creatures followers practiced strict nonviolence, wore masks to prevent even the accidental inhalation of bugs zealous adherents practiced extreme asceticism (self-denial) and nudity, ate only what others gave them … eventually died of starvation less zealous followers, restricted from agriculture by the injunction against killing, lived in cities and engaged in commerce, banking no missionaries … today, nearly all 5 million of the world’s Jains live in India, forming one of that country’s wealthiest communities Siddartha Gautma “the Enlightened One,” Indian founder of Buddhism (563-483 BCE) born into the elite Kshatriya caste (warriors and officials), he eventually gave up the princely life of his upbringing for the life of a wandering ascetic searching for enlightenment after six years of wandering, concluded ascetic life was no more likely than a life of luxury to produce spiritual insight decided to adhere to a “Middle Path” of moderation, which he set forth as the “Four Noble Truths” – the foundation of Buddhism although Siddhartha accepted idea of reincarnation, he rejected the hierarchal Vedic social structure (i.e., caste system) Buddhism as the Buddha’s message spread – by missionaries and by traders along the Silk Road – throughout India and into Central, Southeast and East Asia following his death, its own successes began to subvert the individualistic and essentially atheistic tenets of the founder (he rejected the panoply of Vedic gods and forbade his followers to worship his person or image after his death which is why many Buddhists view Buddhism as a philosophy rather than a religion) Buddhist monasteries were established and a hierarchy of Buddhist monks and nuns came into being as a major threat to the Vedic order in India, Buddhism led to Hinduism evolving and absorbing many Buddhist aspects … which eventually led to Buddhism being largely driven from the land of its birth and becoming a major cultural force elsewhere in Asia 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. Dharma basic doctrine shared by Buddhists of all sects, consisting of the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path emphasis on moderate lifestyle characterized by contemplation, thoughtful reflection and disciplined self-control Four Noble Truths 1) Life if filled with suffering and sorrow. 2) The cause of all suffering is people’s selfish desire for the temporary pleasures of this world. 3) The way to end all suffering is to end all desires. 4) The way to overcome such desires and attain enlightenment is to follow the Eightfold Path, which is called the Middle Way between desire and self-denial Eightfold Path the Eightfold Path consists of right views, right aspirations, right speech, right conduct, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness and right meditation by following the Eightfold Path, anyone could reach – either in this lifetime or across multiple lifetimes – the state of nirvana, the Buddha’s word for the release from selfishness and pain perpetual tranquility Mahayana Buddhism one of the two large movements of Buddhism (“the Greater Vehicle”) – Buddha is a godlike deity; other deities appear, including bodhisattvas (those who’ve achieved enlightenment and are nearing nirvana but choose to remain on Earth to lead others) more complicated and ritualistic than Buddha intended, and detractors say it’s too much like the Hinduism that Buddha disapproved of Theravada Buddhism (“the Way of the Elders” or “the Lesser Vehicle”) – Buddha himself is not considered a god emphasizes meditation, simplicity, interpretation of nirvana as the renunciation of human consciousness and of the self Buddhism in its austere, most authentic form, which may have demanded too much from most people … but it became the dominant form of Buddhism practiced in Southeast Asia Bhagavad Gita a self-contained portion of the Mahabharata, one of India’s two great epics that is eight times longer than Greek Iliad and Odyssey and tells the story of a cataclysmic battle between two sets of cousins quarreling over succession to the throne based on oral tradition but taking final written form in the last two centuries BCE supposedly describes events millions of years in the past, but probably reflects conditions of the early Vedic period when Aryan warrior societies were moving onto the Ganges Plain 90. 91. god Krishna tutors hero Arjuna (who is reluctant to fight own kinsmen) on the necessity of fulfilling his duty Hinduism evolved by around the fourth century CE from its origins in the Aryan Vedic tradition, adopting aspects of the Dravidian cultures of southern India and elements of Buddhism world’s third-largest religion behind Christianity and Islam, with more than 1 billion followers the term Hinduism was imposed by others: Islamic invaders in the 11th century CE labeled the diverse range of practices they saw in India as Hinduism (“what the Indians do”) components include dharma, karma, reincarnation, moksha closely linked with Hinduism, and reinforced by the ideas of karma and reincarnation, is the caste system the world soul, Brahman, sometimes seen as having the personalities of three gods: Brahma, the creator; Vishnu, the protector; and Shiva, the destroyer reflecting the ethnic, linguistic and cultural diversity of India, Hinduism has a vast array of gods (330 million according to one tradition), sects and local practices Hindus today are free to choose the deity they worship (interestingly, Vishnu and its Aryan pedigree is more popular in the north while Shiva is dominant in the Dravidian south) – or choose none at all; most follow a family tradition that may go back centuries Hindus are also free to choose among three different paths for achieving moksha, though with some exceptions only men of top varnas can expect to achieve it in their present life Arabic numerals the power and usefulness of India’s base-10 number system we use today was immediately recognized when it spread to other lands through cultural diffusion Muslim Arabs and Persians adopted the “Hindi” numerals in the eighth century, and Europeans later learned of it from them … hence, the misnomer “Arabic” numerals Chapter 10 92. 93. Minoan society a seafaring people living on the island of Crete and dominating trade in the eastern Mediterranean from about 2000 to 1400 BCE influenced by the older civilizations from Mesopotamia and Egypt but evolving their own unique culture, the Minoans were the first Europeans to have complex political and social structures, and advanced technologies had centralized government, monumental building, bronze metallurgy, writing and recordkeeping (but the writing, called Linear A, hasn’t been deciphered yet) scholars believe Minoan culture died out when they could not recover from natural disaster (a series of earthquakes, followed by volcanic eruption and possibly a tidal wave) and possibly a subsequent invasion of another people, the Mycenaean Greeks Mycenaean society 94. 95. 96. the first advanced civilization in Greece numerous pots excavated from the region would have carried wine and olive oil as Mycenaean sailors replaced Minoan sailors as a central part of trade in the eastern Mediterranean other possible exports: weapons, crafted goods, slaves and mercenary soldiers trade and piracy were intertwined: the Mycenaeans were tough, warlike, acquisitive traded with the strong, took from the weak their script, Linear B, is recognized as an early form of Greek more than 4,000 Mycenaean tablets have been unearthed, showing that Mycenaeans ran an extensive bureaucracy that kept track of people, animals and objects in minute detail; exercised tight control over the kingdom’s economy; kept records of everything from the number of chariot wheels in palace rooms and rations paid to textile workers, to the gifts dedicated to various gods and the ships stationed along the coasts but they wrote down almost nothing about individuals – not even the name of a single Mycenaean ruler – and very little about their political and legal systems, social structures, gender relations or religious beliefs polis a Greek city state fundamental unit of ancient Greece after about 750 B.C. made up of a city and countryside surrounding it with villages Greece had hundreds of them, ranging from 50 to 500 square miles of territory and usually fewer than 10,000 residents (though Athens was much larger) most had a defensible hilltop acropolis (“top of the city”) that offered refuge in an emergency an agora was a gathering place for discussing politics or military matters … which later evolved into a marketplace Sparta Greek city-state that rivaled Athens an agricultural and highly militaristic region where citizens led austere, highly disciplined lives (hence the modern expression, “a Spartan existence [or lifestyle]”) boys taken from their families and put into barracks at age 7, where they would stay until they reached 30 they were toughened by extreme regimen of discipline, beatings and deprivation – marching, exercising, fighting, serving the military until they reached 60 effort to maintain equality among citizens metals and coinage banned, commerce forbidden Interestingly, Spartan women had greater freedom and more opportunities – born of running family estates while husbands were active in military – than women from other Greek city-states, including Athens Sparta had best military but rarely flexed its own muscle, practicing a cautious, isolationist foreign policy Athens 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. ancient Greece’s largest city-state, considered the birthplace of democracy and the fountainhead of Western culture a nobleman named Draco in 621 BCE developed a legal code based on idea that all Athenians, rich and poor, were equal under the law first step toward democracy Pericles skillful Athenian politician, inspiring speaker, respected general held popular support for 32 years during the fifth century BCE, called the “Age of Pericles” he and political allies took final steps in evolution of Athenian direct democracy (e.g., paying salaries to public officials so even those of modest means could hold office) Athens became a vibrant community of scientists, philosophers, poets, dramatists, artists and architects during this time Delian League a voluntary alliance of Greek city-states created in 477 BCE to fight the threat of Persia Athens and its naval capabilities was the leader and supplied the military support while the other city-states provided Athens with financial support Athens soon came to dominate the other city-states of the Delian League, moving the capital from Delos to Athens and using military force against its challengers and to promote its commercial interests weaker, poorer city-states eventually became resentful when expensive building projects were undertaken to glorify Athens Peloponnesian War Athens and Sparta fought from 431 to 404 BCE marked by unprecedented brutality, with entire cities destroyed, innocent schoolchildren killed, war captives murdered, and women and children sold into slavery Sparta prevailed, but it was also greatly weakened and subsequently became highhanded with other city-states ensuing decades brought almost continuous internal conflict among the Greeks until they were overrun by Philip II of Macedon in the fourth century BCE Alexander the Great son of Philip II of Macedon; came to power at 20 and in a little more than a decade had amassed an empire stretching from the Mediterranean to Egypt, across Syria and Palestine, through Persia and as far east as the Punjab region of modern Pakistan. variously viewed as idealistic visionary, ruthless Machiavellian warrior hero was Achilles (he kept a copy of Homer’s Iliad under his pillow) apparently planned to fuse Greeks and easterners adopted Persian dress, used Persians as administrators, encouraged soldiers to marry easterners (he had several Iranian wives with useful royal or aristocratic connections) Hellenistic Age the era ushered in by the conquests of Alexander (323-330 BCE) lands in northeastern Africa and western Asia “Hellenized,” or profoundly influenced by Greek culture 102. 103. 104. 105. Hellenistic sculptors moved toward more emotional and realistic art and away from the ideal beauty prized by Greek classicism Alexandria named after Alexander the Great and located at a strategic place on the western edge of the Nile delta in Egypt the foremost center of commerce and cultural vitality in Hellenistic civilization population: nearly 500,000 attractions: Alexander’s glass coffin, the Pharos (a first-of-its-kind lighthouse), a library with a half-million papyrus scrolls and a museum for advanced study (dedicated to the Muses, the Greek goddesses of arts and sciences) Olympic Games Held every four years starting around 776 B.C. Site of Olympic games in area called Olympia where an alter was built for the father of all Greek gods and goddesses, Zeus. The Olympic games were held to honor their gods and build strong healthy citizens in order to strengthen the city-state. Most famous sport was a race called the stade. Other events included a long-distance race, wrestling, the long jump, the javelin and the dices throw. Victors (winners) were given gifts and hailed as heroes. Socrates lived in Athens 470-399 BCE a critic of democracy and of the Sophists (traveling teachers who provided instruction in logic and public speaking [rhetoric = art of persuasive oratory] to young pupils who could afford it; questioned traditional values and claimed there was no absolute right or wrong; Greek masses came to call someone who uses cleverness to distort and manipulate reality a sophist) Socrates believed there were absolute truths but encouraged Greeks to challenge authority and their own beliefs “The unexamined life is not worth living.” Socratic method (questions, questions, questions …) wise in that he knew that he knew nothing put on trial (and put to death by drinking hemlock) as an old man for “corrupting the youth of Athens” and “neglecting the city’s gods” but was really a scapegoat for the controversial Sophists and several of his aristocratic students who had tried to overthrow the Athenian democracy Plato 427-347 BC; Athens, Greece a student of Socrates Plato laid out his ideal society in The Republic – not a democracy but organized into three classes: 1) farmers/artisans, 2) warriors, and 3) ruling class, with the greatest intellect chosen the philosopher-king 106. Plato's philosophic thought dominated Europe for 1,500 years. A school in Athens called the Academy lasted for 900 years. Aristotle with Socrates and Plato, one of the big three classical Greek philosophers a student at Plato's Academy once Plato died, he opened his own school in Athens called the Lyceum which would come to rival the Academy Aristotle questioned the nature of the world and human belief, thought, and knowledge his method for arguing according to rules of logic provides the basis of the scientific method used today Aristotle's most famous pupil was Alexander the Great Chapter 11 107. 108. 109. plebeians the common farmers, artisans, and merchants who made up the majority of the Roman population inequalities in Roman society led to conflict between the plebeians and the wealthy patricians … but legal innovations for the lower classes included a set of laws called the Twelve Tables (450 BCE) that was displayed publicly so patrician officials couldn’t interpret the law to suit themselves … and the creation of tribunes – new officials drawn from and elected by the lower classes and who had power to veto, or block, actions of the Assembly or patrician officials patricians the wealthy landowners who held most of the power during the days of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire inherited their power and social status, claiming their ancestry gave them authority to make laws for Rome citizenship included all male landowners Roman Republic the period of classical Roman history when representative democracy was in place (50731 BCE) in 509 BCE, an aristocratic republic (form of government whose head of state is usually a president) replaced the Roman monarchy; built Roman forum, a political and civic center housing temples and public buildings for government business a republican constitution gave executive duties and power (civil and military) to two consuls elected for one-year terms by an assembly dominated by the aristocracy (patricians); a senate dominated the decision-making process tension developed as interests of the lower class (plebeians) were not represented … which led to the development of tribunes (consisting of officials elected by plebeians), which had the right to intervene in all political affairs and veto unjust laws 110. 111. 112. 113. in times of civil or military crisis, a dictator was appointed with absolute power for a sixmonth term to restore peace and stability the republic came to an end following the ascent and then assassination of Julius Caesar, after which civil war continued until the eventual emergence of the emperor Augustus, the grandnephew and adopted son of Caesar from this point forward to the fall of the Roman empire in 476 CE, imperial Rome is ruled by emperors, good and bad The Punic Wars a series of three wars fought between Rome and Carthage (a Phoenician settlement in north Africa) between 264 and 146 BCE at issue was dominance of the western Mediterranean Rome won despite nearly succumbing to the famous rear-flank invasion led by Carthaginian general Hannibal, who led his troops along the coasts of Spain and Gaul (modern-day France) before crossing the Swiss Alps on elephants to attack from the north latifundia In Rome, much like China and Greece, conquered lands fell largely into the hands of wealthy elites, who organized enormous plantations known as latifundia enjoying economies of scale and often employing slave labor, owners of latifundia operated at lower costs than did owners of smaller holdings, who often had to mortgage their lands or sell out to their wealthier neighbors … which led to social conflict over the inequities of this land ownership reality owners of latifundia across the Roman empire tended to concentrate on producing specific crops for export (e.g., grains from north Africa, olives and grapevines from Greece, and fruits, nuts and wool fabrics from Syria and Palestine) Julius Caesar Rome’s most brilliant military general, who conquered Gaul between 59 and 51 BCE, giving the Roman empire its first land acquisition in the heartland of Europe as he gained popularity, Caesar’s rivals urged him to disband his legions and return home instead, he and his men defied the Senate, crossed the Rubicon River (the southern limit of his command) and headed for Rome – where he would assume dictatorial power in a military coup the year marking the beginning of his perpetual dictatorship was also the year he was assassinated by members of the Senate, including his friend Marcus Brutus legacy includes introducing a new “Julian” calendar based on the solar year instead of moon cycles (extra day every four years) and July named for him Roman Empire during the republic, conquered land included Italy, Greece, Syria, Gaul, most of the Iberian Peninsula, outposts in North Africa and Anatolia (modern-day Turkey); Augustus then added most of southeastern Europe and most of North Africa and expanded control in Anatolia and southwest Asia … so at its height, the empire included Britain and all of 114. the land surrounding the northern and southern coast of the Mediterranean, from Iberia to Mesopotamia as Roman soldiers, diplomats, governors and merchants settled throughout the empire, Roman culture spread, encouraging the development of local politics and economies and the growth of cities this large land mass facilitated trade and communication all around the empire, which was facilitated by an extensive network of roads designed by Roman engineers Roman roads were up to 26 feet wide and some stretched for thousands of miles, linking all parts of the empire with many side roads to transport supplies, goods, soldiers and postal documents during the first three centuries CE the empire was “urban” despite the fact that 80% of its 50-60 million people still lived in countryside: empire administered through network of towns and cities (Rome’s population was perhaps 1 million; some other cities, like Alexandria and Carthage, had several hundred thousand people; most had far less than that) the western half of the empire fell in 476 CE … but the eastern half lived on for another millennium as the Byzantine Empire, headquartered in Constantinople the reasons for the fall of the empire can be found on Mr. Rosselle’s PowerPoint on Rome and Han China, slides 40-41 … and the legacy of the Romans is detailed on slides 42-44 Augustus after the assassination of Caesar and the conflict that arose, Octavian, Julius Caesar’s nephew and protégé, rose to power defeated his rival Mark Antony and in 27 BCE was given the title Augustus, meaning “exalted one” and hinting at a divine nature for its holder Augustus – ruthless, patient, frugal, religious and family-oriented (banished his only child, Julia, from Rome for adultery) – aligned himself with the equites (EH-kwee-tays), the class of well-to-do Italian merchants and landowners second only to senatorial class this group became the backbone of the civil service system Augustus instituted: workers paid to manage affairs of government (grain supply, tax collection, postal system) key to stability and smooth functioning of expansive empire. 115. Pax Romana the “Roman peace,” or the golden age of prosperity for the Roman empire that lasted for more than two centuries and was initiated by the reign of Augustus 116. Cicero (106-43 BCE) noted Roman intellectual; widely regarded as Rome’s greatest statesman his writings about how a state should be organized would eventually form the foundation of the educations of the founders of the United States and the basis for constitutions that govern lives in the West to this day philosophically associated with Stoicism, which he helped establish as the most prominent school of moral philosophy in Rome 117. 118. his letters and treatises emphasized the individual’s duty to live in accordance with nature and reason … and to pursue justice as one’s highest public duty railed against those who sought to accumulate wealth or power through unethical or illegal means Jesus of Nazareth born about the year 4 BCE, Jesus grew up at a time of high tension between Roman overlords and their Jewish subjects Jesus was a charismatic Jewish teacher who taught devotion to God and love for fellow human beings, attracting large crowds and a reputation for wisdom and miraculous powers, especially the ability to heal the sick alarmed the Romans because he taught that “the kingdom of God is at hand,” which Roman administrators took to be a threat to their rule in Palestine to prevent rebellion, Roman administrators executed Jesus by fixing him to a cross in the early 30s CE followers proclaimed that he rose from the dead, calling him “Christ” or “the anointed one,” the savior who would bring individuals into the kingdom of God followers also taught that he was the son of God whose sacrifice would offset the sins of those who had faith in him … their body of writings – accounts of Jesus’ life, reports of his followers’ works, and letters outlining Christian teachings – gained recognition as the New Testament, the holy book of the emerging religion of Christianity, which would eventually grow into the world’s largest religion, with more than 2 billion adherents Paul of Tarsus an early persecutor turned convert, he was the follower of Jesus, or Apostle, most responsible for the early spread of Christianity widened the appeal of the religion by decreeing that Christians needn’t observe Jewish diet and circumcision laws, which made it easier to convert Greeks and other non-Jewish peoples traveled widely across Roman lands seeking converts, eventually running afoul of the emperor and suffering execution Chapter 12 119. Indian Ocean Maritime System a multilingual, multiethnic trading network established by seafarers and extending from East Africa to southern China and all the lands in between trade took place in three distinct regions: 1) Chinese and Malays dominated in South China Sea; 2) Malays and Indians dominated from Southeast Asia to east coast of India; and 3) Persians and Arabs dominated from west coast of India to the Persian Gulf and east coast of Africa identifying specific mariners as Persian, Arab, Indian or Malay obscures the fact that they were often of a richer cultural mix: coastal areas often became home to a more cosmopolitan reality as seafarers and merchants took wives in port cities, where their families became bilingual and bicultural; gone for long stretches, these men then carried 120. the influence of the various cultures to which they were exposed to other ports throughout the region in contrast to Mediterranean sailors, those in the Indian Ocean basin used triangular (lateen) sails and normally did without oars; could cover long distances entirely at sea thanks to monsoon winds; did not establish colonies that maintained contact with their home cities distances were greater and contacts less frequent, so trading outposts were rarely independent of local political powers but sometimes socially distinctive products in demand from Africa included exotic animals, wood, ivory and the aromatic resins valued as frankincense and myrrh pearls came from the Persian Gulf, copper from southeastern Arabia, spices and manufactured goods from India and Southeast Asia (including pottery transshipped from China) despite the diversity of the highly valued items, the overall level of trade would not have approached that of the more compact Mediterranean until after the classical period (i.e., not until 600-1450 CE) Silk Roads an extensive overland network of trade routes linking much of Eurasia, from China to the Mediterranean, and emerging during the classical age of strong empires (c. 600 BCE to 600 CE) collectively known as the Silk Roads because the high-quality silk from China was one of the principal commodities exchanged over the roads although most people did not travel the entire length of the Silk Roads, caravans took more than four months to traverse the 2,500 miles between the western part of Central Asia (say Bukhara in modern-day Uzbekistan, east of the Caspian Sea) and the capital cities along the Yellow River in northeastern China it was a social system as well as a trading network: ideas spread east and west just as agricultural products and manufactured goods, which were meant primarily for the wealthy elite … but sometimes the ideas and customs affected entire societies cities such as Samarkand and Bukhara grew and flourished in Central Asia, often under local princes the Chinese were especially interested in the better breed of horses from the west, but they also brought in new plants and trees, and food items such as alfalfa, wine grapes, pistachios, walnuts, sesame, coriander and spinach … while traders heading west from China brought peaches, apricots, cinnamon, ginger and other spices … and of course silk cities in Iran during the Sasanid Empire were essentially military installations meant to secure the safety of long-distance trade farmers in the Middle East began experimenting with new items from India and China that would significantly gain in importance over the coming years: cotton, sugar cane, rice, citrus trees, eggplants and more the peoples living along the Silk Roads were influenced by the dynamic interplay of missionaries seeking converts to religions such as Buddhism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism and Manichaeism 121. 122. 123. 124. steppe customs, meanwhile, spread to foreign lands: the saddle and later the stirrup – most likely Central Asian inventions – made mounted warriors very effective led later to armored knights in medieval Europe and superior Tang cavalry in China the spread of epidemic disease was also notably facilitated by this long-distance trade network Manichaeism a missionary religion emphasizing the cosmic struggle between forces of light and darkness, good and evil derived as a syncretic blend of Zoroastrianism, Christianity and Buddhism founded by the prophet Mani (216-272 CE), who regarded Zarathustra as the prophet of Persia, Buddha the prophet of India and Jesus the prophet of the Mediterranean world because of the growing interaction of peoples from different societies, facilitated by the emerging Silk Roads, Mani saw a need for a prophet for all humanity and promoted his syncretic faith as a way to serve the needs of an increasingly cosmopolitan world Mani died in chains as a prisoner of the Sasanid emperor, who wanted to use Zoroastrianism to unify his realm … and Manichaeans began to be persecuted in the Roman empire, but the faith survived among nomadic Turkish peoples Diocletian Roman emperor who took power in 284 CE, ruling for 21 years and bringing the empire back from the brink of destruction set fixed prices for goods and froze many people into their jobs to ensure adequate supply of labor in key areas (which worked short-term but contributed long-term to common view that government was oppressive, no longer deserving of loyalty). divided the sprawling, difficult-to-manage empire into Greek-speaking East (Greece, Anatolia, Syria and Egypt) and Latin-speaking West (Italy, Gaul, Britain and Spain), taking the far wealthier East for himself and appointing a co-ruler for the West Constantine reigned 306-337 CE, winning the struggle for power after Diocletian resigned in 305 continued many of his predecessor’s coercive policies issued Edict of Milan, which in 313 finally made Christianity an approved religion of the emperor (Theodosius would later make it the empire’s official religion in 380) reunited entire empire under his own rule by 324 but moved the capital from Rome to Byzantium (which he renamed Constantinople and is now Istanbul), an easily defendable city strategically located on the Bosporus strait linking the Mediterranean and Black seas after the fall of the western half of the Roman empire in 476, the Byzantine empire would live on until 1453 Germanic migrations Germanic peoples had migrated from their homelands in northern Europe and lived on the eastern and northern borders of the Roman empire since the second century CE most notable of these were the Visigoths from Scandinavia and Russia, who settled, adopted agriculture and adapted elements of Roman culture and law to suit their own needs the Romans discouraged the settlement of Germanic peoples within the empire, preferring they remain outside the imperial borders as a buffer state but then in the mid-fifth century CE the warrior-king Attila organized the Huns (nomads from central Asia and cousins of the Xiongnu) into a virtually unstoppable military fighting force that invaded Hungary, menaced the Roman frontiers in the Balkans, and attacked Gaul and northern Italy … all of which led the Germanic peoples living in those areas to stream en masse into the Roman empire in search of refuge this hastened the end of the Roman empire: Visigoths stormed and sacked Rome in 410 and by the middle of the fifth century the western part of the Roman empire was in shambles