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City-States in Mesopotamia

City-States in Mesopotamia. Mr. Morris World History. Key Terms Ch 2.1 pg. 29. Fertile Crescent Mesopotamia City-state Dynasty Cultural diffusion Polytheism Empire Hammurabi. Setting the Stage. There are two rivers in Southwest Asia that flow to the Persian Gulf

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City-States in Mesopotamia

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  1. City-States in Mesopotamia Mr. Morris World History

  2. Key Terms Ch 2.1 pg. 29 • Fertile Crescent • Mesopotamia • City-state • Dynasty • Cultural diffusion • Polytheism • Empire • Hammurabi

  3. Setting the Stage • There are two rivers in Southwest Asia that flow to the Persian Gulf • These rivers allowed farmers to settle on their banks and they eventually became home to villages and cities

  4. Geography of the Fertile Crescent • Southwest Asia is home to a hot, dry desert • However, there is an area between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers that is very fertile and provided great farming long ago • This region is known as Mesopotamia • The rivers would flood at least once a year, leaving behind silt that was very fertile for planting crops • The large harvests led to room for expansion and cities

  5. Environmental Challenges • 3300 B.C. – Sumerians arrive in Mesopotamia because of the good soil and farming conditions • There were some disadvantages, however • Unpredictable flooding, little rain • No natural barriers • Limited natural resources • Problems?

  6. Solving Problems Through Organization • Sumerians had to come up with solutions to deal with these disadvantages • Dug irrigation ditches • Built walled cities • Opened trading with other peoples • These projects took cooperation and good leadership • Beginning of government AND civilization

  7. Sumerians Create City-States • Five key characteristics in Sumer • Advanced cities • Specialized workers • Complex institutions • Record keeping • Improved technology • Sumerians created many city-states to serve as centers of government

  8. Priests and Rulers Share Control • Early governments were run by temple priests • Taxes were taken from crops given to priests • When there was a war, the priests would not lead the army, instead a great warrior was chosen • These leaders led the army during peacetime as well • Eventually military leaders became rulers of the city-states • Dynasties were formed after one ruler’s death

  9. The Spread of Cities • As Sumerians produced more food, they had more to trade • Traded with other people and shared ideas with them • Cultural diffusion

  10. A Religion of Many Gods • The Sumerians were polytheistic • Their gods were like humans, they fell in love, argued, and had kids • They were also all-powerful and immortal • Sumerians had to keep the gods happy so that they would not be attacked or fall victim to fire or flood • Offered sacrifices and impressive ziggurats to keep gods happy • Those who died went to a gloomy place

  11. Life in Sumerian Society • Sumerians started social classes • Most people were lowly workers or slaves • Slaves were either captured enemies or children sold into slavery to pay their parents’ debts • Women in Sumer had more rights than in later societies • Own land • Join priesthood • Choose their profession

  12. Sumerian Science and Technology • Sumerians invented many technological advances • Wheel, sail, plow, bronze tools • Arithmetic & geometry helped build buildings • Arches, columns, ramps, pyramid • Cuneiform writing • First maps and recordings of scientific observations

  13. Sargon of Akkad • Sargon was a great ruler who captured Sumerian city-states • Spread culture of Sumer further than ever before • This created the first empire ever • Only lasted 200 years

  14. Babylonian Empire • The Amorites invaded Mesopotamia and set up their capital at Babylon • At its peak, the Babylonian ruler was Hammurabi, who established a set of laws for his subjects to abide by

  15. Hammurabi’s Code • The Code of Hammurabi was a list of laws that applied throughout the empire • Hammurabi had them carved in stone and copies sent out all over the empire • 282 laws dealing with a variety of crimes • Different punishments for rich and poor • Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth (retaliation) • Government took responsibility for crimes against its citizens

  16. Why is this Important? • The Sumerian people started what would become the first cities, empire, government, and written laws in the world • Many of their advances in technology benefit us today • Wheel = car tires • Sail = travel over water • Geometry = Mr. Yoder • Ramps = disabled have access to buildings • Writing = you can read this!

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