1 / 28

Civilization Cynic

QUAESTIO : How did geography shape the early river valley civilizations? NUNC AGENDA : Work in groups to finish the civilization cynic activity. Civilization Cynic. Finally , discuss the summary questions on the board within your group and as a class.

norah
Download Presentation

Civilization Cynic

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. QUAESTIO: How did geography shape the early river valley civilizations?NUNC AGENDA: Work in groups to finish the civilization cynic activity

  2. Civilization Cynic • Finally, discuss the summary questions on the board within your group and as a class. • How did the need for defense against war contribute to the development of civilization, and how did it lead to either social stratification or patriarchy? • How did the need to coerce people into working for the common good contribute to the development of civilization, and how did it lead to either social stratification or patriarchy? • Have you become a civilization cynic?

  3. THE BIG FOUR RIVER VALLEYS • Mesopotamia (several civilizations): Tigris & Euphrates Rivers – Modern Iraq & E Syria

  4. THE BIG FOUR RIVER VALLEYS • Indus Civilization (aka Harappan Civilization): Indus River – Modern Pakistan & NW India

  5. THE BIG FOUR RIVER VALLEYS • Egypt & Nubia: Nile River – Modern Egypt and Sudan

  6. THE BIG FOUR RIVER VALLEYS • Xia & Shang China: Yellow River (aka Huang He River) – Modern NE China

  7. THE BIG FOUR RIVER VALLEYS • River valleys = Fertile: seasonal floods deposit silt into the soil, making surplus possible • Silt = sediment carried by river water, somewhere between sand and clay, full of nutrients • Rivers can also facilitate travel and trade

  8. CONTROL OVER WATER • Excessive flooding can destroy settlements and crops, and even cause deaths • Infrequent flooding leaves crops without sufficient water • Solution = Irrigation systems for bringing water to crops & Dikes to hold back flood waters • Required organization and coordination  Governments develop to oversee and direct • Some easy to control water (Egypt, Indus), some difficult (Mesopotamia, China)

  9. CITY–STATES – CASE STUDY THE SUMERIANS • Sumerians = the earliest civilization, located in Southern Mesopotamia, a collection of city-states • Each city-state had one central city that controlled the lands surrounding it • City: Center of political and military control as well as trade and religious ritual • State: Wider lands which included many small villages and agricultural land

  10. Meso = Between Potamia = Rivers

  11. Sumer = First Civilization

  12. CITY–STATES – CASE STUDY THE SUMERIANS • Politically divided but culturally united • Different rulers but shared language, religion, customs, trade • Spoke Sumerian, a language isolate (not related to any other known language)

  13. THE FIRST KINGDOMS • Mesopotamia • 2334 BCE: Akkadians, Semitic-speaking people from the desert, settled in northern Mesopotamia and soon conquered Sumer in the south • Created the first kingdom built on conquest, with Kings evolving from warrior leaders • Sometimes called world’s first Empire: a state ruling over multiple territories and peoples

  14. THE FIRST KINGDOMS • Egypt • Nile shamans evolved into Egyptian Priest Kings, seen as connected to the gods • 2686 BCE: Upper and Lower Kingdoms united as one, forming Old Kingdom Egypt • Priest King evolved into Pharaoh, seen as a living god

  15. THE FIRST KINGDOMS • China • 2200 BCE: Ancient legends claim the Xia dynasty was founded by Yu the Engineer, who organized large-scale flood control projects to tame the Yellow River • General theme: Over time, shift from importance of religious leaders to military leaders in control of government, especially in areas exposed to frequent warfare

  16. DEVELOPMENT OF WRITING • Most early writing began as pictograms, symbols designed to look like the things they represent, but later developed into more abstract forms, and came to represent sounds rather than things • Sumer: Cuneiform was the first system of writing ever invented, used for many different languages of peoples in and around Mesopotamia

  17. DEVELOPMENT OF WRITING • Egypt: While not the first, Heiroglyphics was the ancestor script of many modern scripts, including our own!

  18. OTHER TECHNOLOGIES • Bronze: 4000 BCE Mesopotamians strengthened soft copper with tin to make the alloy metal called bronze, used for durable tools and weapons, but very expensive because of the rarity of tin • Wheel: 3500 BCE Sumerians began using wooden wheels, and wheeled carts by 3000 BCE, which dramatically improved transportation of large and heavy goods

  19. TRADE NETWORKS • Specialized labor + more efficient transportation (land and water) + geographic differences = Long-Distance Trade • River valleys often resource poor, had to trade with neighbors for special raw materials like lumber, tin, textiles, skins, dyes, gold, gems, slaves etc • Trade works best with healthy peaceful relations, though often continues even during hostility and war

  20. TRADE NETWORKS • Indus Valley traded with Southern/Eastern India and Mesopotamia • Mesopotamia also traded with Asia Minor, Levant, and Egypt

  21. TRADE NETWORKS • Egypt also traded throughout Eastern Mediterranean and upstream of Nile with Nubia and along the coast of East Africa • China had only very limited trade to the West but traded with their neighbors in East Asia • Contact and trade leads to cultural diffusion – exchange of ideas and technology

  22. RELIGIOUS BELIEFS • Mostly polytheistic – belief in many gods (poly = many; theos = god) • Pantheon = collection of gods within a polytheistic system (pan = all) • Though less common, some examples of monotheism – belief in one god (mono = one)

  23. Lamassu = Protector God

  24. RELIGIOUS BELIEFS • Influenced by agriculture • Fertility still important as with Paleolithic, now focused on crops • Major themes = cycles of birth, death, and rebirth, just like crops and seasons • Most religions had stories of a major destruction by a flood, often sent by the gods

More Related