1 / 16

How did humans become “civilized”?

How did humans become “civilized”?. This class is called “World Civilizations” What were we like before “Civilization” came around? How did we change to become civilized?. What is a Civilization? Two definitions. Civilizations have: An urban focus – major cities

papina
Download Presentation

How did humans become “civilized”?

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. How did humans become “civilized”? This class is called “World Civilizations” What were we like before “Civilization” came around? How did we change to become civilized?

  2. What is a Civilization? Two definitions Civilizations have: An urban focus – major cities Political and military systems Social structure based on economic systems-upper and lower classes Development of labor specialization Distinct religious structure Development of Writing New and significant artistic and intellectual activity Advanced Cities Advanced Technology System of Writing Civilization Has… Complex Institutions Skilled Workers

  3. Food, What would we do without it?

  4. Before farmingForaging AKAHunter-Gatherers • Food sources? • Plants are gathered in season and stored when possible • Meat is hunted and dried for food and other uses, clothing, rope, etc. • Move around to take advantage of seasonal offerings i.e. nomadic

  5. Hunter-Gatherers’ societies Advantages Disadvantages Dependent upon wild animals and plants Nature can only support small groups and cultures Must travel around to find food, so no permanent building structures No animals to help with labor • Fit into nature (little environmental impact) • Relatively little labor expended to get food • Variety in diet • Deep knowledge of uses for plants and animals in the region they live.

  6. What changed? • Hunter Gatherer type societies had survived for thousands of years. • After the last ice age ended in 10,000 B.C.E., humans began selecting dependable plants for food

  7. What tastes makes a good food plant? • Tastes good (not bitter) • Large (larger fruit or seeds) • Easy to pick • Grow fast or with lots of fruit/seeds. (High Yields) • Grow Annually • The first crops that met with humans’ approval were cereals and pulses.

  8. Domestication! • The process of humans selecting plants for more useful characteristics is called Domestication • It was also used with animals.

  9. First domesticated plants Geographical Area Crops domesticated Wheat, barley, peas, lentils, chickpea, flax, muskmelon Millet, rice?, soybean, adzuki bean, mung bean, hemp Rice?, hyacinth bean, cotton, cucumber Corn, common bean, yucca, jicama, squashes Potato, quinoa, lima bean, peanut • Middle East aka Fertile Crescent • China • India • Mesoamerica • Andes/Amazonia

  10. Lentil Stew ala Clay Ball • - by: Ruth Tringham Prep time: 3-4 hours (includes gathering wild herbs, processing bones for grease, gathering wood/dung for fire) You'll need: • lentils, soaked in water • wild herbs • goat grease • wood/dung for fire • water-tight basket • Fill basket with water. Soak for 1 hour. (Basket will absorb water and expand the fibers, making it water-tight. This also prevents scorching.) • Heat clay balls in a dung or wood fire. (For complete instructions, see Clay Ball Heating section.) • Put soaked lentils in the cooking basket with water, goat grease, and wild herbs. • Put hot clay balls in the cooking basket, stirring constantly. As balls cool, replace them with hot ones.

  11. What makes a useful animal? Good characteristics Bad characteristics But not too big Bad temper Carnivore • Humans have used animals for… • Meat • Milk • Fertilizer • Transportation • Military Assault • Plowing fields • and unknowingly Germs • Big • Easy to control • Herbivore or omnivore • Multiple uses • Short childhoods

  12. Approximate dates and locations for Domestication of Large Mammal Species Species Dog Sheep Goat Pig Cow Horse Donkey Water buffalo Llama/alpaca Bactrian camel Arabian camel Dates (B.C.E.) 10,000 8,000 8,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 4,000 4,000 3,500 2,500 2,500 Place Middle East, China, North America Middle East Middle East China, Middle East India, Middle East Ukraine Egypt China? Andes (South America) Central Asia (the stans) Arabia From Guns, Germs, and Steel pg. 167

  13. The Fertile Crescent

More Related