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Early River Valley Civilizations

Early River Valley Civilizations. 3500 B.C.-450 B.C. . What is the fertile crescent?. Between Persian Gulf and Mediterranean sea in Southwest Asia Region is curved shaped and the land is rich Provided some of the best farming in Southwest Asia. Became known as Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia.

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Early River Valley Civilizations

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  1. Early River Valley Civilizations 3500 B.C.-450 B.C.

  2. What is the fertile crescent? • Between Persian Gulf and Mediterranean sea in Southwest Asia • Region is curved shaped and the land is rich • Provided some of the best farming in Southwest Asia. • Became known as Mesopotamia

  3. Mesopotamia Means “land between the rivers” The Tigris and Euphrates frame Mesopotamia Flow to the Persian Gulf

  4. What environmental challenges existed in the area? • Unpredictable flooding • Long periods of little to no rain • No natural barriers for protection • Limited natural resources • Building materials were scarce

  5. How were these problems solved? • Dug irrigation ditches that carried river water to their fields and allowed them to produce a surplus of crops. • Built city walls with mud bricks for defense • Traded with peoples of mountain an deserts to receive raw materials. • KEY: ORGANIZATION, COOPERATION AND LEADERSHIP

  6. Sumerian City-States • Functioned like an independent country • Center of all Sumerian cities was walled temple with a ziggurat (city hall) in the middle • Priests had most control over the cities, because citizens wanted the blessings of the Gods • City-states grew, because crop production facilitated trade • Advanced cities, specialized workers, complex institutions, record keeping and improved technology set Sumer apart from other city-states.

  7. Sumerian Religion • Polytheistic: Believed in many different Gods • Gods did many of the same things that humans did-fell in love, had children, argued • Gods were also immortal • Humans were servants to the Gods • Built alters to the Gods and made sacrifices

  8. Life in Sumerian Society • Social classes existed • Women had many rights that did not exist in other civilizations • Technology greatly increased • Invented wheel, sail, plow • Used bronze • Developed measuring system • Created their own system of writing

  9. What was Mesopotamia’s first empire? • Led by Sargon from Akkad • Conquests helped spread culture of Sumer • Brought together people from across the Mediterranean Coast • Lasted only about 200 years • Declined because of internal fighting, invasions and famine

  10. What was the most lasting empire? • The Babylonian Empire • Reached its peak during the reign of Hammurabi • Developed his own code of laws • Helped unify diverse groups • Affected everything within the community • Tells about beliefs of Mesopotamians • Different punishments for rich and poor • Lasted for two centuries • Fell to neighboring Kassites

  11. What were the geographical features of Egypt? • Africa • Most settlements were along the Nile River, the longest River in the World • When the Nile flooded, it left rich, fertile silt which was beneficial to farming • Egyptians built irrigation ditches, from which to water crops year-round • The desert was advantageous because it kept invaders from Egypt

  12. Early Egyptian Villages • Farming villages • Each had its own rituals, gods and chieftain • Under the rule of two separate kingdoms, Lower and Upper Egypt • Two kingdoms were eventually united

  13. When was Egypt unified? • Around 3000 BC • Ruled by one Kingdom • Kings were representative of the Gods and were called Pharaohs • Government was a theocracy • Believed that King ruled, even after death • Pyramids were constructed to serve as “palaces” for dead kings • Reflected the strength of Egyptian civilization and technology

  14. Egyptian Culture and Life • Religion: Polytheistic • Mummification, items used in afterlife. • Class Structure: King, upper class, middle class, lower class, slaves • Not locked into social class • Women had same rights as men • Writing: Hieroglyphics-Picture stood for an idea • Also invented papyrus, a form of paper • Science and Technology: Calendar(kept track of seasons), written numbers, geometry, medicine

  15. How did the “Old & Middle Kingdoms” end? Power of Pharaohs declined Group from Palestine, called the Hyksos moved into Egypt and began their rule.

  16. What was the geography of the Indian Subcontinent? • World’s tallest mountains to the north • Largest desert to the east • Helped protect from invasion • Two significant rivers: Ganges and Indus • Carried water for irrigation and silt for rich agriculture • Southern part thrusts south into the Indian Ocean • Monsoons dominated climate

  17. How did civilization emerge on the Indus? • Not really sure, because historical evidence is lacking • Inhabitants did construct planned cities, with strong levees to keep out flooding • Cities were laid out on a precise grid system, inside fortifications • Had sophisticated plumbing and sewage systems • Harappa was one of the more famous cities.

  18. Harappan Culture • Language: Written language, but impossible to decipher-over 400 symbols • Religion: Theocracy-Gods and Goddesses • Trade: Thriving trade due to location along the Indus river

  19. Indus Valley Culture Ends • Fate of cities remained a mystery until 1970 • Satellite images revealed that tectonic plates had shifted, possibly causing earthquakes and floods • Many cities were destroyed • Over-farming may have led to the destruction of other cities.

  20. What was the geography of early China? • Natural barriers (oceans, seas, mountains, deserts) isolated China from other parts of the world & limited trade • Two major river systems (Yellow River & Chang Jiang) flow through China • Only about 10% of China’s land was suitable for farming

  21. Chinese Civilization Emerges • 2000 BC early Chinese settlements grew into cities • During the first dynasty, flood control and irrigation projects helped tame rivers so that settlements could grow. • Shang Dynasty came to power in 1700 BC. • First to have written records • Built elaborate palaces, walled cities and tombs • Anyang was most important cities

  22. Chinese Culture • Family: Central to society, respect for parents, greater rights for males, arranged marriages • Social Classes: Sharply divided between nobles and peasants • Religion: Believed spirits of ancestors could bring good or evil • Writing: No links between written and spoken language, but did help unify the Chinese

  23. Zhou and the Dynastic Cycle • 1027 BC Zhou overthrew Shang and created their own dynasty • Said that their authority to do this came from a “Mandate from Heaven” • Established feudalism, a political system in which nobles could use the land of the king, in return for loyalty and military service • During the dynasty, roads and canals were built, money was introduced and improved trade • Towards the end of the Zhou reign chaos and defiance was commonplace in China

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