1 / 14

Southwest Asia: Beginnings

Southwest Asia: Beginnings . Mesopotamia: The Land Between the Rivers . Tigris and Euphrates – the two rivers that surround Mesopotamia Annual Flooding – left fertile soil for farmers to grow crops but the flooding was unpredictable

tasya
Download Presentation

Southwest Asia: Beginnings

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. Southwest Asia: Beginnings

  2. Mesopotamia: The Land Between the Rivers • Tigris and Euphrates – the two rivers that surround Mesopotamia • Annual Flooding – left fertile soil for farmers to grow crops but the flooding was unpredictable • Built dikes to hold back the flood and installed gates on the dams so they would provide direct water to their crops • Irrigation became an important part of Mesopotamian farming technology

  3. Sumer Southern region of Mesopotamia that consisted of a series of city states Cities were walled and the houses were made out of mud bricks

  4. Sumer Social Hierarchy

  5. Sumer • Deities or gods and goddesses • Very important to the Sumerians • Made sure harvests were good and the people were prosperous • Believed the king received his power to rule from the deities • Ziggurat – special temples to honor their deities

  6. Sumer • Inventions • Cuneiform – wedge-shaped system of writing • Based on pictures instead of letters like we use today • Scribes would use reeds or sticks to draw the shapes on clay tablets which would “bake” in the sun • Epic of Gilgamesh

  7. The Babylonian Empire • Hammurabi • Ruler of Babylon, a city state in Sumer • Took over much of central and southern Mesopotamia • Code of Hammurabi • 282 laws that were carved on stone pillars and placed throughout the empire • People who broke the laws were punished severely • Laws regulated marriages and family issues • Fathers had absolute rule over the family and women had fewer rights that men

  8. The Persian Conquerors • Power of city-states rose and fell constantly in Mesopotamia • Incoming kings may be powerful or weak • Cyrus the Great of Persia • Created a large empire in what is today Iran • Nicknamed the great because of how he treated the people he conquered

  9. The Persian Conquerors • Darius • Enlarged the empire so it reached from Europe to India • Centralized government to rule over the empire • 20 satrapies that were governed by a satrap • Royal road linked the parts of the empire to Susa (capital of the Persian Empire)

  10. The Israelites and the Beginning of Judaism

  11. Judaism began in Mesopotamia • The beginnings of Judaism is recorded in what Christians call the Old Testament

  12. The Israelites • Judaism began around 2000 BC with a leader named Abraham • Hebrews were nomadic herders who raised sheep and goats • Famine forced the Hebrews to migrate to Egypt in search of land and water • Egyptians enslaved the Hebrews until Moses led them out of Egypt and into Canaan

  13. The Israelites • Invasion • Took many Jews as captives to Babylonia in Mesopotamia where they remained for about 50 years • Cyrus the Great allowed the Jews to return to their homeland where they were able to rebuild Jerusalem and the temple that had been destroyed

  14. Jewish Beliefs • Judaism is MONOTHEISTIC – 1 God • God and the Jews enter a covenant • Jews would be protected if the Jews obeyed the ten commandants • Prophets – holy leaders • Teachings included a strong sense of right and wrong for individuals and communities • Social Injustice – looking out for others • The Rich and the powerful have a duty to help the poor and needy

More Related