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CLASSICAL PERIPHERIES: EMERGING AREAS ON THE BORDERS OF CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS

CLASSICAL PERIPHERIES: EMERGING AREAS ON THE BORDERS OF CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS. THE CLASSIC WORLD. NOMADIC SOCIETY AND ECONOMY. Nomadic peoples Pastoral nomads Clans from common ancestors, with related languages Central Asia's steppes Good for grazing, little rain, few rivers

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CLASSICAL PERIPHERIES: EMERGING AREAS ON THE BORDERS OF CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS

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  1. CLASSICAL PERIPHERIES: EMERGING AREAS ON THE BORDERS OF CLASSICAL CIVILIZATIONS

  2. THE CLASSIC WORLD

  3. NOMADIC SOCIETY AND ECONOMY • Nomadic peoples • Pastoral nomads • Clans from common ancestors, with related languages • Central Asia's steppes • Good for grazing, little rain, few rivers • Nomads and their animals; few settlements • Nomads drove their herds in migratory cycles • Lived mostly on animal products • Produced millet, pottery, leather goods, iron • Nomads and settled peoples • A love, hate relationship of war and trade • Trade, exchange: Nomads maintained caravan routes • Exchanged horses for finished goods including silk • Fluidity of classes, gender in nomadic society • Two social classes: nobles and commoners • Patriarchal society but women accorded many rights, privileges • Religions • Mostly shamanistic • Diviners influence forces of nature, interpret it • Political and Military organization • Autonomous clans and tribes • Organized confederation of tribes • Loyalty to higher, stronger lord but generally autonomous • Outstanding cavalry forces

  4. THE NOMAD’S WORLD

  5. Central Asia 2000 – 1000 BCE

  6. Indo-Europeans • Obscure pastoral nomads • Central Eurasian pastoral • Lived in area around • Northern Black Sea • Northern Caspian Sea • Language • Is basis of Indo-European languages • Now spoken on every continent • Spoken by over ½ of world’s people • Spread throughout Eurasia • Left no written records • Deeds remembered orally and written down later • Often called chariot peoples • Migration split culture into different branches • Hittites were first in “Western” History

  7. Proto-Indo-European • Groups • Indo-Europeans • Indo-Iranians • Indo-Aryans • Chariot Peoples • Domesticated horse • Developed metallurgy technologies • Created chariots, archery, cavalry • Herded sheep, horses, cattle

  8. Indo-European Languages and Groups • Linguists cannot date divergence of branches • Vocabulary included • Mother-Father • Mutter-Vater (German) • Matar-Patar (Sanskrit) • Madre-Padre (Spanish) • Mater-Pater (Latin) • God • Dyas (Sky God – Aryans/Sanskrit) • Zeus (Greek) • Deus (God – Latin) • Dios, Dieu (God – Spanish, French) • Dream • Soma – God of Dreams, Sanskrit • Sonar – Dream, Spanish • Fire, Combust • Agni – God of Fire, Sanskrit • Ignite – Explode, combust, English

  9. First Migrations • c. 4500 BCE • First Indo-European cultures north of Caspian Sea • Sub-division into tribes with distinct cultures • Early chariots, stone idols, stone circles • Domestication of the horse • c. 4000 BCE • Indo-Europeans bury leaders in artificial hills with all belongings • Anatolian migration begins • c. 3500 BCE • Animal husbandry, permanent settlements, hill forts • Subsisting on agriculture and fishing, along rivers. • Beginning of Bronze Age • c. 3000 BCE • Indo-Europeans extend across entire steppe north of Black Sea to China • Migration begins into Europe from the Volga to the Rhine River • Rise of distinct, individualized cultures with distinct languages • Anatolian (Hittite) and Tocharian (in Xingjian Province) • Loose contact spreads technology

  10. SPREAD OF THE INDO-EUROPEANS Red—settling up to ca. 2500 BCE Orange—settling up to ca. 1000 BCE • SPREAD OF THE CHARIOT & HORSE

  11. Break-Up and Spread • c. 2500 BCE • Rise of distinct proto-languages due to geographic separation and physical geography • Proto-Greek is spoken in Balkans • Proto-Indo-Iranian is spoken North of the Caspian Sea • Bronze Age reaches Europe • c. 2000 BCE • Chariot is invented in its modern form • Chariot leads to split, spread of Iranians, Indo-Aryans over Central Asia, Northern India, Iran • Anatolian splits into Hittite and lesser languages • c. 1500 BCE • Proto-Germanic and Proto-Celts emerge in Central Europe, Scandinavia • Proto-Celts become masters of bronze technology • Proto-Italians migrate into Italian peninsula • Rise of the Rig Veda and Vedic Culture in the Indus-Ganges River Valley • Mycenaean civilization arises in Peloponnesian Peninsula. • c. 1000 to 500 BCE • Celts spread throughout Western Europe; Germanic culture arises in Scandinavia • Vedic Age gives way to Brahamanism and Upanishads • Medes and Persians establish Achaeamenid Empire in Southwest Asia • Zoroaster arises in Iran and composes the Gathas; Homeric epics written in Greece • Genesis of Italic and Greek alphabets • Thracian, Illyrian, Dacian languages arise in Balkans; Hittite goes extinct

  12. Eurasian Migrations

  13. Migrations into europe

  14. Later Migrations • In Europe • Celts to Iberia, British Isles c. 750 BCE • Scythians, Sarmatians c. 500 BCE along Black Sea • Germans 100 – 600 CE in Central, Western Europe • Slavs 300 – 700 CE from Eastern to SE, Central Europe • Scandinavian (Vikings) 600 – 900 CE along rivers, coasts • In Central Asia • Shang to China, c. 1500 BCE • Bactrians to Persia, Afganistan 250 BCE • Parthians to Persia 250 BCE • Tocarians/Kushans to Afghanistan 100 BCE • Sakas (Indo-Scythians) to Afghanistan, India 100 CE

  15. Scythians & Sarmatians

  16. THE CELTS • Celts • History • Arose in Alps, Central Europe 1200 BCE • Settled in France, Spain, Britain, Ireland • Migrated into Italy, Balkans, Greece, Turkey around 1000 BCE • Paul’s Letter to the Galatians = Celt tribe of Turkey • Strong tradition of warfare, raids • Civilization at Ancient Bronze Age similar to Mycenae Greece • Some cities but generally fortified hill sites • Grew wheat and barley and kept sheep, cattle and some pigs • Developed crafts, strong artistic tradition; pottery • Controlled salt deposits as source of trade • Strong trade with Mediterranean, Greeks, Etruscans • Developed Iron technologies around 1000 BCE • Structures and hierarchies • Organized into clans, tribes ruled by kings and druids • Polytheistic, deified nature: priests = druids • Strong tradition of bards, story tellers, ballads, heroes, saints • Rome and the Celts • Romans conquered Celts, Romanized Celts • Caesar conquered Gaul; later emperors added Britain • Organized Celtic lands into provinces, built cities • Blended Celtic-Latin culture: Assimilation • Exterminated Druid priests as they opposed Rome • Ireland, Scotland retained independence • Christianity reached Celts by 3rd century CE • Irish Christianity never effected by collapse of Rome

  17. Celtic Migrations

  18. CELTIC WORLD CELTS BECAME Treveri Helveti Parisi Veneti Regni Iceni Caledones Celtiberi AND LATER Irish Welsh Scots Britons Cornish Manx

  19. THE GERMANS • Early Bronze Age History • Original Homeland = Sweden • Migrated into Germany, Denmark • Sometimes allies, slaves of Celts • later established independence of Celts • Settled 2/3 of Europe • Eastern Europe, Central Europe, steppes of Ukraine • Pushed up to Rhine, Danube border • Germans and Romans • With defeat of Celts, Germans became threat to Rome • Germans were stronger than Celts, defied Romans • In 1st century, defeated Romans, remained independent • Romans erected elaborate defense systems against Germans • Late 3rd century: Germans become Roman mercenaries • Late 4th century: Germans allowed to settle in Roman empire • Society • Agrarian society: small villages, fortified areas; some trade • Strong tribes, loyalty to warlords; raiding very important • Two classes: nobility and commoners; both owned land • Women had many rights in Germanic society • Religion was a militaristic bloody polytheism • Christianity and Germans • Missionaries moved, settled amongst Germans • St. Ulfias converts Germans to Arian Christianity

  20. THE GERMAN WORLD Teutons Became Goths Visigoths Ostrogoths Vandals Franks Burgundians Suevi Alans Angles Saxons Jutes Lombards Norsemen Germans Austrian Dutch Flemish English Swiss Swedes Danes Norwegians Icelanders

  21. Germanic MigrationsThe Volkerwanderung

  22. THE EARLY SLAVIC MIGRATIONS Slavs were Originally Part of the German World. The tribes were allied. When the Germans Moved West, Slavs Were ruled First by Huns and Later Independent. They filled Hun and German vacuum.

  23. Slavic Migrations • Homeland: Pripet Marshes (Belarus) • 400 – 650 CE • Come to dominate Central, Eastern Europe • Filled in for exiting Germans • Spread across Carpathians • 650 – 750 CE • Spread into Southeast Europe, Balkans • Byzantines too weak to prevent • Bulgars (Turks) adopt Slavic customs • Spread across Northern European Plain

  24. Late Indo-European Steppe Peoples in Central Asia

  25. BORDERS OF CHINA • Relative Location • Korea, Vietnam borders of China • Japan located off coast of East Asia • Physical Characteristics • Korea, Vietnam • Mountainous, cut by river valleys • Population located on plains • Japan • Volcanic islands, very mountainous • Deep valleys with plains • Demography • Peoples related to Chinese • Populace generally heavy on plains • Rice was principal crop • Cities exist but rarer than China • Cities: centers of Chinese culture • Countryside: resistant to Sinification

  26. THE CONFUCIAN WORLD

  27. Yue, yueh: who are they? • Yangzi and South • China: Two cultural hearths where agriculture arose • Yellow River were clearly Chinese or Han • The peoples south of the Yangzi were not Chinese • Rice, yams cultivated; pig, water buffalo, chicken domesticated • Strong aquaculture and use of sea-borne technologies • 1st Wave: Voluntary migration to Taiwan, Philippines • The Yue and the Chinese • Ancient Chinese name for peoples south of Yangzi • Chinese identify 100 different peoples • Qin and Han push control south • Increasingly brought under Chinese influence – language, customs • Ethnic Chinese settled throughout area • People forced to migrate to hills, leave area • Second Wave: Westward into hills of Sichuan • Third Wave: Southward into Vietnam

  28. MIGRATION IN EAST AND SOUTH-EAST ASIA Conquests by Qin and Han armies plus Pressure from Han peasants migrating To south began the migrations.

  29. Malayo-Polynesians • Theories for Origin • They migrated from Taiwan, Philippines • They migrated from New Guinea • They migrated from Yunnan down Mekong • Dates • Hard to define • Thought to be have begun around 2000 BCE • Migration Pressures • Over-population • Technology allowed ease of sailing, navigation • Areas Settled • Indonesia, Philippines, Malay Peninsula, South Vietnam • Madagascar, New Zealand, Hawaii • New Guinea, Micronesia, Melanesia, Polynesia

  30. Mapping Their Movement

  31. THE POLYNESIANS: OCEANIC NOMADS • Polynesians • Originated in New Guinea • Developed shifting agriculture, portable agriculture • Farm one area intensively, move on • Raised banana, taro, sweet potato, fish, pigs, chickens • Sailing Technology • Double hulled canoes; central platform with sail • Use stars, winds, wave patterns, air/sea patterns, islands, atolls, birds • Migrated across island chains in boats • By 1500 BCE settled Madagascar; by 300 CE Easter Island • By 500 CE settled Polynesia, Micronesia, Hawaii • By 1000 CE settled New Zealand – totally different climate • Social Structures • Migration needed to avoid overpopulation • Depleted resources, shortages, environmental degradation, conflict • Eastern Island was example of this problem • Hamlet and villages • Hamlets on volcanic islands, up to 5 houses; often one family • Villages on larger islands, up to 30 houses; often an important chief, king • Society organized by extended families, clans • Many taboos or prohibitions, laws regulating societies • Division of labor • Men fished, women worked shore and land • Coastal Polynesians traded fish for inland products

  32. POLYNESIAN WORLD KEY 1. Polynesia 2. Hawai‘i 3. New Zealand 4. Easter Island 5. Samoa 6. Fiji 7. Tahiti

  33. Oceanic Nomads

  34. Micro, Mela, Poly-nesia Micro = Small IslandsMela = Black Islands (Volcano)Poly = Many Islands

  35. EARLY KOREA • Pre-Historic Korea • Region had extensive Paleolithic, Neolithic settlements • Evolved into pottery producing societies • Evolved both dry field, wet field production of rice • Practiced elite burial • Gojoseon • Claimed to be the first Korean historical state • Founded c. 2300 BCE • People were descendants of Altaic tribes migrating from Manchuria • First capital was Liaoning but later moved to Pyongyang • Bronze Age Culture to 400 BCE • Feudal culture became centralized • Agriculture expanded with new crops • Iron Age Culture • Warfare in China pushed Chinese refugees into Korea • Refugees brought iron technology into Korea leading to collapse of state • Period saw rise of culture in Southern Peninsula which traded with Japan • Han China • Qin and Han conquered Northern Korea, ruled them as four provinces • Fall of Han saw Korea independent with three rival states • Confucianism entered with bureaucracy

  36. EARLY JAPAN • Ancient Japan • Earliest inhabitants were nomadic Caucasians (Ainu) from Northeast Asia • Japanese related to Koreans, migrated into islands, pushed Ainu north • Ruled by several dozen states dominate by clans, 1st millennium BCE • Shinto: Ancestor veneration with deification of nature, spirits (kami) • Nara Japan (710-794 C.E.) • Yamato clan claimed imperial authority • The imperial court modeled on that of the Tang • Built a new capital (Nara) in 710 C.E., modeled on Chang'an • Adopted Confucianism, Buddhism, but maintained Shinto • Heian Japan (794-1185 C.E.) • Moved to new capital Heian (modern Kyoto) in 794 • Japanese emperors as ceremonial figureheads and symbols of authority • Effective power in the hands of the Fujiwara family, bureaucrats • Emperor did not rule; lived in splendid isolation along with court elite • Chinese learning dominated Japanese education, culture • The Tale of Genji • Women contributed most to Japanese literature and writing • Decline of Heian Japan • Equal-field system failed; Aristocratic clans accumulated lands • Rivalry between court nobility and landed aristocracy • Taira and Minamoto, the two most powerful clans, engaged in wars

  37. Dai Viet or Vietnam • Yue People • Chinese name for Vietnamese • Settled in Red River Valley • Subject to Chinese rule until 900 CE • Vietnamese State • Many Chinese cultural forms • But distinctive Vietnamese qualities • Constant battle with Chinese • Later State • Pushed south along coast • Settled Vietnamese peasants to farm rice, raise fish • In early modern era, absorbed Champa • Pushed up Mekong River against Khmer People

  38. The Vietnamese & Champa • Genetic Markers • Indicate an origin in South China • Southern Chinese (Yue, Intermarriage) • The Thai, Malayo-Polynesians • Originated as the Yue People of South China • Came under increasing Chinese presence • Migration to avoid assimilation • Moved into Red River Valley • Tributary to China for 1500 years • From 500 BCE to 1000 CE were tributary to China • Around 900 began successful revolt to throw off Chinese • Vietnamese state expanded • Expanded south along coast – absorbed related Champa • Push inland from coast up to highlands • Champa • A Malayo-Polynesian state establish in South Vietnam

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