1 / 72

HIS 101

HIS 101. Western Civilization Chapter 1. Homo Sapien. Progression. Neanderthals. Neanderthal Face. Modern Human. Cave Painting at Lascaux, France. Paleolithic. Neolithic. Mesopotamia. Egypt. Cuneiform. Gilgamesh. Gilgamesh Tablet. Sargon I. Hammurabi. Babylon.

shalin
Download Presentation

HIS 101

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. HIS 101 Western Civilization Chapter 1

  2. Homo Sapien

  3. Progression

  4. Neanderthals

  5. Neanderthal Face

  6. Modern Human

  7. Cave Painting at Lascaux, France

  8. Paleolithic

  9. Neolithic

  10. Mesopotamia

  11. Egypt

  12. Cuneiform

  13. Gilgamesh

  14. Gilgamesh Tablet

  15. Sargon I

  16. Hammurabi

  17. Babylon

  18. Ishtar Gate, Babylon

  19. Hammurabi’s Kingdom

  20. Code of Hammurabi

  21. Ziggurat at Ur

  22. Ziggurat at Ur

  23. Early Sumerian Statue

  24. Sumerian Stele

  25. Stele

  26. Egypt

  27. Farming Along Nile

  28. Menes

  29. Old Kingdom (3100 – 2200 BC) • Middle Kingdom (2050 – 1750 BC) • New Kingdom ( 1560 – 1087 BC)

  30. Dynasty: group of rulers from a single family who succeeded one another as pharaoh

  31. Menkure, Kephren, & Khufu

  32. Key to the success of the Third Dynasty of the Old Kingdom was • Absolute power of pharaoh • Pharaoh owned Egypt and its people • Every person was pharaoh’s servant • Pharaohs were active statesmen • Pharaohs had a highly developed administrative system

  33. At the end of the Old Kingdom there were ineffectual leaders and things fell apart. • This was followed by years of chaos • About 2050 BC the Middle Kingdom began and restored the institutions of the Old Kingdom

  34. The divine power of pharaohs • A centralized bureaucracy • A provincial administration • A revived economy • Reclaimed land from the desert • Expanded trade • Maintained order

  35. One change : less emphasis on the divine power of the pharaoh and more on the quality of government • Concept of ma’at was important • principle of right order, justice, and harmony • This added a humane quality to Middle Kingdom

  36. Hyksos

  37. Old and Middle Kingdoms • Economic system depended on carefully controlled agriculture • Relied on peasants to keep irrigation system working, to plant and harvest, and to build pyramids, public buildings, temples, and dwellings • Artisans and merchants added to Egypt’s wealth

  38. Cultural Life • Rooted in religion • Deities thought to be benevolent to humans • Deities explained through mythology • Egyptians thought they had won the gods favor because of their abundant harvests, peace, and security • Ka : spiritual double that lived after death in close association with the spirits

  39. Hieroglyphics

  40. Hieroglyphics

  41. Khufu

  42. Rigid Statue

  43. Relief

  44. Science and Technology • Recorded movements of the stars • Had accurate time system: had 12 – 30 day months with 5 days added at end of year • Had system of numbers: arithmetic, volumes, and areas • Had information on metals and plant life • Developed surgical techniques and drugs • Understood anatomy from mummification

  45. Ahmose I

  46. Thutmose I

  47. Thutmose II

More Related