C.E.-=COMMON-ERA(0)-* PC-=POLITICALLY-CORRECT-*
Transcript of C.E.-=COMMON-ERA(0)-* PC-=POLITICALLY-CORRECT-*
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CH. 1 – EARLY CIVILIZATIONS civiliza'on |ˌsivələˈzā sh ən| noun the stage of human social development and organizaKon that is considered most advanced : they equated the railroad with progress and civiliza7on. • the process by which a society or place reaches this stage. • the society, culture, and way of life of a parKcular area : the great books of Western civiliza7on | the early civiliza7ons of Mesopotamia and Egypt. • the comfort and convenience of modern life, regarded as available only in towns and ciKes : the fur traders moved further and further from civiliza7on.
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B.C. = BEFORE CHRIST
B.C.E. = BEFORE THE COMMON ERA *
A.D. = ANNO DOMINI – LAT. – IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD (0)
C.E. = COMMON ERA (0) *
PC = POLITICALLY CORRECT *
WHY?
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Before Civilization
• Prehistory: before wriUen records appeared (c. 3000 B.C.E.)
• Early man and archaeological evidence – Tool-‐making hominids appear about 2 million years ago
– Neanderthal (thirty thousand to two hundred thousand years ago)
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Before Civilization
• Early man and archaeological evidence – Upper Paleolithic Age, c. 40,000 B.C.E.
• Homo sapiens sapiens • Finely crafted tools • Cave paintings at
Lascaux
Cave paintings from Lascaux (right)
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Before Civilization
• Hunters and gatherers constantly on the move (c. 11,000 B.C.E.)
• Social, economic, and political consequences – Without domesticated animals, there were no
significant material possessions – Undeveloped division of labor – Acquiring food and tools the top priority – No storable surpluses
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The fertile crescent
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The growth of agriculture
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The Neolithic RevoluKon: New Stone Age, c. 11,000 B.C.E.
• The emergence of towns and villages – Emergence of villages – Jericho (c. 9000 B.C.E.)
• Grain-‐producing seUlement • Massive building program (walls and a tower) • Supported three thousand inhabitants • PoUery used for storage
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The Neolithic RevoluKon: New Stone Age, c. 11,000 B.C.E.
• The emergence of towns and villages – Food storage
• Led to inequalities of wealth
• Tied people to a specific community
– Trade and the exchange of commodities • Accelerated exchange of commodities and new
ideas
• Increasing social stratification
• Social elites
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GROWTH OF CITIES
POTTERY – TO STORE AND COOK FOOD
IRRIGATION – TO STORE WATER/DIVERT TO CROPS
TRADE – TO ACQUIIRE RARE GOODS
AFFECT
-‐ Wealth gap – Some accumulated more, some less
-‐ Religion – divine intervenKon for seasonal needs (rain)
-‐ Social Class DisKncKons – rulers, priests, laborers, etc
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Urban Development in Mesopotamia
• Urbanism in the Uruk Period (4300–2900 B.C.E.) – Transition to Sumerian city-states
• Temple architecture • Urbanization and expansion of trade routes
• The development of writing – Recordkeeping
– Cuneiform (“wedge-shaped writing”)
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Cuneiform writing
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“Necessity is the mother of inven'on.”
How does this saying apply to the Sumerians?
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The Culture of Sumer
• Religion – Pantheon of Sumerian gods (around fifteen
hundred of them) – Each city-state protected by its own patron
god • Redistributive economy and the temple/
warehouse complex
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The Culture of Sumer
• Slavery – Prisoners of war – Slaves as forms of property
• The Early Dynastic Period begins (2900–2500 B.C.E.) – War leadership and kingship – Conflict between city-states
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The Culture of Sumer
• Science, technology, and trade – High degree of self-reliance and ingenuity – Produced copper weapons and tools – Invention of the wheel (chariots and carts) – Mathematics
• Lunar calendar
– Trade • Acquired raw materials • Interacted with Egyptians and Persians
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The Old Babylonian Empire
• Hammurabi – Ascends throne in 1792 B.C.E. – Used wriKng as a weapon -‐ Ruled as a shepherd rather than a Lugal (“big man”)
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The Old Babylonian Empire
• Law and Society under Hammurabi – Interweaves political power with religious
practice – United his people politically – Ruled as king of Babylon, the city of Marduk
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The Old Babylonian Empire
• Law and Society under Hammurabi – The Code of Hammurabi
• Actual rulings of Hammurabi • The code was probably
never intended to be a code of laws in the modern sense
• The code as propaganda, used to publicize the king’s devotion to justice
The Code of Hammurabi (right)
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The Old Babylonian Empire
• Hammurabi’s legacy – The creation of a durable state – Helped establish a conception of kingship – The importance of religion