Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into...

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Transcript of Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into...

Page 1: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 2: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Mesopotamian Civilization

• Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies.

-advanced cities -class divisions

-organized governments

-art

-religion

-writing systems

Page 3: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

River Valley Civilizations• The first civilizations arose in river valleys

because good farming conditions made it easy to feed large numbers of people.

• Then rivers also made it easy to get from one place to another and to trade.

• As cities took shape, so did the need for organization.

• People formed governments to make plans and decisions about matters of common concern.

Page 4: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

The Dawn of Civilization

Page 5: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Early Governments

• Government leaders took charge of food supplies and building projects.

• They made laws to keep order and assembled armies to fend off enemies.

• With fewer worries about meeting their basic needs, people in the river valleys had more time to think about other things.

Page 6: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Elements of Civilization

• They developed religions and the arts.

• To pass information, they invented ways of writing.

• They also created calendars to tell time.

• Class structures developed with different levels of society depending on what work a person did and how much wealth or power they had.

Page 7: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

The Rise of Sumer• The earliest-known civilization arose in

what is now southern Iraq, or a flat plain bounded by the Tigris River and Euphrates River.

• This area was called Mesopotamia, which is Greek for “the land between two rivers.”

• Mesopotamia lay in the eastern part of the Fertile Crescent, a curving strip of land that extends from the Mediterranean Sea to the Persian Gulf.

Page 8: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 9: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

“Land Between Two Rivers”

Page 10: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Unpredictable Flooding

• Mesopotamia had a hot, dry climate.

• In the spring, the rivers often flooded, leaving behind rich soil for farming.

• The problem was that the flooding was very unpredictable.

• It might flood one year, but not the next.

• Every year, farmers worried about their crops and came to believe they needed their gods to bless their efforts.

Page 11: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 12: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 13: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Irrigation Systems• Over time, the farmers learned to build

dams and channels to control the seasonal floods.

• They also built walls, waterways, and ditches to bring water to their fields.

• This way of watering crops is called irrigation.

• Irrigation allowed the farmers to grow plenty of food and support a large population.

Page 14: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 15: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 16: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Flooding & Irrigation

Page 17: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Sumer’s City-States• Sumerian cities were isolated from each

other by geography.• Beyond the areas of settlement lay

mudflats and patches of scorching desert.• This terrain made travel and

communication difficult, so each Sumerian city and the land surrounding it became a separate city-state.

• It had its own government and was not part of any larger unit.

Page 18: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Sumerian City-States

Page 19: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

City Walls• Sumerian city-states often went to war

with one another, fighting for glory and the control of more territory.

• For protection, each city-state surrounded itself with a wall.

• Because stone and wood were in short supply, the Sumerians used river mud as their main building material.

• They mixed the mud with crushed reeds, formed bricks, and left them in the sun to dry.

Page 20: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 21: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 22: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 23: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Gods & Rules

• The Sumerians believed in many gods.

• Each was thought to have power over a natural force or a human activity—flooding or basket weaving.

• The Sumerians tried hard to please the gods. They built a grand temple called a Ziggurat to the chief god.

Page 24: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Mountain of God

Page 25: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 26: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Ziggurats

• With tiers like a giant wedding cake, the ziggurat dominated the city.

• At the top was a shrine, or place of worship that only priests and priestesses could enter.

• The priest and priestesses were powerful and controlled much of the land.

• They may have even ruled at one time.

Page 27: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Religious Beliefs

Page 28: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Sumerian Kings

• Later, kings ran the government.

• They led armies and organized building projects.

• The first kings were probably war heroes.

• Their position became hereditary.

Page 29: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Life in Sumeria• While Sumerian kings lived in large

palaces, ordinary people lived in small mud-brick houses.

• Most people in Sumer farmed, but some were artisans.

• Other people worked as merchants and traders. They traveled to other cities trading, tools, wheat, and barley, for things that they did not have like copper, tin, and timber.

Page 30: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Social Class System

• People in Sumer were divided into 3 social classes.

• The upper class was made up of kings, priests, and government officials.

• The middle classes were artisans, merchants, farmers, and fishers.

• The lower class included enslaved people who worked on farms or in the temples.

Page 31: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Class Divisions

Page 32: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Roles of Men & Women

• In Sumer, women and men had separate roles.

• Men headed the households and only men could go to school.

• Women did have rights. They could buy and sell property and run businesses.

Page 33: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Sumerian Writing System

• Sumer’s greatest invention was writing.

• It helped people keep records and pass on their ideas to others.

• They developed writing to keep track of business deal and other events.

• Their writing was called cuneiform.

• It consisted of hundreds of wedge-shaped marks cut into damp clay tablets.

Page 34: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.
Page 35: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Sumerian Scribes

• Only a few people—mostly boys from wealthy families—learned how to write.

• After years of training they became scribes, or record keepers.

• Scribes held honored positions in society and often became judges and political leaders.

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Page 37: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Cuneiform

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The Epic of Gilgamesh• The world’s oldest known story comes

from Sumer.• An epic is a long poem that tells the story

of a hero.• The hero Gilgamesh is a king who travels

around the world with a friend and performs great deeds.

• When his friend dies, Gilgamesh searches for immortality. He learns that this is possible only through the gods.

Page 39: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Gilgamesh

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Advances in Science & Math• Sumerian Inventions and Ideas included..

-wagon wheel

-plow

-sailboat

-geometry to measure fields

-number system based on 60

-recorded position of stars and planets.

-12 month lunar calendar

Page 41: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Sumerian Inventions

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Sargon of Akkad• Constant conflicts began to weaken

Sumer’s city-states and they became vulnerable to attacks by outside groups.

• The king of the Akkadians was named Sargon.

• In 2340 BC, he conquered all of Mesopotamia and created the world’s first empire.

• The empire lasted for 200 years before falling to invaders.

Page 43: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Babylonians

• In the 1800’s BC, a new group of people became powerful in Mesopotamia.

• They built the city of Babylon by the Euphrates River, and it quickly became a center of trade.

• In 1792 BC, the Babylonia king, Hammurabi, began conquering cities to the north and south and created the Babylonian Empire.

Page 44: Mesopotamian Civilization Over thousands of years, some of the early farming villages developed into civilizations, or complex societies. -advanced cities.

Code of Hammurabi• Hammurabi is best known for his law

code.

• He took laws for most of the city-states and put them into one code.

• It covered crimes, farming and business activities, marriage and the family.

• Although his punishments were cruel, his laws mark an important step toward a fair system of justice.

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Sumerian Trade