What makes a civilization - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 62
About This Presentation
Title:

What makes a civilization

Description:

b. History part fact/fiction. c. State organized irrigation. d. ... b. China basic harmony all live together ... 4. Four centers of civilization started ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:51
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 63
Provided by: Norths
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: What makes a civilization


1
What makes a civilization?
2
7 traits 
  • Cities serve as administrative centers
  • Specialized workers (non food gathering)
  • Permanent records- Arts Science develop
  • Political institutions controlled a certain
    area
  • Monumental building- temples, statues, cities
  • Status distinctions (based on wealth)- upper and
    lower classes
  • Long distance trade- CULTURAL DIFFUSION

3
Cities
  •   Population size alone does not make a village
    into a city. 
  • center for trade for a larger area.  Farmers,
    merchants and traders brought goods to market in
    the cities. 
  • The city dwellers themselves produced a variety
    of goods for exchange, including pots, tools and
    jewelry.

4
Political Institutions
  • A city and its agricultural surrounding
    land/villages became known as city/states
  • Secular leaders grew in power, begin to absorb
    others and create fledging empires

5
Specialized Workers
  • Specialized workers are people who are skilled at
    a job (potters, weavers, metal workers, traders,
    etc). 
  •   As peoples skills improved in hunting and
    gathering and in herding and raising crops, less
    time and fewer people needed to provide food. 
    Farmers could produce a surplus, or more than was
    needed.  They could trade that extra food to a
    potter for a clay pot or a scribe to write a
    letter.  This ability to raise a surplus of food
    was the key that freed some people to do
    specialized jobs.

6
Writing
  • Priests needed some way of keeping track of the
    grain and other merchandise that moved in and out
    of the temple storehouses. 
  • Merchants needed accounts of debts and payments. 
    The first written symbols, therefore, stood for
    commonly traded objects. 
  • Soon ideas became associated with certain
    pictures.  For example, a house might also stand
    for the idea of protection and safety
    (ideograms).  Later, signs came to stand for
    certain sounds. 
  • By putting groups of signs together, scribes
    (professional writers) could begin to make
    sentences and express many ideas.

7
Advanced Technology
  • Any specialized knowledge that is used to
    transform the natural environment and human
    society more than just tools, i.e. writing
  • With the plow a farmer could raise more crops
    creating a surplus that cities needed. 
  • The wheel and the sailboat vastly improved
    transportation which led to trade with other
    groups of people. 
  • The Sumerians began working with bronze which is
    a mixture of tin and copper allowed metalworkers
    to create spearheads by the thousands as well as
    making countless other tools.

8
Status Distinctions 
  • Abundance in agriculture allowed for some to
    acquire wealth
  • With increased trade and specialized labor cities
    grew and distinctions of social classes become
    apparent along lines of wealth

9
Long Distance Trade
  • Stimulated economies as well as supplies cities
    with goods not naturally found there
  • Mesopotamia had little resources (wood, stone,
    metal) needed to trade with others to supply
    these (or CONQUER other places!) 

10
Civilization happens but why?
  • Search for order- agricultural societies needed
    political authorities to settle disputes among
    individual or groups
  • Provide that which one could not provide for
    themselves
  • Food, security, etc

11
(No Transcript)
12
Mesopotamialand between two rivers
13
Sumerians
14
Physical Setting- Geography
  • Tigris and Euphrates -rivers flood yearly
  • Grassland
  • Wandering herds
  • Rough Lifestyle- Warlike people

15
  • Where- Southern Mesopotamia
  • Government- City State Major cities-Ur, Uruk,
    and Kish
  • Theocracy
  • Social Class
  • Nobles, Priests, and Government Officials
  • Merchants
  • Peasants and Slaves

16
WritingCuneiform
17
Accomplishments
  • Arch
  • Ramps
  • Sewer System
  • Ziggurat- Layered temples, Shrine to citys god
    at top
  • Wheel (3200 BC)
  • 12 month calendar

18
(No Transcript)
19
Religion
  • Polytheistic- Many gods
  • a. gods and goddesses based upon natural
    elements
  • b. Afterlife- no reward such as heaven- separate
    region dead had to be buried with treasures or
    they would come back to haunt the living

20
  • Akkadians
  • 2400 B.C., Akkadians conquer Sumerians
  • Semitic Language-derived from Noah
  • Sargon of Akkad established first empire

21
(No Transcript)
22
Babylonians
  • 1792 B.C. Hammurabi comes to
  • power
  • Hammurabi est. strict law code
  • Code had 282 laws covered all
  • aspects of life harsh
  • punishments could be altered
  • with money

23
Eye for an eye
24
(No Transcript)
25
  • Traded all over (Egypt India)
  • Three social classes
  • Men could sell family himself to pay debts
  • Religion performed sacrifices to gods
    Afterlife was land of no return

26
(No Transcript)
27
Egyptian Civilization
  • Writing system of hieroglyphics
  • Wrote on papyrus
  • 4 social classes
  • Pharaoh/ Nobles
  • Merchants/
  • Artisans
  • Peasants
  • Slaves

28
United Kingdom
  • Menes unites upper and lower Egypt

29
  • Old Kingdom
  • 27002181 b.c.
  • Society of upper lower-classUpper pharaohs,
    royals, priestsLower all the rest


30
Egyptian Religion
  • Polytheistic
  • Mummification- preservation of the body Ka-
    persons spiritual body Ba- Soul, spirit and
    mind of the deceased

31
Government
  • Dynasty- Rule by a family
  • Pharaoh Great House- title of
  • the Egyptian monarchs
  • Bureaucracy- Type of Government
  • Vizier- Official in charge of the government

32
  • New Kingdom
  • 1550 1085 B.C.
  • Amenhotep IV makes social religious changes
    (changes
  • to monotheism)
  • Tutankhamen returns to old ways


33
  • Middle Kingdom
  • 2000-1780 B.C.
  • Powerful pharaohs reunite Egypt-rivalries,
    conflicts, of power destroyed kingdom
  • Hyksos invade


34
  • Late Period
  • Decline fall of Egyptian
  • Empire

35
Accomplishments
  • Architecture Arts
  • - Sphinx
  • 4500 years old
  • Sun God
  • - Pyramids
  • - Temples

Science Math -lunar calendar - Dog Star
12 month calendar - number system -
geometry - medicine
36
(No Transcript)
37
(No Transcript)
38
Hittites
  • 1600 B.C., conquered T-E valley
  • Used iron weapons
  • Law system considered pre-meditation
  • Unable to control Babylon

39
Assyrians
  • 900 B.C., overwhelmed Mesopotamia
  • Used cavalry battering rams
  • Killed p.o.w.s enslaved conquered people
  • Deported slaves replaced them w/Assyrians
  • Built roads est. postal system

40
(No Transcript)
41
  • Territorial governors levied taxes
  • used mercenaries in armies
  • Effective model for governing an empire

42
Chaldeans
  • 612 B.C., conquered Assyrians
  • Nebuchadnezzar ruled from Babylon
  • Built Hanging Gardens
  • (7 wonders of ancient world)

43
Phoenicians
  • Government- City state- monarchy
  • Trading Economy- Murex
  • Writing- 22 characters or letters
  • The_Phoenicians.asf

44
Hebrews (1200-1000 B.C.)
  • Semitic language
  • Ancestors to the Jewish peoples
  • Abraham founder-settled in area of Palestine-
    Monotheistic (Yahweh)
  • Movement- Palestine Egypt (enslaved)
    Moses Israel
  • Government-Monarchy 12 tribes

45
Religion- Judaism
  • Old testament- 39 books that tells the creation
    of the world and beliefs for over 1000 years
  • Mosaic Laws- first 5 books (ethical Monotheism)
  • Emphasis on self- restraint
  • Importance of family
  • Reflects belief that all people deserve kindness

46
Gifts Of Ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt
  • Irrigation and drainage canals
  • Standardized written laws
  • Copper, bronze, and iron metals
  • Cuneiform and hieroglyphic writing
  • Counting by 60, geometry, and algebra
  • Womens rights
  • Government regulation of trade
  • Astronomy

47
(No Transcript)
48
(No Transcript)
49
GEOGRAPHY influenced the development of river
valley civilizations.
50
Indus River Harappa/Mohenjo Daro
Unique alphabet/art - Harappan alphabet not
deciphered Invasion plus invasion by
Indo-Europeans difficult to understand culture
51
  • Excavations at the ancient Harappan and
    Mohenjo Daro mounds revealed well planned cities
    and towns built on massive mud brick platforms
    that protected the inhabitants against seasonal
    floods. In the larger cities the houses were
    built of baked brick while at smaller towns most
    houses were built of sun-dried mud brick. Each
    city is laid out in a grid pattern and shows
    signs of stunningly modern plumbing systems.

Much writing has been found at these sites, but
it has not yet been translated.
52
(No Transcript)
53
(No Transcript)
54
Huanghe (Yellow River)
  • a. Isolated, little overland trading
  • b. History part fact/fiction
  • c. State organized irrigation
  • d. Elaborate intellectual life
  • 1. Writing knotted ropes, scratches of lines,
    ideographic symbols
  • 2. Delicate art, musical interest
  • 3. Limited materials basic housing

55
1. Defeating military rivals, leader gains control
Dynastic Cycle
2. Right to rule becomes hereditary
5. Chaos and Rebellion
3. Period of Internal Peace
4. Period of Regression
56
Shang China
57
Shang Dynasty
  • Government- hereditary King gave
  • land to his follower in exchange for loyalty
  • Mandate of Heaven- Gods gave right to rule
  • Culture- Agriculturally basedsilk worms
  • Religion- Animism (Dragon) Oracle Bones (used
    to foretell the future)
  • Fall- King obsessed with alcohol soldier farmers
    took over

58
Heritage of the River Valley Civilizations
  • Accomplishments
  • a. Monuments
  • b. Wheel
  • c. Taming of horse
  • d. Square roots
  • e. Monarchies/bureaucracies
  • f. Calendars/time
  • g. Major alphabets

59
How much are these civilizations origin of today
  • a. Except for China, all have a break from past
  • b. Roman empire god-like king
  • c. Slavery
  • d. Scientific achievements Greeks studied
    Egyptians

60
East vs. West
  • a. Mesopotamians gap between humankind and
    nature
  • b. China basic harmony all live together
  • c. Temple building, art, architecture
    Mesopotamia to Middle East/Greece

61
The First Civilizations
  • Clear division between river valley civilizations
    and classical civilizations
  • a. Invasion/natural calamities India
  • b. Invasion/political decline Egypt
  • c. Mesopotamia break but bridges smaller
    cultures

62
  • 1. Values and institutions spread
  • 2. Theme emerges Steadily proliferating
    contacts against a background of often fierce
    local identity
  • 3. Integrating force
  • a. Local autonomy lessens priests/kings
    increase power
  • 4. Four centers of civilization started
  • 5. Close neighbors Egypt/Mesopotamia
    different politics, art, beliefs on death
  • 6. Diversity and civilization worked together
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com