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Early Civilizations

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Title: Early Civilizations


1
Early Civilizations
  • Chapter 1

2
Growing toward civilizations
  • Earliest period of human history known as the Old
    Stone Age or Paleolithic Period
  • Nomads moving from place to place searching for
    animals and edible plants
  • Bands of 20 to 30 people
  • Adapted to environment for survival
  • Simple tools and weapons (digging sticks, spears)

3
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4
The Growth of Farming
  • 10,000 years ago, nomads learn to farm
  • New Stone Age or Neolithic Period
  • Learned to tame once hunted animals
  • Allowed meat and animal labor without leaving
    camps
  • Leads to an increase in population, number of
    villages
  • Warfare increases

5
Beginnings of Civilizations
  • Historians define eight basic features common to
    most early civilizations
  • Cities (first emerge in Africa and Asia)
  • Well Organized central government
  • Complex religions
  • Job specialization
  • Social classes
  • Arts and architecture
  • Public works
  • writing

6
Beginnings of Civilizations
  • Organized Governments
  • Challenges of farming lead to the creation of
    city governments
  • Cooperation led to building of canals and
    irrigation ditches
  • Growth of Bureaucracy
  • A system of managing government through
    specialized departments run by appointed
    officials

7
Beginnings of Civilizations
  • Social Classes
  • People ranked in social classes according to
    their jobs
  • Priests and Nobles at the top
  • Developed pictograph writing technique
  • Wealthy merchants next
  • Followed by artisans (skilled craftworkers)
  • Slaves were at the lowest social class

8
Beginnings of Civilizations
  • First Empires
  • Ancient rulers gain more power, conquer lands
    outside their territory
  • These rulers created Empires or a group of
    states, territories, and peoples ruled by one
    person
  • Question
  • Would the creation of early empires be good or
    bad for early civilizations? Explain your answer.

9
First Civilizations Asia and Africa
  • Ancient Kingdoms of the Nile
  • 5,000 years ago, rich farming grew around the
    Nile River Valley
  • To control annual floods and built reservoirs and
    irrigation ditches, farmers learned to cooperate
  • Villages join into 2 kingdoms
  • King Menes United both kingdoms , creating the
    worlds first unified state in 3100 BC

10
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11
Growth of Ancient Egypt
  • Divided into 3 periods
  • Old Kingdom (2575 BC-2130 BC)
  • Pharaohs rule a strong central state
  • Building of pyramids
  • Middle Kingdom (1938 BC-1630 BC)
  • New Kingdom (1539 BC-1075 BC)
  • Egypt establishes trade and warfare to expand
    influences through cultural diffusion
  • Power of Egypt declines after Ramses II

12
Egyptian Civilization
  • Worshiped many gods and goddesses
  • Pharaoh considered a god
  • Social classes
  • Pharaoh
  • Nobles (fought Pharaohs wars)
  • Merchants and artisans
  • Farmers and slaves

13
The Battle for Mesopotamia
  • City-State Sumer controls the fertile crescent of
    Mesopotamia
  • Sumerians invent the earliest form of writing
    called cuneiform
  • Akkad conquers Sumer, forms the first empire
  • 1790 BC Hammurabi, king of Babylon, controls much
    of Mesopotamia, puts together the first
    collection of laws in History
  • Code of Hammurabi
  • 539 BC, Persian armies overthrow Babylon

14
Roots of Judaism
  • Hebrews occupied Mesopotamia and migrated to
    Canaan around 2000 BC
  • Hebrews develop Judaism and are monotheistic
  • Follow the Ten Commandments which focus on ethics
  • Prophets urge Hebrews to obey Gods law
  • 1000 BC, King Solomon establishes the kingdom of
    Israel
  • Kingdom splits and invading armies capture both
    kingdoms
  • Great Diaspora forces Jews to relocate all
    throughout the world

15
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16
Civilizations in India and China
  • Civilizations grew in India and China as others
    grew along the Nile and fertile crescent
  • Near river valleys
  • First Indian civilization grew near the Indus
    River around 2600 BC

17
Indus River Valley
  • People of Indus thrived for 700 years
  • Largest area covered of any in ancient times
  • Two main cities
  • Mohenjo-Daro
  • Harappa
  • Cities laid out in a grid system
  • Houses had plumbing systems with baths, drains,
    and underground sewers
  • 1750 BC, severe floods ravaged cities, most areas
    around the Indus Valley were abandoned by 1700 BC

18
Kingdoms of the Ganges
  • As people left the Indus valley, they moved to
    Northwestern India
  • Aryans form a new Indian civilization in 500 BC
  • Aryans made up of Indo-Europeans intermarried
    with existing Indian residents
  • Form walled cities in the Ganges River Basin

19
Kingdoms of the Ganges
  • Aryan social class determined by occupation
  • Priests
  • Warriors
  • Herders, farmers, artisans, and merchants
  • Farm workers, servants, laborers
  • Dalits, those who had to do the jobs no one else
    wanted
  • Caste system formed
  • social groups in which people are born and
    cannot leave

20
Kingdoms of the Ganges
  • Religious beliefs
  • Aryans were polytheistic
  • Began to move towards a belief in a single
    spiritual power beyond the normal gods
  • Brahman
  • Lived within all things

21
Early Civilizations in China
  • Long distances and physical barriers separated
    China from Egypt, the Middle East, and India
  • Isolation convinces early Chinese that they are
    at the center of the Earth
  • China called their land the Middle Kingdom

22
Early China
  • First Chinese civilization began in the Huang He
    valley during the Neolithic periods
  • Controlling large river leads to cooperation,
    strong central government

23
The Shang and Zhou Dynasties
  • Shang come into power in Northern China about
    1650 BC
  • Zhou take over in 1027 BC and lasts until 256 BC,
    creating a dynasty
  • Ruling family
  • Justify overthrow claiming a Mandate of Heaven
  • Mandate belief leads to the idea of a dynastic
    cycle, the notion that if a ruler became corrupt,
    Heaven withdrew its support.

24
Ancient Chinese Religion
  • Complex religious system
  • Many gods and natural spirits
  • Centered around respect for ancestors
  • Believed the universe reflects a balance between
    two forces, yin and yang
  • Yin earth and female forces
  • Yang heaven and male forces

25
Chinese Science and Technology
  • Studied movement of planets and recorded
    eclipses, created an accurate calendar
  • Developed bronze and silkmaking
  • Zhou Dynasty creates the first books, bound by
    wood or bamboo.

26
Ancient Greece
27
Ancient Greece
  • Unlike other civilizations, The Greeks did not
    rise from a fertile river valley
  • Grew from the rugged terrain of Southeastern
    Europe
  • Greek city-states created a civilization that set
    the standard of excellence for later
    civilizations
  • Ideas about the universe, individuals, and
    government still exist today

28
Ancient Greece
  • Island of Crete houses the earliest Greek
    civilization, Minoans
  • Natural disaster ends civilization in 1400 BC
  • Mycenaens flourish between 1400 BC to 1200 BC.
  • Absorbed both Egyptian and Mesopotamian ideas,
    later passed on to later Greeks
  • Known for the Trojan War
  • Homers Iliad and the Odyssey

29
Ancient Greece
  • Rise of Greek City-States
  • Greeks stepped back after Mycenaean decline
  • Small isolated farms grew into small city states
  • Shared common culture language, religion, and
    festivals, Constantly warred.
  • Greek colonies grow throughout the Mediterranean
  • City-States first ruled by a monarchy, soon power
    shifted to an aristocracy, or ruled by
    landholding elite
  • Oligarchy (powerful business class) later
    controlled

30
Sparta and Athens
  • Sparta
  • Warrior society
  • Athens
  • Early democracy
  • Only male citizens participated

31
War with the Persians
  • Persian Empire attacked Greece for their support
    of the Ionian rebellion
  • Battle of Marathon 490 BC
  • Persia outnumbers Athens Troops 2/1
  • Persian center attack engulfed and outflanked
  • 6000 Persian dead, 200 dead Athenians
  • Persia leaves Greece

32
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33
War with the Persians
  • Persian King Darius I dies in 486 BC
  • Xerxes takes over, heads back to Greece in 490 BC
  • Battle of Thermopylae
  • Thebes, Argos, Thessaly allies with Persians
  • Athens and Sparta create Alliance
  • 200,000 Persians vs 35,000 Greeks
  • 370 Greek ships vs 1,000 Persian
  • Narrow pass at Thermopylae was strategically
    chosen by Greek Commanders as the place to fight
    on land

34
Battle of Thermopylae
  • Ground forces led by Spartan king Leonidas
  • Sea forces led by Thamystocles, Greek sailor
  • Fight in the Artemesium Strait
  • Greeks loyal to the Persians show path to
    surround Greek forces
  • Leonidas orders all but 300 troops to return to
    the cities
  • Battle was a technical Persian victory
  • Greeks able to regroup and batter Persian Navy
  • Persians lost will to fight Greece, lost the war

35
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36
The Glory that was Greece
  • Greek artists, writers, and philosophers deny
    events were caused by the gods, begin to use
    observation and reason to determine causes.
  • Socrates, Plato, Aristotle develop ideas about
    truth, justice, and government
  • Classic style develops in art and architecture

37
Alexander and the Hellenistic Age
  • Greek City-States war within, King Philip of
    Macedonia built a superb army and conquered all
    of Greece
  • Philip dies, 20 year old son Alexander takes over
  • Greek influence spreads over the Mediterranean,
    Middle East and India.
  • Blend of Greek, Persian, Egyptian, and Indian
    cultures creates the Hellenistic Civilization
  • Even though Greek power faded, ideas dominated
    kingdoms.

38
Ancient Rome
39
Origins of Rome
  • Legend 753 B.C. Romulus Remus, twin sons of a
    princess and Mars, the god of war, raised by a
    she-wolf, start the city of Rome where they
    were abandoned on the Tiber River

40
Origins of Rome
  • Rome founded on the Palatine hill, one of the
    seven hills on which Rome is built
  • Built in a curve of the Tiber River
  • Midpoint of Italian peninsula
  • Midpoint of Mediterranean
  • Fertile soil

41
Early Rebublic
  • Etruscans become the kings of Rome
  • 509 B.C. last Etruscan king driven out
  • A Republic is established citizens vote for
    representatives who run the government
  • Citizenship with voting rights only for free-born
    male citizens

42
Early Republic
  • Roman citizens split into groups
  • Patricians - wealthy landowners
  • Plebeians - common farmers, artisans, merchants,
    majority of population

43
Early Republic
  • Patricians organized Romes government into
    executive legislative branches
  • Legislative branch Assembly of Centuries
    Senate
  • Senate 300 patrician men, served for life, most
    power

44
Early Republic
  • Executive branch headed by Consuls patrician
    men elected for one year terms
  • Had to consult each other before acting
  • Either could veto the others decisions
  • Veto Latin for I forbid
  • In times of crisis a dictator could be
    temporarily appointed by consuls for six months
  • Dictators word was law
  • Could overrule the consuls
  • Cincinnatus

45
Plebeians vs Patricians
  • Plebeians resented lack of power
  • 494 B.C. plebeians refused to fight in army
    unless patricians gave in to demands for change
  • Patricians frightened at loss of military forces
    agreed to reforms
  • Patricians recognized Tribunes plebeians
    chosen representatives
  • Gave tribunes the right to veto government
    decisions

46
Plebeians Against Patricians
  • Plebeian rights recognized by patricians
  • Enslavement for debt was ended
  • Marriage between plebeians and patricians was
    allowed
  • Creation of written law code
  • All laws engraved on 12 bronze tablets called the
    Twelve Tables
  • On display in the Forum for all to see

47
Roman Expansion
  • Romes military success due to its strong army
  • Every male citizen had to serve the military
  • Used tactics of Greek phalanx warfare
  • Generals realized phalanxes were too large and
    slow to be effective

48
Roman Expansion
  • Romans organized their army into legions
  • 6000 men
  • Roman generals with legions could smash phalanxes
    of their enemies

49
All roads lead to Rome
  • Romans set up permanent military settlements
    called coloniae throughout Italy to defend
    strategic positions
  • To link the coloniae, soldiers built roads
  • Some roads became major trade routes

50
Punic Wars
  • Carthage, founded by Phoenicians, became
    wealthiest city in the Mediterranean area
  • Romans decided to stop the expansion of Carthage
  • Roman wars against Carthage called the Punic Wars

51
Punic Wars
  • Three Punic Wars fought
  • 1st Punic War war for Sicily, Rome won
  • 2nd Punic War Carthaginian general Hannibal
    went through Spain and over the Alps with 40,000
    soldiers and about 40 elephants to attack Rome

52
Punic Wars
  • Hannibal nearly destroyed the Roman army at the
    battle of Cannae
  • Roman general Scipio attacked Carthage forcing
    Hannibal and his armys recall
  • Rome Defeats Carthage
  • 3rd Punic War, Carthage Destroyed

53
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54
Rome in Crisis
  • Rome built an empire but provinces paying
    tribute complained of corrupt officials,
    stealing provincial wealth
  • Wealthy Romans seized land from small landowners
  • Landowners created large estates called
    latifundia
  • Labor for the latifundia was cheap because of
    slaves brought in through conquest
  • By 100 B.C. 30 of population was slaves

55
Republic in Crisis
  • Military loyalty to the Republic broke down
  • General seized power for themselves
  • Soldiers were recruited for the generals
    personal armies from among the poor
  • Soldiers owed loyalty to the general that hired
    them not to the Republic as citizen soldiers
    would

56
The beginning of the end
  • 60 B.C. Gaius Julius Caesar, 40 year old
    aristocrat, allied himself with politician
    Crassus, and military general Pompey to rule Rome
    as a triumvirate group of three people

57
The Republic Collapses
  • After serving as Consul for one year Caesar
    appoints himself Governor of Gaul
  • Felt he needed military victories to advance his
    political career
  • 58-50 B.C. Caesar led his legions to conquer all
    Gaul
  • Earned the loyalty devotion of his soldiers

58
The Rise of Caesar
  • Senate and Pompey fear the power of Caesar, order
    him to give up army and return to Rome
  • Caesar crosses the Rubicon River, begins Roman
    Civil War
  • Caesars army defeats Pompey, Pompey flees to
    Egypt
  • Caesar rules as an absolute ruler

59
The Fall of Caesar
  • March 15th, 44BC, Brutus and Cassius assassinate
    Caesar in order to save the Republic
  • Octavian and Marc Antony defeat Caesars
    assassins
  • Octavian declares war on Antony because of
    Cleopatra
  • Marc Antony falls at the battle of Actium in 31
    BC
  • Octavian changes name to Augustus Caesar, becomes
    first emperor of Rome

60
Roman Emperors
  • Julio-Claudian
  • The Good Emperors
  • Tiberius
  • Caligula
  • Claudius
  • Nero
  • Showed great promise but had great faults
  • Trajan
  • Hadrian
  • Antonius Pius
  • Marcus Aurelius

61
Roman Decline
  • In late AD 200s, 300s emperors attempted to
    halt the decline of the empire
  • Diocletian came to power in 284
  • Raised the number of legions in the army
  • Decided the empire was too large for one emperor
    to govern
  • Divided the empire into two administrative units

62
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63
Fall of Rome
  • Diocletian tried to stop empires economic
    decline
  • Froze wages and set maximum prices
  • Penalty for breaking law was death
  • People sold goods through illegal trade
  • Theodosius
  • Problems continued in the empire
  • Theodosius willed that upon his death the Eastern
    and Western parts of the empire should become
    separate empires
  • 395 that happened

64
Fall of Rome
  • Constantine took power in 312
  • First Christian emperor
  • Tried to continue and enforce Diocletians
    reforms
  • 330 moved the capital of the eastern Empire to
    Byzantium good place for trade and changed
    the city name to Constantinople

65
Fall of Rome
  • Barbarian Invasions
  • Germanic people moved into empire to find warmer
    climate, better grazing land
  • Most came into the empire because they were
    fleeing the Huns
  • After Roman Empire was divided in 395
  • Eastern half known as the Byzantine Empire
  • Empire included Greeks, Persians, Jews,
    Egyptians, Syrians,
  • Arabs, Slavs, Turks

66
  • Roman Empire falls in 476 AD when German tribes
    sack Rome
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