Early Civilizations Essential Questions :

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Warm – Up 2/2/12 In a paragraph, relate the following key vocabulary words to one another. Civilization Nomad Paleolithic Neolithic Stone Age Domestication.
Advertisements

Early Civilizations of the Middle East
Do Now: What major rivers are seen on this map?
River Valley Civilizations
How are “empires” different from “river valley civilizations”?
9 th grade acceleration April 22, Where is Mesopotamia? There is no country or area on a map today called “Mesopotamia.” Today, it includes the.
Early Civilizations Unit 1
River Civilizations: Southwest Asia
Early Man A. Neolithic Revolution B. River Valley Civilizations.
River valley civilizations (about 3500 to 500 b.c.)
Mesopotamia and Egypt. Ancient Mesopotamia Timeline B.C.-Emergence of Sumerian Cities B.C.-Babylonian Kingdom 1780 B.C.-Code of Hammurabi.
WARM-UP: 9/3/14 ■ Label the following buildings/ artifacts with the appropriate titles & civilizations where they were found. A.B.C. D. E. F.
River Valley Civilizations
Ancient Mesopotamia & the Fertile Crescent
Essential Questions : How did ancient civilizations develop? What were similarities between various early civilizations?
Chapter 1 Sec. 3 Beginnings of Civilization
River Valley Civilizations Egypt Mesopotamia. Egypt.
Review for the Mesopotamia Test
Literature of the Ancient World 3000 B.C. – A.D. 500.
Ancient Middle East Civilizations developed in river valleys because they provided: Civilizations developed in river valleys because they provided: –
MESOPOTAMIA AND SUMER. MESOPOTAMIA Mesopotamia is the valley between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers – Also known as the Fertile Crescent due to an abundance.
RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS
Essential Question: What were the important characteristics of the civilizations in Mesopotamia? Warm-Up Question: Why was the Neolithic Revolution such.
Ancient Civilizations Mesopotamia. The Start of Mesopotamia Early humans traveled to find food –When food became scarce, they moved As they moved they.
Mesopotamia K. Roberts.
Mesopotamia Social Studies. Mesopotamia Mesopotamia Mesopotamia means: “land between two rivers” Mesopotamia means: “land between two rivers” Civilization.
Ancient Sumer 3300 – 1900 B.C..
City-States of Ancient Sumer
Mesopotamia FOCUS QUESTION
Civilization Begins. Beginnings of Civilizations Cities, first rose in river valleys –Water –Farming –Renewable soil –Animals –Transportation 4 Major.
■ Essential Question: – What were the important characteristics of the civilizations in Mesopotamia? ■ Warm-Up Question: – Why was the Neolithic Revolution.
Mesopotamia Review.
MESOPOTAMIA The First River Valley Civilization. River Valley Civilizations The discovery of farming during the Neolithic Revolution allowed nomadic people.
Warm Up: Key Terms Fertile Crescent (p. 33) Mesopotamia (p. 33)
Mesopotamia Geography. Mesopotamia Mesopotamia Mesopotamia means: “land between two rivers” Mesopotamia means: “land between two rivers” Civilization.
Aim: How did Early Peoples and River Civilization develop?
Essential Question: What is the difference between a “river valley civilization” & an “empire”? Warm-Up Questions: What is an “empire”? How are “empires”
Focus # pg. 86 (map) 1. What is the title of the map? 2. Where did all of these civilizations begin around? 3. pg Name three categories.
River Valley Civilizations
The Revolving Door of Mesopotamia
Early Civilizations of the Middle East. The Sumerians ( B.C.)
MIDDLE EAST: ANCIENT EMPIRES. Mesopotamia means “land between rivers” It is the area between Tigris River and Euphrates River. It sometimes refers to.
The Place of Beginnings 1.Fertile Crescent 2.Earliest Civilization Cities Specialized Labor Government Arts & Sciences Religious Beliefs Written Language.
Early River Civilizations 3500 BC to 450 BC Review – Rise of Civilizations 5000 BC – Neolithic Revolution & 3000 BC– Bronze Age Mesopotamia = City States.
Review: (1)____________ is tiny bits of rock and dirt from the river bottom (2)I am the geographic feature where early people settled around _______________.
Early Civilizations.
Part Introduction This part will cover the world’s earliest civilizations. These include the Egyptians in North Africa, the Sumerians and Hebrews in the.
First Civilizations Chapter 1 World History (B) Mr. Simmons.
Ch. 1 Foundations of Civilization I.Peopling of the World II.Neolithic Revolution.
9/18 AGENDA (1, 3, 5, 7) Journal: REVIEW YOUR CIVILIZATION NOTES- Pick one of the 5 characteristics of civilization, explain it and give 2 examples (think:
Ancient River Valley Civilizations
WH Holt: Mesopotamia & Sumer. Geography promotes Civilization! In southwest Asia the Fertile Crescent curves between the Mediterranean Sea and the Persian.
Ancient River Valley Civilizations
Final Exam Review Day 1- Mesopotamia slides Front of worksheet (Mesopotamia questions only)
1.2 Western Asia and Egypt. Mesopotamia Land between rivers Tigris and Euphrates Fertile Crescent Sumerian City States  Cuneiform  Epic of Gilgemesh.
Day 8: Mesopotamia, Fertile Crescent
9/22 Journal: REVIEW YOUR CIVILIZATION NOTES- Pick one of the 5 characteristics of civilization, explain it and give 2 examples (think: STAIR)
RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS
-Ancient Middle East-.
The Ancient Civilization of Mesopotamia
RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS
The World’s First Civilization: Mesopotamia
RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS
(Review) The First Humans: Nomadic Peoples to Civilizations
LO: Understand key information about Mesopotamia
Part Introduction This part will cover the world’s earliest civilizations. These include the Egyptians in North Africa, the Sumerians and Hebrews in the.
MESOPOTAMIA AND SUMER.
The World’s First Civilization: Mesopotamia
The Major River Valley Civilizations
Early River Valley Civilizations
Presentation transcript:

Early Civilizations Essential Questions : How did ancient civilizations develop? What were similarities between various early civilizations?

Civilizations began in certain parts of the world with many similarities even though vast distances separated them. Mesopotamia (present day Iraq) India China Egypt The Americas

MESOPOTAMIA CHINA INDIA EGYPT AZTEC Mayan INCA

Geographic similarities Civilizations grew around areas where a stable food source could be found River valleys are common among these early civilizations Annual flooding of the rivers left rich deposits on the surrounding soil Tigris and Euphraties Rivers: aka the Fertile Crescent (Mesopotamia) Nile River (Egypt) Indus River (India) Yellow (Huang He) River (China) Agriculture flourished as a result Surplus of food led to expansion of population

C. Characteristics of civilizations Social structure All societies have different classes of peoples Some people are considered more important than others due to their wealth or job In ancient times, rulers, nobles and priests were considered most powerful The next class was typically made of military, civil workers, merchants, farmers, laborers, doctors, educators, etc. The bottom class of people were slaves and outcasts

Example of Egyptian Social Structure

Characteristics of Civilizations Stable food supply Before civilization, people hunted and gathered their food These people tended to be nomadic, following herds as they migrated Societies became more settled with the advent of agriculture Crops were farmed and animals were domesticated Cause and effect throughout all civilizations Population expansion  Specialization/trade  Growth in wealth/expansion/conquests  Sharing of ideas/technology/belief systems

Characteristics of Civilizations Religion Societies developed polytheistic religions Nature and mystic notions were attributed to gods who controlled these unseen forces Rising and setting sun, phases of the moon, rain, drought, flooding, wind, natural disasters, etc. A few did develop monotheistic religions Israelites developed Judaism Persians developed Zoroastrianism

Various sun gods

Characteristics of Civilizations Government Several reasons for development of governments Somebody needed to lead Rules have to be made Rules have to be enforced Code of Hammurabi 1st set of written laws Based on “eye for an eye” principle Societies have general welfare needs Roads, water systems, protection from foreign invasions

King of Ancient Babylon Hammurabi King of Ancient Babylon Tutankhamen Chinese Emperor Shun

4. Government (continued) Most early civilizations were theocratic and/or dynastic Leaders were seen to rule because of the will of the gods or they were seen as demi-gods Some ruled because of wealth or military power Hammurabi’s Code

Characteristics of Civilizations Writing systems Societies used forms of writing to record events, keep records and transmit information Early forms of writing consisted of pictures and symbols Egyptian hieroglyphics Chinese pictographs/ideographs Sumerian Cuneiform Incan Quipu

 Hieroglyphics Ideograph   Cuneiform Quipu 

Characteristics of Civilizations Culture Societies developed art, music, literature and other forms of entertainment

Characteristics of Civilizations Technology Inventions made life easier Shaduf  wheel  plow

Empires

Certain civilizations became powerful and conquered others, creating empires Akkadian 2340 BC (Present-day Iraq) 1st known empire Conquered their Sumerian neighbors in Mesopotamia Babylon 1792 BC (Present-day Iraq) Under Hammurabi, the Babylonians took control of Mesopotamia Hittites 1600 BC (Present-day Turkey) 1st Indo-Europeans to use iron

Egypt 1550 (New Kingdom period) Because of it’s wealth, became the richest and most powerful state in the Middle East Existing at the same time as the Hittites, they were also fighting against them for the area around present-day Syria They were both weakened and eventually their empires were destroyed by peoples known only as the Sea Peoples Very little is known of these peoples

After the fall of Egyptian and Hittite Empires Some independent kingdoms arose Phoenician Kingdom Great sea-traders Influential alphabet that was adopted by the Greeks This led to the Roman alphabet which our current alphabet is based on Israelite Kingdom Minor in the political arena of the area Major contribution to the world is their monotheistic religion Judaism

Assyrian 700 BC (Present-day Iraq) Ruled by kings with absolute power Brutal conquerors Network of posts relayed information from across the empire Established one of the world’s first libraries

Persian 539 BC (Present-day Iran) Cyrus the Great Widely respected by those he ruled over Considered very wise and just Darius 521-486 BC Created world’s largest empire to that time Divided empire into provinces to be managed more easily

9. Greek 330 BC (Greece/Macedonia) Under Alexander the Great, Greece conquered the Persian Empire After Alexander’s death, the Hellenistic period followed Greek culture was spread throughout Southwest Asia

10. Mauryan 324 BC (India) After retreat of Alexander’s forces from India, Candragupta Mauryan established India’s first empire The empire really flourished under the leader Asoka Considered greatest Indian ruler

11. Qin 221 BC (China) Qin Shihuangdi defeated and unified the warring Chinese dynasties, thus creating China’s first empire He was very brutal though and his dynasty fell after his death