Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CHAPTER 2 SECTION 1 Mesopotamia.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 2 SECTION 1 Mesopotamia."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 2 SECTION 1 Mesopotamia

2 Land between the Persian Gulf and Mediterranean Sea in SW Asia
FERTILE CRESCENT Land between the Persian Gulf and Mediterranean Sea in SW Asia

3

4 Means land between two rivers (EUphrates & Tigris)
MESOPOTAMIA Means land between two rivers (EUphrates & Tigris) Located in Iraq

5

6

7 TIGRIS AND EUPHRATES RIVERS (SUMERIANS)
Region of rich soil Irrigation Silt (rich soil)

8

9 LIMITED RESOURCES IN THE MESOPOTAMIA
4 DISADVANTAGES a. unpredictable rivers b. no natural barriers c. limited natural resources d. dependent upon trade

10 SUMERIANS

11 CITY-STATES A city and it’s surrounding land
Functions as an independent country

12

13 5 CHARACTERISTICS OF A CIVILIZATION
1. Advanced cities 2. specialized workers 3. complex institution 4. record keeping 5. advanced technology

14 Sumerians absorbing new ideas with the interaction of other people
CULTURAL DIFFUSION Sumerians absorbing new ideas with the interaction of other people

15

16 ZIGGURAT Sumerian temple Religious belief – polytheism
Sacrificed animals Their gods were the same as humans love, bearing children, quarreling, etc

17

18

19 SOCIAL CLASSES OF SUMERIANS
1. Priests and Kings 2. Wealthy merchants 3. Working class 4. Slaves (captured in war)

20

21 INVENTIONS Wheel Plow Sail First to use bronze First system of writing Number system based on 60

22

23

24

25 ARCHITECTURAL INNOVATIONS
Ziggurat Arches Columns Ramps

26 Sumerian Ziggurat

27 Sumerian Arches

28 Sumerian Columns

29 Sumerian Ramp

30 BABYLONIANS

31 EMPIRE Brings together several peoples, nations, or previously independent states under the control of one ruler.

32

33 BABYLONIAN EMPIRE’S RULER
Hammurabi Hammurabi’s Code of Laws 282 laws “Eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth”

34

35

36 Example of Hammurabi’s Code of Laws
If any one brings an accusation of any crime before the elders, and does not prove what he has charged, he shall, if a capital offense is charged, be put to death.

37 Babylonian innovations
Astrology System of numbers

38

39 CHAPTER 2 SECTION 2 Egyptians

40 NILE RIVER Longest river in the world 4100 miles long Flows north
Cataracts effects travel

41

42 NILE DELTA

43 DESCRIBE THE SEASONAL CYCLE OF FLOODING
July – rains and melting snow from the mountains of east and central Africa cause the Nile to flood October – Nile recedes and leaves behind a rich deposit of soil

44 HERODOTUS Ancient Greek historian – wrote about ancient Egypt
“All Egypt is the gift of the Nile” Importance of flooding Worshipping the Nile

45

46 ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES OF THE NILE
Nile River was predictable If the Nile floodwaters were short, the people could starve If the Nile floodwaters were excessive it could ruin their villages

47

48 MENES – UNITED EGYPT INTO A KINGDOM
King of Egypt United lower and upper Egypt Capital was Memphis 3100 B.C.

49

50

51 DYNASTY Series of rulers from a single family Created by Menes
31 dynasties over 2800 years (90 years per dynasty)

52 5th Dynasty

53 PHARAOHS Kings of Egypt are know as Pharaohs
Political leaders and representatives of the gods Caused the sun to rise, Nile to flood, crops to grow, good things in life came from the Pharaohs

54

55 PYRAMIDS The home after death of a Pharaoh Built by the peasants
Worked for the glory of their god-king 80 pyramids stand today

56 THEOCRACY Pharaohs were the head of the government and religion

57 KA (eternal spirit) Egyptian believed that their king ruled even after his death

58 PYRAMIDS Resting place after death of the King/Queen

59 GREAT PYRAMID AT GIZA 2 million stone blocks (each block weighed 2 ½ tons) Stacked with precision to a height of 481 feet Structure covers 13 acres

60

61 KING TUTANKHAMON (most famous pyramid)
Boy King of Egypt Came to the throne at age 8 and died at 17 Tomb was uncovered in 1922 by British archaeologist, Howard Carter Wealth of gold in his tomb

62 Recreated picture of King Tutankhamon

63

64

65 MUMMIFICATION Egyptians believed that their Pharaohs ruled even after death He had an eternal spirit called the ka Description of preserving the body

66

67

68 SOCIAL CLASSES Royal family Upper Middle Lower Slaves

69

70 HIEROGLYPHICS Means sacred carving Pictures represented things

71

72 PAPYRUS A reed that grew in the marshy delta of the Nile
Split the reeds into narrow strips, soak them, and press them into sheets of papylike material The English word paper comes from papyrus

73

74

75

76 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Number system Geometry – for surveying and measuring areas Origin of geometry Calendar – 12 months, 30 days per month, 5 days for holidays and feasting Medicine –worked with heart rate, broken bones, wounds, and fevers

77 Number System

78 Geometry was used to build the pyramids

79 Calendar

80

81

82

83 Planned Cities on the Indus
SECTION 3 Planned Cities on the Indus

84

85 MOUNTAINS Hindu Kush Mountains – north of India
Karakoram Mountains – north of India Himalayas Mountains – northwest of India

86 RIVERS Indus River: northwest of India Ganges River: northeast of India

87 PLAINS Indus-Ganges Plain ( northwest of India)

88 Deccan – central part of India
PLATEAU Deccan – central part of India

89

90 MONSOONS Seasonal winds
October to May: winter monsoons blow in from the northeast with dry air June: spring monsoons from the southwest carries moisture from the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean

91 SETTLEMENT/BUILDINGS (Planned Cities)
Mohenjo-Daro and Harrappa Featured a fortified area call a citadel Uniform housing using a grid system Brick buildings with plumbing and sewer systems

92

93

94 RELIGIOUS BELIEFS Worshipped major Indian god Shiva –”destroyer”
Mother goddess (figure that they worship) Fertility images (figure that they worship) Cattle (figure that they worship)

95 End of the Indus Valley culture
Civilization declined Invaded by other groups of people Wore out their natural resources river changed it’s course

96 SECTION 4 CHINA

97 GEOGRAPHIC FEATURES Huang He and Yangtze Rivers (loess – fertile soil)
Plateau of Tibet Gobi Desert Mongolian Plateau Himalaya Mountains

98

99

100

101

102

103

104 ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES
Flooding of the Huang He Geographic isolation Monsoons

105 SETTLEMENTS Walled cities Elaborate palaces Tombs Timber-framed homes

106 SOCIAL CLASSES Warrior-Nobles Peasants

107 ROLE OF THE FAMILY Central authority in Chinese society
Elderly had special privileges Women treated as inferior

108 Worshipped spirits of family members, supreme god, and lesser gods
RELIGIOUS BELIEFS Worshipped spirits of family members, supreme god, and lesser gods

109 WRITING SYSTEM Over 10,000 characters Each represented an idea

110 TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES
Manufactured weapons and religious items bronzework

111 Embroidered silk clothing
ARTISTRY Embroidered silk clothing


Download ppt "CHAPTER 2 SECTION 1 Mesopotamia."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google