1 / 18

Early River Valley Civilizations

Chapter 2. Early River Valley Civilizations. City-States in Mesopotamia. Geography in the Fertile Crescent Fertile Crescent – an arc of rich farmland in Southwest Asia Mesopotamia – “land between the rivers” Environmental Challenges Unpredicted flooding No natural protection

bunme
Télécharger la présentation

Early River Valley Civilizations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 2 Early River Valley Civilizations

  2. City-States in Mesopotamia • Geography in the Fertile Crescent • Fertile Crescent – an arc of rich farmland in Southwest Asia • Mesopotamia – “land between the rivers” • Environmental Challenges • Unpredicted flooding • No natural protection • Limited natural resources • Solving Problems through Organization • Irrigation ditches • Construction of city walls • Traded crops and tools for stone, wood, and metal

  3. City-States in Mesopotamia • Sumerians Create City-States • City-state – a city and its surrounding lands functioning as an independent political unit • Priests and Rulers Share Control • Dynasty – a series of rulers from a single family • The Spread of Cities • Cultural diffusion – process in which a new idea or a product spreads from one culture to another

  4. City-States in Mesopotamia • Sumerian Culture • A Religion of Many Gods • Polytheism • Life in Sumerian Society • Social classes • Kings, landholders, and priests • Wealthy merchants • “ordinary Sumerian people” • slaves • Sumerian Science and Technology • Arithmetic and Geometry • Architectural innovations • Cuneiform

  5. City-States in Mesopotamia • The First Empire Builders • Sargon of Akkad • Conquered Sumer around 2350 B.C. • Empire – a political unit in which a number of peoples or countries are controlled by a single ruler • Babylonian Empire • Amorites took over around 2000 B.C. • Established their capital at Babylon • Hammurabi’s Code • 282 specific laws dealing with everything that affected the community

  6. Pyramids on the Nile • The Geography of Egypt • The Gift of the Nile • Yearly floods bring water and rich soil to allow settlements to grow • Environmental Challenges • Regular and predictable flooding • Vast forbidding deserts on either side of the Nile • Upper and Lower Egypt • Delta – a marshy region formed by deposits of silt at the mouth of a river

  7. Pyramids on the Nile • Egypt Unites into a Kingdom • Narmer – unified Upper and Lower Egypt • Established the capital at Memphis • Pharaohs Rule as Gods • Pharaoh – Egyptian god-kings • Theocracy – government in which rule is based on religious authority • Builders of the Pyramids • Pyramids – resting place after death

  8. Pyramids on the Nile • Egyptian Culture • Religion and Life • Polytheistic • Egyptian afterlife • Mummification – a process of embalming and drying corpses to prevent them from decaying

  9. Pyramids on the Nile • Life in Egyptian Society • Egyptian Writing • Hieroglyphics – “sacred writing” • Papyrus • Egyptian Science • Developed the solar year – 365 days • Invaders Control Egypt • Hyksos gain control of Egypt from 1630 – 1523 B.C.

  10. Planned Cities on the Indus

  11. Planned Cities on the Indus • The Geography of the Indian Subcontinent • Subcontinent – a large landmass that forms a distinct part of a continent • Rivers, Mountains, and Plains • World’s tallest mountains • Indus and Ganges Rivers • Monsoons • Seasonal winds • Bring moisture • Environmental Challenges • Yearly unpredictable floods • Changing rivers • Unpredictable monsoons

  12. Planned Cities on the Indus • Civilization Emerges on the Indus • Earliest Arrivals • Planned Cities • Strong levees • Grid system plans • Sophisticated plumbing and sewage • Harappan Planning

  13. Planned Cities on the Indus • Harappan Culture • Language • No bilingual inscriptions • Culture • Prosperous society • Use of animal images • Role of Religion • Theocracy but no found temple • Trade • Thriving trade • River transportation • Indus Valley Culture Ends • Earthquakes and shifting geology

  14. River Dynasties in China

  15. River Dynasties in China • The Geography of China • River Systems • Huang He (Yellow River), Chang Jiang (Yangtze) • Loess – a fertile deposit of windblown soil • Environmental Challenges • Disastrous floods • Isolation • Natural boundaries did not protect from invaders • China’s Heartland • The North China Plain

  16. River Dynasties in China • Civilization Emerges in Shang Times • The First Dynasties • The Xia Dynasty – Yu • The Shang Dynasty • Early Cities • Anyang – built mainly of wood • Massive earthen walls

  17. River Dynasties in China • The Development of Chinese Culture • Family • Central to Chinese society – respect for one’s parents • Social classes • Divided between peasants and nobles • Religious Beliefs • Spirits of family ancestors had power to bring good fortune or disaster • Oracle Bones – animal bones and tortoise shells on which priests scratched questions for the gods • Development of Writing • All people of China could learn the same written symbols • Thousands of characters

  18. River Dynasties in China • Zhou and the Dynastic Cycle • Mandate of Heaven • Divine approval • Dynastic cycle – rise, decline, and replacement of dynasties • Control Through Feudalism • A political system in which nobles, or lords, are granted the use of lands that legally belong to the king • Improvements in Technology and Trade • Roads and canals • Coined money • Blast furnaces for iron • A Period of Warring States • Nomads conquered the Zhou rulers in 771, B.C.

More Related