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Chapter 3 Section 1

Chapter 3 Section 1. Why would the Arabian Peninsula be well suited for world trade?. Who are the Indo-Europeans? Read on page 61 1 st paragraph Indo-Europeans Migrate --- --- --- --- --- ---. Who are the Indo-Europeans?. Nomadic People-people on the move

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Chapter 3 Section 1

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  1. Chapter 3 Section 1

  2. Why would the Arabian Peninsula be well suited for world trade?

  3. Who are the Indo-Europeans? • Read on page 61 1st paragraph Indo-Europeans Migrate --- --- --- --- --- ---

  4. Who are the Indo-Europeans? • Nomadic People-people on the move • Came from Steppes-dry grassland • Herded cattle, sheep, goats • Tamed (domesticated) horses • Battled using two-wheeled Chariots • Lived in tribes • Light skinned people-near Caucasus Mountains-name Caucasian People

  5. Languages-page 61 • Many modern languages can be traced back to Indo-Europeans • Look at languages chart page 61. What do you notice?

  6. Migrationpage 62 • No one knows why left steppes-But what were some possibilities? • Migrated in many directions 1700 and 1200BC • Happened in waves over long period of time

  7. The Hittite EmpirePage 62 • One group of Indo-Europeans called Hittites lived in Anatolia (current day Turkey) 2000BC • Anatolia is a high, rocky plateau rich in timber and agriculture and mountains of mineral deposits • Why would the Hittites • leave the steppes for • Anatolia? How would they • use the timber and minerals?

  8. City-States form an Empire 1650 BCPage 62 Adopt and Adapt • Hittites used own language with one another but adopted language of people they conquered • Hittites borrowed ideas about literature, art, politics and law from Mesopotamia • Hittites blended own traditions with other peoples • Hittities were one Indo-European tribe • Military Society-Soldier were trained

  9. Hittites • They conquered and dominated other tribes • Brutal Warriors-not nice people • As they took over other civilizations they copied their ways-writing, class system, language

  10. Information about Chariots • Student Reports

  11. Chariots and Iron Technology • Hittites excelled in technology of war Superior Chariots and iron Weapons Iron stronger than Bronze and sharper edge But more difficult to shape Page 63

  12. Raw material of iron Ore readily available in Mountains of Anatolia Hettites first in Southeast Asia to work with iron And harden into weapons of war Even with its military might, the Hittite empire fell in 1190BC because of invasions of tribes attacking their capital city.

  13. Video of Chariot and its advanced technology • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/pharaoh-chariot.html • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/chariot-weapons.html • Respond: Write about the challenges and advantages of using a chariot in battles.

  14. Aryans Transform India • Very few records from Aryans so can only guess or hypothesize • Did leave behind Vedas-sacred literature which has hymns to Aryan gods, prayers, spells, and instructions for performance rituals • Aryans organized themselves into four groups based on occupation

  15. Caste System • Student Reports

  16. Caste SystemPage 63-64 • Video

  17. Caste System • Brahmin-Priests • Kshatriya-Warriors • Vaishya-Traders and Landowners Sudra-Peasants/Traders Untouchables The most impure Because of their work Butchers, gravediggers, trash collectors

  18. Compare Caste System to our way of Life • The caste system helps maintain social harmony by discouraging competition and helping everyone be satisfied with their place in life. It is a completely different way of looking at life than that of Westerners, who see life as an opportunity to improve oneself and one’s family.

  19. In the old days the punishments for certain crimes were many times higher for upper caste members than for lower caste members because more was expected of them. • So that means, lower castes could enjoy more freedom because less was required of them and they had fewer duties to perform. (in practice it often didn’t work out like that because lower case members spent so much time doing menial work).

  20. Aryan Kingdoms Rise • Settlements increased slowly-hard to clear jungle areas for farming • Arayn chiefs ran kingdom were elected by tribe • Later minor kings wanted territorial control and struggled for land and power • Magadha a major kingdom then expanded to include almost all of the subcontinent of India

  21. Seafaring TradersChapter 3, Section 3 • The Minoans and Phoenicians were both traders along the Mediterranean. • Student Report

  22. Ancient trade routes • Connected Mediterrean Sea with South and East Asia • Used the monsoon winds to travel Southeast Asia and Indonesia-where they obtained spices and products not native to India • Shared their culture-beliefs, art, way of living, • (Cultural Diffusion)-Act it out to show meaning

  23. MINOANS • Dominated trade 2000-1400BC • Lived on Crete-island in Aegean Sea • Known for painted pottery • Exported art and culture • Culture shared: burial customs, architecture • Religious rituals • Peaceful culture-no walls for protection • Graceful/athletic people boxing, wrestling, bull leaping • Civilization ended 1200BC, but do not know why

  24. Bull leapingpage 73 • Student Report

  25. Mysterious End of Minoans • Page 73-What are some possible reasons the civilization ended? • Make a cause and effect chart

  26. Mysterious End Cause Effect • Over population no examples given • Overrun by invaders From Greece 1200BC • Natural disaster possible earthquake Volcanic eruption Tidal wave

  27. Listen to story • Minos and the Minotaur Fact & Fiction

  28. Phoenicians • 1100BC • Current day Lebanon • Wealthy city-states around Mediterrean • Competed against each other • Remarkable shipbuilders and seafarers & craftsman • Ventured out beyond Strait of Gibraltar-this trip not repeated for another 2000 years

  29. Greatest legacy-alphabet-needed a new way to record transactions quickly and clearly • They introduced this writing system –symbols and sounds-around the Mediterrean Sea to trading partners • Had trading centers for papyrus-plant used to make paper • Traded good from other lands-wines, weapons, metals, ivory and slaves

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