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Title: UNIT 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations


1
UNIT 1 Technological and Environmental
Transformations
  • To c. 600 B.C.E

2
Key Concept 1.3
  • From about 5,000 years ago, urban societies
    developed, laying the foundations for the first
    civilizations. The term civilization is normally
    used to designate large societies with cities and
    powerful states. While there were many
    differences between civilizations, they also
    shared important features. They all produced
    agricultural surpluses that permitted significant
    specialization of labor. All civilizations
    contained cities and generated complex
    institutions, such as political bureaucracies,
    armies, and religious hierarchies. They also
    featured clearly stratified social hierarchies
    and organized long-distance trading
    relationships. Economic exchanges intensified
    within and between civilizations, as well a with
    nomadic pastoralists.
  •  
  • As populations grew, competition for surplus
    resources, especially food, led to greater social
    stratification, specialization of labor,
    increased trade, more complex systems of
    government and religion, and the development of
    record keeping. As civilizations expanded, they
    had to balance their need for more resources with
    environmental constraints such as the danger of
    undermining soil fertility. Finally, the
    accumulation of wealth in settled communities
    spurred warfare between communities and/or with
    patoralists this violence drove the development
    of new technologies of war and urban defense.

3
Objective 1.3.1
  • Core and foundational civilizations developed in
    a variety of geographical and environmental
    settings where agriculture flourished.
  • Students should be able to identify the location
    of all of the following required examples of core
    and foundational civilizations.
  • Mesopotamia in the Tigris and Euphrates River
    Valleys
  • Egypt in the Nile River Valley
  • Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa in the Indus River
    Valley
  • Olmecs in Mesoamerica
  • Chavin in Andean South America

4
Objective 1.3.2
  • The first states emerged within core
    civilizations.
  • States were powerful new systems of rule that
    mobilized surplus labor and resources over large
    areas. Early states were often led by a ruler
    whose source of power was believed to be divine
    or had divine support and/or who was supported by
    the military.
  • As states grew and competed for land and
    resources, the more favorably situated
    including the Hittites, who had access to iron
    had greater access to resources, produced more
    surplus food, and experienced growing
    populations. These states were able to undertake
    territorial expansion and conquer surrounding
    states.
  • Early regions of state expansion or empire
    building were Mesopotamia, Babylonia, and the
    Nile Valley.
  • Pastoralists were often the developers and
    disseminators of new weapons and modes of
    transportation that transformed warfare in
    agrarian civilizations.
  •  
  • New Weapons
  • Compound bows
  • Iron Weapons
  •  
  • New modes of transportation
  • Chariots
  • Horseback riding

5
Objective 1.3.3
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Early civilizations developed monumental
    architecture and urban planning.
  • Monumental architecture and urban planning
  • Ziggurats
  • Pyramids
  • Temples
  • Defensive walls
  • Streets and roads
  • Sewage and water systems
  • Elites, both political and religious, promoted
    arts and artisanship.
  •  Arts and Artisanship
  • Sculpture
  • Painting
  • Wall decorations
  • Elaborate weaving
  • Systems of record keeping arose independently in
    all early civilizations and subsequently were
    diffused.
  •  Systems of record keeping
  • Cuneiform
  • Hieroglyps

6
Activator
  • Complete the SPRITE worksheet on the earliest
    civilizations.

7
Mesopotamia
8
Culture
  • Independent innovation that passed to Egypt/Indus
  • 4000 BCE bronze, copper
  • Wheel, irrigation canals
  • 3500 Sumerians cuneiform first writing
    stylus objects gt sounds
  • Number system 60 movement of heavenly bodies
  • navigation
  • time
  • Architecture ziggurats 1) glory of
    civilization, 2) many gods
  • Clay primary building material
  • First epic Epic of Gilgamesh 1) great flood
    story
  • Kings quest to achieve immortality
  • great traders

9
State
  • Unpredictable flooding need for government
    irrigation
  • City-states controlled city surrounding area
  • Geography lack of natural barriers invasion
    defensive walls
  • Conflicts over water/property rights
  • Akkadians/Babylonians spread Sumerian culture
  • Code of Hammurabi first written law code
  • Different rules for gender/social classes
  • Very harsh, favored upper class
  • Systematic, consistent set of regulations, not
    arbitrary will of a ruler
  • After 900 BCE Assyrians and Persians ruled
  • king-like figure lugal big man

10
Social Sturcture
  • Ruled by elite, rulers, priests
  • Farmed by slaves could purchase freedom
  • Patriarchal men could sell wives/children to
    pay debts
  • 1600 BCE women wearing veils
  • Butwomen could gain power courts, priestesses,
    scribes, small business

11
Egypt
12
Culture
  • 3000 BCE Nile River
  • pharaoh pyramids tombs for self/families
  • Decorated w/ colorful paintings
  • polytheists afterlife gt mummification
  • Egyptian Book of the Dead what happened to
    soul, how to reach happy
  • afterlife gt mummification and tombs
  • bronze tools weapons after Mesopotamia
  • Kush independent innovation iron spread to
    Egypt
  • some trade w/ Kush and Mesopotamia
  • hieroglyphics from trade contacts Mesopotamia
  • papyrus paper making
  • geography protected could create unique
    civilization
  • less urban than Mesopotamians
  • 365 day calendar, medicine, math, astronomy

13
State
  • Nile overflowed annually predictable
  • irrigation led to organization/government
  • agricultural villages engaged in trade
  • pharaoh king power
  • living incarnation of sun god
  • geography protected from invading people
  • beginning 3100 when Menes unites Upper and Lower
    Egypt
  • 2040-1640 BCE Middle Kingdom culturally dynamic
  • New Kingdom 1500 regained from foreign
    invaders Hyksos focused on military
  • by 900 in control of foreign invaders internal
    disorder, invasions

14
Social Structure
  • Social classes, but commoners could enter
    government service rise in social status
  • Patriarchal, but women had some privileges
  • Women sometimes acted as regents for young
    rulers, priestesses, scribes
  • managed household finances/education of children
  • right to divorce husbands/alimony
  • could own property
  • Queen Hatshepsut

15
Indus 2500 BCE Indus River - Pakistan
16
Culture
  • Streets laid out in precise grid houses had
    running water/sewage
  • Harappan writing not deciphered much unclear
  • active trade w/ Indus valley and Sumer ores
    from one place found in others
  • blend of Aryans and Indus valley people affected
    future course of history
  • quite large size of France/urbanized

17
State
  • unpredictable flooding
  • Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro
  • Because of similarities of cities, tightly
    unified, centrally controlled
  • Overtaken by Indo-Europeans Aryans
  • Already dying out 1) river change or 2)
    earthquake, 3) erosion of soil 4) salt in wells
  • whole societies all over Harappa and
    Mohenjo-Daro only tip, last

18
Social Structure
  • little known Dravidians relatively egalitarian
  • not as patriarchal
  • Aryans based it on color Varnu
  • Aryans eventually control politically, but
    Dravidians would win out culturally

19
Shang most isolated Huange He valley Yellow
River Chinas Sorrow
20
Culture
  • Isolated by deserts, mountains, and seas
    unpredictable flooding
  • Still some trade w/ Southwest Asia and South Asia
  • Shang Dynasty (1766-1122 left written records)
  • Knowledge of bronze metallurgy from Southwest
    Asia
  • Strengthened Shang war machine
  • 1000 BCE Ironworking
  • Fortune telling and ancestor worship started here
  • Palaces/tombs built for emperors
  • Writing oracle bones
  • Oracle scratch persons question on bone/shell
    heat it
  • Resulting cracks read to learn message from gods

21
State
  • Dynasties
  • Central rule to oversee irrigation/flood-control
    projects
  • Walled cities center of cultural, military,
    economic set precedent in villages
  • Zhou replaced Shang mandate of heaven if
    leader governed wisely and fairly, he could claim
    right to divine rule
  • Warrior aristocracy
  • fought northern/western neighbors barbarians
    expanded empire
  • Tradition of central authority
  • Began as small agricultural cities along Yellow
    River

22
Social Structure
  • Stratified ruling elites, artisans, peasants,
    slaves
  • Patriarchal father needs to know children are
    his
  • Subservient
  • multiple marriages
  • preference for sons - infanticide
  • ancestor worship
  • Matrilineal society before Shang

23
Mesoamerica and Andean South
24
Culture
  • lacked knowledge of wheel
  • Olmecs/Maya pyramids/temples
  • Polytheistic
  • Cultural diffusion maize, terraced pyramids
  • Calendars
  • Ball game on a court
  • Quetzalcoatl god who would return to rule world
    in peace
  • Mayan reached height in 300 CE
  • system of writing pictographs
  • value of zero
  • astronomy predicted eclipses
  • length of year within a few seconds

25
State
  • small city-states ruled by kings fought
    against each other
  • Prisoners of war slaves/sacrifices to gods
  • lack of pack animals/geography prevented
    communication
  • Inhabitants cooperated for irrigation systems
  • Rugged terrain of Andes prevented central govt
    from organizing

26
Social Structure
  • Elite class of rulers/priests vs. commoners and
    slaves

27
Geography
  • not in valleys of major rivers
  • smaller rivers/streams near oceans
  • no large animals/beasts of burden llama biggest
    animal human labor

28
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Early civilizations developed monumental
    architecture and urban planning.
  • Monumental architecture and urban planning
  • Ziggurats
  • Pyramids
  • Temples
  • Defensive walls
  • Streets and roads
  • Sewage and water systems

29
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Elites, both political and religious, promoted
    arts and artisanship.
  •  Arts and Artisanship
  • Sculpture
  • Painting
  • Wall decorations
  • Elaborate weaving

30
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Systems of record keeping arose independently in
    all early civilizations and subsequently were
    diffused.
  •  Systems of record keeping
  • Cuneiform
  • Hieroglyps
  • Pictographs
  • Alphabets
  • Quipu

31
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • States developed legal codes, including the Code
    of Hammurabi, that reflected existing hierarchies
    and facilitated the rule of governments over
    people.

32
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • New religious beliefs developed in this period
    continued to have strong influences in later
    periods.
  •  Required examples of new religious beliefs
  • The Vedic religion
  • Hebrew monotheism
  • Zoroastrianism

33
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Trade expanded throughout this period from local
    to regional and transregional, with civilizations
    exchanging goods, cultural ideas, and technology.
  •  Required examples of trade expansion from local
    to regional and transregional
  • Between Egypt and Nubia
  • Between Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley

34
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Social and gender hierarchies intensified as
    states expanded and cities multiplied.

35
Small Points
  • Culture played a significant role in unifying
    states through laws, language, literature,
    religion, myths, and monumental art.
  • Literature was also a reflection of culture.
  •  Literature
  • The Epic of Gilgamesh
  • Rig Veda
  • Book of the Dead

36
Questions to Ponder
  • How was Sumeria politically organized?
  • What event/happening do most historians begin the
    history of Egypt?
  • On what did Egyptian civilization depend?
  • How did ancient Egypt civilization and the
    Mesopotamian civilization resemble each other?
    How did they differ?
  • What major similarities did the four great river
    systems have in common? Where are they? What
    differences do they have?
  • Major characteristics of the Shang dynasty?
  • What was the longest Chinese dynasty and what
    were the factors for its longevity?
  • Major results for the fall of the Zhou Dynasty?
    What major philosophies came out of this time
    period? Explain basic tenets of each.
  • Most significant contribution of Judaism?
  • Contributions of the Phoenicians?
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