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FIRST SUMERIANS

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Title: FIRST SUMERIANS


1
FIRST SUMERIANS
  • Sumerians first arrived in region around 5000 BC
  • Typical Paleolithic people motivated by search
    for game
  • Settled in region and took up farming
  • Built dams, dikes, and short canals to use water
    from the Euphrates
  • Grew barley and dates and raised sheep and goats

2
SUMERIAN CITY-STATES
  • City-states gradually emerged over next 1000
    years
  • Ur, Uruk, Lagash, Nippur, Kish, Umma, etc.
  • Larger than Neolithic settlements and displayed
    evidence of economic specialization and strong
    political organization
  • Included the urban center plus surrounding
    countryside
  • Each was also an independent political unit

Lagash
3
SUMERIAN AGRICULTURE
  • Each was crisscrossed by irrigation system of
    major canals and minor channels
  • Designed to bring water from Euphrates to
    farmland
  • Farmland divided into square and rectangle-shaped
    plots
  • Farmers worked land with plows, seed-drills, and
    stone hoes and received yield of 401
  • Other areas set aside as gardens and fruit
    orchards
  • Carts pulled by donkeys and boats on the canals
    took produce to the urban center itself

4
CITY CHARACTERISTICS
  • Each city surrounded by walls
  • Permanent garrisons of soldiers stationed in
    towers and at each gate
  • Wide boulevards crossed city, lined by houses of
    the wealthy
  • Rest of city made up of narrow, twisting alleys
    surrounded by small, flat-roofed huts
  • Homes of farmers, and small craftsmen

5
ZIGGURAT
  • Most dominant structure in each city was its
    temple
  • Dedicated to patron god of the city
  • Largest structure in city
  • Resembled a gigantic stepped pyramid
  • Designed to look like mountains because Sumerians
    believed their gods liked to live on top of
    mountains

6
LUGAL
  • Cities originally governed by an assembly of
    adult males
  • Kings appeared who claimed to be representatives
    of the gods and who took control of most
    government functions
  • Called lugals
  • Not originally an hereditary position and the
    kings power was limited to interpreting the will
    of the gods
  • But this position would become extraordinarily
    powerful in a relatively short period of time

7
GENERAL ANARCHY
  • Although an occasional city-state would
    temporarily control the region from time to time,
    more common were long, anarchic periods where the
    various city-states fought each other over
    boundaries and water rights
  • Constant warfare, shifting alliances, and
    double-crosses were important characteristics of
    ancient Sumer

8
SARGON THE GREAT
From Akkad North of Sumer Originally settled by
nomads from Arabia Fairly untouched by Sumerian
civilization for centuries
9
MORE SARGON THE GREAT
Then conquered rest of Sumer, northern
Mesopotamia, and Syria
In 2300 BC, led by a chieftain named Sargon, the
Akkadians invaded and took over Kish
10
STILL MORE ON SARGON THE GREAT
  • According to legend, he was a poor orphan adopted
    by a gardener
  • Not a harsh ruler
  • By Mesopotamian standards
  • Respected and adopted Sumerian culture and
    civilization

11
THE END TO THE WORLDS FIRST EMPIRE
  • Sargon was succeeded by his son, Naram-Sin
  • Called himself King of the Four Quarters of the
    World
  • Ruled in the same tradition as his father
  • After the death of Naram-Sin (around 2160 BC),
    the Akkadian Empire collapsed
  • Under pressure of new groups moving into the
    region from the Arabian Desert and Iranian
    highlands
  • Also because of a revolt of Sumerian city-states

12
AFTERMATH
  • Syrian city-state of Ebla took over Akkad after
    collapse of Akkadian Empire while Sumerian
    city-states regained their independence
  • Although Ur appears to have been first among them

Great Ziggurat at Ur
13
THE BABYLONIAN EMPIRE
  • In 2000 BC, the Amorites moved into region from
    Arabia
  • Settled near Babylon and ultimately took it over
  • Amorites/Babylonians prospered and became
    wealthiest and more powerful people in
    Mesopotamia
  • Under King Hammurabi, they conquered the region
  • Babylonian Empire
  • Peak of Mesopotamia civilization
  • Produced first written law code
  • Empire collapsed shortly after Hammurabis death
  • Victim of new invading tribes and jealously
    independent spirit of Sumerian city states

Hammurabi
14
INVENTION OF WRITING
  • As early as 3500 BC, the Sumerians used
    pictograms to represent certain physical objects
  • Drawn on clay
  • By 3500 BC, they began to use ideograms (symbols
    standing for abstract, non-physical concepts) and
    phonograms (symbols representing phonetic sounds)
  • Meanwhile pictograms became more stylized

15
CUNEIFORM WRITING
  • Emerging writing system known as cuneiform
  • Means wedge-shaped
  • Impressed on clay tablets with wood stylus
  • Very complicated
  • Originally 2000 symbols
  • Reduced to 500 over time
  • Only small group of professional scribes could
    master it
  • After 15 years of training
  • A secret held by only a few specially-trained
    individuals

16
MATH
  • Developed in response to needs associated with
    raising and storing food and designing irrigation
    systems
  • Based on units of 60
  • Only used today to measure time and circles
  • Also had supplemental system based on units of 10
  • Invented system to measure metal and grain based
    on units of 60
  • Developed fundamental principles of geometry
  • Used to measure fields and design buildings
  • Invented first calendar
  • Based on phases of moon
  • Had 12 months

17
SUMERIAN GODS
  • At top of Sumerian pantheon of gods was An
  • Divine force, the creator, thought to be the sky
  • Below An came Enhil
  • Controlled the weather
  • Capricious
  • Then came Enki
  • Controlled fertility of the earth and abundance
    of harvests
  • Also capricious and cruel
  • Then 50 other major gods and a host of minor
    gods, demons, spirits, and the like

18
FIRST CREATION MYTH
  • World was originally nothing but water
  • From this water, two forcesone male and one
    femalearose and created An through procreation
  • An then created the other gods, who then worked
    with him to make the sky, earth, and human beings
  • Sumerians believed the world was the conscious
    product of a divine force and that it was created
    for a divine purpose
  • Although this might be difficult for human beings
    to ascertain

Sumerian god
19
NATURE OF RELIGION
  • Sumerian gods did not pay much attention to
    mortals
  • More interested in drinking, partying, and
    fighting among themselves
  • Sumerians did not therefore worship their gods
    out of any sense of devotion or love
  • They worshipped them out of fear of the gods
    power and capriciousness
  • Sumerian religion was pessimistic
  • Reflected mentality of a people who had just
    recently raised themselves to the level of
    civilization in a land marked by a severe climate
    and where the dangers of flood and disease were
    always present (and also unexplainable and
    incurable)

Sumerian priest
20
RELIGIOUS DILEMMA I
  • Sumerians were proud of their achievements
  • But they worried about to what extent did their
    achievements, or at least their pride in their
    achievements, go against what the gods wanted
  • To what extent did mans achievements upset the
    natural order created by the gods?

21
RELGIOUS DILEMMA II
  • This dilemma was reflected in their mythology
  • Myth of Great Flood
  • Gods, angry at the pride of men, destroyed
    mankind (except one person) in order to teach
    humans a lesson
  • Myth of the Garden of Eden
  • Humans kicked out of this paradise by refusing to
    be passive and obey the rules of the gods
  • Mythology reflected Mesopotamian insecurity over
    the alleged contradiction between their growing
    belief in the importance of man and his earthly
    accomplishments and the ingrained belief that
    they were the insignificant creation of divine
    beings much more important than they were

22
GILGAMESH I
  • Epic poem first written down around 2000 BC
  • Part of oral tradition for at least 1000 years
    before it was written down
  • Hero is legendary king of the city-state of Uruk
  • Began career as good ruler
  • But turned into a tyrant
  • Gods decide to punish him for his pride

Gilgamesh
23
GILGAMESH II
  • Gods send wild man named Enkidu to kill Gilgamesh
  • Gilgamesh recruits a prostitute to tame Enkidu
  • She does and Enkidu became like a man (ie.,
    civilized)
  • Also becomes loyal companion of Gilgamesh

Gilgamesh and Enkidu
24
GILGAMESH III
  • Gilgamesh becomes obsessed with his mortality and
    tries to find a way to cheat death
  • At first he tries to become so famous that his
    reputation will live forever
  • Fights and defeats numerous monsters
  • In the course of these adventures, Enkidu offends
    a god and is made to die

25
GILGAMESH IV
  • Gilgamesh is devastated by Enkidus death
  • Mopes around for a while
  • Then searches for Ut-Napishtim
  • Sumerian Noah who survived the Great Flood
  • Person to whom the gods had given the secret of
    eternal life

26
GILGAMESH V
  • Ut-Napishtim tells Gilgamesh how to find magic
    plant that will bring Enkidu back to life
  • Also tells entire story of the Great Flood
  • Gilgamesh finds plant after difficult quest
  • But a snake steals it from him before he arrives
    home
  • Story then suddenly ends

Gilgamesh tablet
27
MEANING
  • Dont mess with the gods
  • Gilgamesh defied the gods several times, only to
    be slapped down by them
  • Men can achieve but they must remember that they
    were only men
  • They must not try to alter the fate that the gods
    planned for them
  • Reflects the tension between the increasingly
    impressive achievements of man (and his pride in
    these achievements) and his fear that these
    achievements might upset the original plans of
    the gods

Gilgamesh on quest for magic plant
28
SOCIAL CLASSES
  • Establishment of a social hierarchy where some
    people had more power, wealth, and privileges
    than others
  • Equality originally prevailed in Sumerian
    city-states
  • But divisions soon appeared
  • First group to claim special privileges and
    status were priests
  • Gave up working and began to live off work of
    others
  • Temples given huge tracts of land which priests
    rented in small parcels to farmers
  • Lived off rent

29
FURTHER ELABORATION
  • Very early on, men began to stake out a special
    place for themselves in Sumerian society and drew
    tremendous wealth from their superior position
  • Soon joined by other groups
  • Kings and nobles because they defended city-state
    and maintained law and order
  • Merchants because they provided the commodities
    the city-state needed
  • Scribes because they had mastered the secrets of
    reading and writing
  • All exploited ordinary people who did not claim
    special status

30
SLAVERY
  • Originated with practice of men selling
    themselves and/or their families to pay off debts
  • Supplemented by using pows as slaves
  • Demand for slaves increased as civilization
    progressed
  • Advance of civilization did not bring same
    benefits to everyone
  • Some benefited a great deal
  • Others saw a deterioration in their situation
  • Civilization brought important benefits but it
    also introduced inequality, exploitation, taxes,
    and slavery

31
THE PURPOSE OF LAW
  • If inequality and exploitation become too naked,
    society will not survive
  • Ancient Mesopotamia rulers realized this
  • They established law to define the limits of
    exploitation
  • In order to prevent such terrible acts of
    oppression that it would have sparked the
    oppressed to rise up and the destroy the entire
    system
  • Law was invented by those on top to protect their
    superior status by limiting the abuses they
    theoretically had the power to commit

32
HAMMURABI
  • Several Sumerian city-states seem to have some
    sort of rudimentary law code by 2300 BC
  • But the man credited with implementing the first
    uniform law code was the Babylonian king
    Hammurabi
  • Applied to almost all of Mesopotamia

33
HAMMURABIS LAW CODE
  • Greatest of his accomplishments
  • Carved on a huge stone slab
  • Discovered in Syria in 1901
  • Probably carried off from Babylon after Ebla
    destroyed the Babylonian Empire
  • Contained 282 sections and incorporated many
    unique features

34
FEATURES
  • Basic feature was eye for an eye, tooth for a
    tooth
  • Revolutionary new legal principal
  • Earlier Sumerian laws calculated all punishments,
    no matter what the crime, in monetary fines
  • Punishments varied according to the social status
    of offender
  • Very harsh punishments
  • No concept of cruel and unusual punishment
  • Detailed regulation of economic life
  • Subsidiary status of women

35
SUMMARY
  • Despite difficulties of climate and terrain, the
    ancient Mesopotamians made remarkable physical
    progress and established cities where large
    concentrations of people could live in relative
    peace and prosperity
  • Political, religious, and intellectual
    achievements were equally formidable
  • But new problems arose with the advance of
    civilization
  • Social stratification, inequality, injustice,
    etc.
  • Mesopotamians tried to at least limit these
    problems
  • Example was Hammurabis Code
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