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Tiffany Alexander

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The Coastal Plains India s third region, the costal plains are located between two mountain ranges. These two mountain ranges are the Eastern and Western Ghats. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Tiffany Alexander


1
Tiffany Alexander
  • Chapter 3
  • THE INDUS VALLEY
  • KINGDOMS OF THE GANGES
  • EARLY CIVILIZATION IN CHINA

2
Getting Started
  • Before getting started, there are a list of
    vocabulary words that may help you along to
    better understand this chapter.
  • Subcontinent this is a large landmass that juts
    out from a continent.
  • Plateau raised area of level land
  • Monsoon is a seasonal wind
  • Castes social groups into which people are born
    and which they can not change
  • Mystics these are people who devote their lives
    to seeking spiritual truth.
  • Clans groups of families who claim a common
    ancestor.
  • Calligraphy fine hand writing
  • Feudalism was a system of government in which
    local lords governed their own lands but owed
    military service and other forms of support to
    the ruler
  • Veneration special regard for
  • Dynastic cycle the rise and fall of dynasties

3
THE INDUS VALLEY
  • The Indus valley is a subcontinent that is
    located in the region which is known as South
    Asia.
  • The Indus valley is where India gets its name
    from.
  • The northern border of the Indus Valley is marked
    by snow covered mountain ranges known as the
    Hindu Kush and the Himalayas.
  • These mountains hindered the Indian people from
    having contact with other lands yet helped them
    to have a distinct culture.
  • Two main cities in the Indus Valley were Harappa
    and Mohenjo- Daro. Each of these were dominated
    by hill top structures that were so carefully
    planned out which showed how these cities were
    well organized goverments.

4
Geography of India
  • The Indian subcontinent is a huge, wedge-shaped
    peninsula extending into the Indian Ocean .
  • This land is divided into three major zones.
  • Northern Plane
  • Triangular Deccan
  • Coastal Plains

5
THE NORTHERN PLANE
  • The northern plain is a fertile, well- watered
    region that lies just south of the mountains in
    India.
  • This plain is watered by three major rivers.
  • The Indus River
  • The Ganges
  • The Brahmaputra
  • These rivers are very important to the Indian
    people because they help in contributing to their
    agriculture. They are also very sacred to the
    people who live in India for religious reasons.

6
The Deccan
  • The Deccan is a triangular plateau that juts into
    the Indian Ocean.
  • The Deccan is not as populated as the northern
    plain because the land is less fertile there
    which inhibits people from wanting to live in
    this particular area.
  • It is very dry and unproductive and lacks the
    impacts of the rivers in the northern plain.

7
Weather in India
  • Indian life is greatly effected by its weather.
  • India is most known for its monsoons which occur
    at different times of the year and have different
    effects on the people which live there.
  • In October, the winter monsoons bring hot, dry
    air which comes from the northeast. This withers
    crops and affects India's farmlands.
  • During May however, wet summer monsoons blow from
    the southwest and bring drenching rain that
    downpours daily on the Indian subcontinent.

8
The Coastal Plains
  • Indias third region, the costal plains are
    located between two mountain ranges.
  • These two mountain ranges are the Eastern and
    Western Ghats.
  • It is very moist in the coastal plains because
    they get heavy seasonal rains which are good for
    agriculture.
  • The seas in the coastal plains are great for
    trading as well as fishing.

9
The Start of Indian Civilization
  • India although great in size, had many diverse
    languages and traditions which made it hard to
    unite and come together as a people.
  • The earliest Indian civilization emerged about
    2500 B.C but there is little to know about how it
    came about.
  • Most people who lived in the Indus Valley were
    farmers which grew a wide variety of crops such
    as barley, melons, dates and wheat.
  • People who werent farmers were merchants and
    traders.
  • The people of this time were religious people who
    were polytheistic. They believed in a mother god
    and sacrificed many animals including the bull.
    With a veneration for cattle.

10
The Disappearance of the Indus Valley
  • The Indus valley had many ordered cities which
    slowly began to decline in keeping up their
    standards.
  • Some believe that damages to local environments
    may have contributed to the decline or too many
    trees were cut down in order to fuel the ovens of
    brick makers.
  • Others believe that deathblow fell when nomadic
    people arrived in larger numbers from the north.
  • Whatever the case, many scholars are unclear
    about what exactly may have happened to the
    people of this time.

11
The Beginning of a New Civilization
  • Over many centuries the Aryans were a warlike
    people who destroyed cities in the Indus valley,
    however they later became builders of the same
    habitat in which they terminated.
  • Their civilization began northeast along the
    Ganges River rather than northeast along the
    Indus.
  • Aryans migrated across Europe and Asia seeking
    water and food from their horses as well as their
    cattle.

12
Aryan Society
  • The early Aryans built no cities and left behind
    not much about themselves, however they did leave
    behind the Vedas which is their collection of
    prayers, hymns and religious teachings.
  • Many of the priest of this time recited the Vedas
    for thousands of years before they were ever
    written down. As a result , the period starting
    from 1500 B.C to 500 B.C is known as the Vedic
    Age.
  • As mentioned before, the Aryans were warriors who
    fought in chariots with bows and arrows. They
    valued cattle which provided them with food and
    clothing and loved eating, drinking, music and
    diced games.
  • Later these people became settled farmers. But
    their new change didnt interfere with their
    value in animals.

13
Religious beliefs of the Aryan People
  • Just as the first inhibitors of the Indus Valley,
    the Aryan people were also polytheistic. They
    worshipped many gods and goddesses which embodied
    natural forces such as the sun and the sky.
  • Many of their gods were Indra, the chief god of
    war, Varuna the god of order and creation and
    Agni the god of fire.
  • The Aryans called on their gods for wealth,
    health and victory in the time of war.
  • Many of the people were Mystics who used
    meditation and yoga for spiritual and bodily
    discipline.

14
Change in Aryan Society
  • As the Aryan people began to conquer lands they
    also adopted the ways of the people they
    overtook.
  • Gradually, the Aryans yielded to their nomadic
    ways and began to settle into villages where they
    grew crops.
  • The Aryan society started to spread eastward
    where they continued to colonize. Due to their
    expansion, they learned to make tools out of
    iron. Some such as iron axes and weapons.
  • As the Aryans society grew a new Indian
    civilization emerged. There started a new culture
    which was rooted in both Aryan and Dravidian
    traditions.
  • In thanks to the blending of these cultures, the
    Indian people had developed a written language
    known as Sanskrit.

15
Contributions of the Aryans
  • The Aryans were the first of many to travel into
    India via the Hindu Kush and leave a lasting
    affect.
  • Scholars today are not left with much about the
    Aryan migration however, they know that their
    traditions and beliefs were the foundation for
    later Indian civilization.
  • For example, the religious beliefs of the Aryans
    would evolve into major world religions such as
    Hinduism and Buddhism.

16
The Start of Civilization in China
  • The ancient Chinese land was called Zhongguo or
    the Middle Kingdom. Chinas early civilization
    began in the valleys of the Hung He or Yellow
    River.
  • At the beginning of this time, China is the most
    isolated from its near by lands because of its
    physical barriers.
  • In the west and southwest of China there are high
    mountain ranges known as the Tien Shan and the
    Himalayas.
  • Toward the southeastern part of China thick
    jungles prevented communication with Southeast
    Asia.
  • Despite the Chinese isolation, they traded with
    neighboring people which helped Chinese goods to
    be spread throughout the Middle East.

17
China under the Shang Dynasty
  • From about 1650 B.C to 1027 B.C a group of people
    called the Shang gained control of northern
    China.
  • During the Shang period noblemen as well as
    noblewomen fought in battles and drove off
    nomadic invaders.
  • Shang kings and princes were the head of
    important clans in a centralized government.

18
Social Classes in Shang Society
  • The social classes of the Shang dynasty was that
    of other early civilizations.
  • In this society the royal family was first
    followed by the noble warriors. Then were
    artisans and merchants which produced goods for
    nobles and exchanged food and traded with people.
    And last were the peasants. Most of the people in
    Shang China were that of a poor lifestyle. They
    lived in cluttered farming villages or pit houses
    where they lived grueling lives.

19
A System of Writing Emerges
  • The ancient Chinese developed a system of writing
    in which they used pictographs and ideographs
    which were signs that expressed thoughts or
    ideas.
  • The Chinese have over 10,000 characters or
    symbols that represent their way of communication
    whereas we only have over two dozen letters in
    our Alphabet.
  • In their way of writing the Chinese mastered the
    art of calligraphy into an elegant art form.
  • By using the same system of writing, people in
    China who could not understand each other in
    language could however understand each other in
    writing.

20
Religious Beliefs
  • The Chinese people prayed to many gods and nature
    spirits. One god that they prayed to was a mother
    goddess who brought plant and animals to earth.
  • But they didnt believe that mere mortals were
    the ones who could pray directly to the gods but
    instead that only the spirits of the greatest
    mortals could pray on their behalf.
  • These great spirits were that of kings who have
    departed and so the family of which is still
    alive must pray to their great ancestor on behalf
    of the whole community which ensured a plentiful
    harvest and victory in time of war.

21
Rise of the Zhou Dynasty
  • In 1027 B.C the Zhou peopled marched out of their
    land in order to overthrow the Shang Dynasty.
  • The Zhou believed that in right to the Mandate of
    Heaven, or divine right to rule, they had every
    right to take over. They also believed that
    because of the cruelty of the last king of the
    Shang Dynasty, that the gods had sent them to
    punish him.
  • The Zhou Dynasty believed that due to the
    dynastic cycle as well as the Mandate of heaven,
    if a dynasty provided good government than the
    gods would be on their side.
  • However, of they did not then the Heaven or gods
    would be against them.

22
The Start of Feudalism and Economic Growth
  • Under the Zhou, China became a a feudal state in
    which it rewarded supporters by granting them
    control over particular region.
  • During the Zhou Dynasty Chinas economy began to
    grow. New developments such as iron axes and iron
    plows helped in building and farming. Also there
    was the production of growing new crops such as
    soybeans.
  • Feudal lords of this time organized large scale
    irrigation works which helped in making farming
    more productive.
  • The Chinese also began to use money for the first
    time. This made trade easier and more efficient.
  • Due to economic expansions a rise in population
    also occurred. Because of the Zhou Dynasty, China
    in this time flourished in prosperity.

23
QUIZ TIME!!!
1. The history of which classical civilization
was shaped by the monsoon cycle, the
Himalaya Mountains, and the Indus
River? (1)Maurya Empire (2)
ancient Greece (3) Babylonian Empire
(4) ancient Egypt
24
2. In which region did Chinas earliest
civilizations develop? (1) Gobi Desert
(2) Yellow River Valley (3) Himalaya Mountains
(4) Tibetan Plateau
25
Base your answers to questions 6 and 7 on
the statements below and on your knowledge of
social studies. Speaker A We must return to the
ideas of the Bible. We should encourage people to
read and interpret religious scripture for
themselves. Speaker B Our people worship many
gods, who control the peoples activities, such
as birth, death, and commerce. Speaker C Our
people received the Ten Commandments at Mount
Sinai. We are few in number, but we will bring
these commandments to all people. Speaker D We
trace our religions birth to the flight of our
greatest prophet from Mecca to Medina. 3.Which
speaker is expressing an idea from a
polytheistic religion? (1) A (3) C (2) B (4) D
26
4. Archaeological studies of the Indus Valley
cities of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro show evidence
of (1) dynastic rule (2) social
equality (3) Monotheism (4) urban
planning
27
5.One way in which the Huang He, the Indus,
and the Nile civilizations were similar is that
they each (1) flourished by trading salt and
gold (2) developed monotheistic religions (3)
suffered repeated invasions (4) originated in
river valleys
28
Answers
  • THE ANSWER TO 1 IS 1
  • THE ANSWER TO 2 IS 2
  • THE ANSWER TO 3 IS 2
  • THE ANSWER TO 4 IS 4
  • THE ANSWER TO 5 IS 4

29
STUDY HARD FOR THE REGENTS !!!
  • GOOD LUCK EVERYONE!!!
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