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Origins and beginnings

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Title: Origins and beginnings


1
Origins and beginnings
  • Transition to Complex societies

Adapted from http//intra.burltwpsch.org/users/rl
ee/apworld.htm
2
What are the ingredients that transform a society
into a civilization? What is an inherent problem
with the word civilized?
  • cities that serve as administrative centers
    rather than isolated communities usually coupled
    with monument building
  • a political system based on territory rather than
    kinship
  • a specialization of labor in areas other than
    food production called division of labor
  • advancing technological skills
  • the division of the society into classes, which
    accompanies the accumulation of wealth and
    prestige
  • a recordkeeping system formed from a writing
    system
  • long-distance trade, as opposed to local trade
  • major advances in the sciences and arts.
  • The term civilization is an ambiguous concept and
    must be discussed carefully because of the
    tendency throughout time to equate civilization
    with our own way of life. People tend to define
    themselves as civilized and anyone else as
    uncivilized or barbaric.

3
Other than learned behavior what is culture?
  • Culture consists of learned patterns of action
    and expression and includes art, music, clothing,
    dwellings, tools, values, beliefs, and languages.
  • Although Stone Age music and dance remain hidden
    from investigation, early human art and tools are
    important sources for studying Stone Age culture.
  • Cave paintings reveal much about human society
    and wildlife.
  • The development of increasingly specialized tools
    is evident in the archaeological record.
  • Tools for gathering and digging food as well as
    for killing and butchering animals demonstrate
    human ingenuity.
  • Tool and weapon design changed along with new
    methods of hunting and agriculture, revealing the
    adaptability of the human species.
  • Methods of food preparation are deduced from the
    tools made for those tasks and are important
    indicators of cultural phenomena, such as the
    gendered division of labor

4
Indus Mesopotamia - Egypt
  • All three civilizations were built around fertile
    river valleys.
  • The resulting surplus production of foodstuffs
    supported a government and religious
    infrastructure, a middle class of merchants and
    artisans.
  • All three civilizations also developed a complex
    system of writing to accompany the growth of
    government and urban life.
  • While little is known about Indus religion,
    Egyptians and Mesopotamians linked their
    religious beliefs and practices to the natural
    environment.
  • Because of the size of the Indus River system,
    the civilization there was much larger than that
    in Mesopotamia.
  • Whereas the Mesopotamian civilization was urban
    centered, that of the Indus Valley was more
    dispersed and rural.
  • Metals were more readily available in the Indus
    Valley, both those occurring naturally and those
    acquired through trade.
  • Consequently, metal objects tended to be more
    utilitarian in design and more generally
    distributed through the population.
  • Metal objects in Egypt and Mesopotamia, on the
    other hand, were more likely to have a decorative
    and ceremonial function.

5
As the Harrapan script has yet to be deciphered,
how do historians make inferences about the
civilization of the Indus River Valley?
  • The geography provides some clues.
  • For example, the rivers, ocean access, and
    particularly the mountain ranges all shape the
    history of the region.
  • The geography supports intensive cultivation
    therefore city life and civilization is possible.
  • The excavations of the cities Mohenjo-Daro and
    Harappa are also fertile places to find
    information on this society.
  • The archaeological evidence of the cities helps
    to figure out information on settlements. The
    identity of the people who lived there isnt
    certain however, the design and construction of
    the cities can be examined and suggests the
    existence of a central government. The natural
    resources, crafts, and metals can also be
    discovered. Trade contacts through the Persian
    Gulf are also evident, although we know little
    about their religious, social, economic, and
    political structures. The decline of this
    civilization is also not certain. There is
    speculation that natural disaster like earthquake
    or flooding may be responsible.

6
What are social divisions and how do they appear
within Mesopotamian society, and what are reasons
for those divisions?
  • Divisions arise among groups of people because of
    differences in wealth, social or religious
    functions, and legal and political rights.
  • Social classes are formed when a society grants
    or acknowledges status and privilege because of
    these imbalances.
  • Wealthy and middle classes were formed in
    Mesopotamia with the establishment of a royalty,
    a religious hierarchy, large landholdings, and
    long-distance trade.
  • There were three distinct classes
  • the large landholders, royalty, priests, and
    merchants
  • dependent farmers and most artisans and workmen
  • slaves.
  • Slavery was not economically crucial to
    Mesopotamian society, and it was not an inherited
    condition.

7
What was the political structure within the
Mesopotamia region and how was this main
framework of civilization created?
  • Mesopotamia was a civilization based on villages
    and cities and thus relied on the existence of a
    large agricultural sector to supply those urban
    areas with food.
  • An agricultural surplus makes possible the
    existence of merchants, artisans, government
    officials, scribes, and religious specialists who
    are not directly engaged in producing food
    themselves.
  • The city supplied markets for foodstuffs and
    crafted items, and military protection for the
    agriculturalists.
  • As political leadership in Sumerian Mesopotamia
    grew, leaders were able to organize and coerce
    labor to build an irrigation system, dikes,
    canals, and roads, which contributed to further
    agricultural expansion.
  • As cities grew, political, social, religious,
    educational, judicial, and economic institutions
    expanded as well.

8
How did the status and experience of women change
as Mesopotamian society developed into a
civilization?
  • Because of their primary role in procuring much
    of the familys food, women in hunter-gatherer
    societies had relatively high status. In the
    transition to food production, womens status
    suffered as more of the heavy cultivating work
    was done by men.
  • As increased food supplies encouraged larger
    family size, raising children occupied greater
    portions of womens time, further detracting from
    their social status.
  • When Mesopotamia developed an urban middle class
    and private wealth, women were used to enhance
    family status and privilege through arranged
    marriages and family alliances. It is possible
    that the women also began to wear the veil at
    this time.
  • New laws granted higher levels of control to male
    family members.
  • Despite the fact that women had no political
    role, some women worked outside the home in such
    occupations as textile weaving, brewing,
    prostitution, tavern keepers, bakers, and
    fortunetellers in addition to carrying out the
    ever-present domestic duties, preserving
    families, and raising children throughout time.

9
The conditions leading to the transition from
food gathering to food cultivation had universal
environmental implications but resulted in
regional and irregular spread of the technology
and also led to differences in types of
agriculture.
  • Changes in the global climate about ten thousand
    years ago made increased food supplies necessary,
    and humans began manipulating native plants to
    enhance their food supply.
  • As hunter-gatherers returned yearly to the same
    sites, they deliberately scattered seeds from
    desirable plants to encourage their growth.
  • Using fire and rudimentary tools, they cleared
    land for cultivation and discouraged the growth
    of unwanted plants.
  • Selecting seeds from the highest-yielding plants
    eventually led to new types of crops.
  • Climate and soil conditions heavily influenced
    the development of agriculture.
  • Emmer wheat and barley were among the first
    grains grown in the Middle East but were
    unsuitable for humid or dry climates.
  • In those areas, root crops or other grains such
    as sorghum and millet predominated.
  • Agricultural Revolutions developed independently
    in many different places.
  • Maize, for example, became the most important
    domesticated crop in the Americas but was unknown
    in other parts of the world.

10
Geography contributed to Egyptian vision of
cosmic order
  • The abundance and benevolence of the environment
    of the Nile Valley gave their vision of the
    cosmos a quality that emphasized renewal and
    bounty.
  • The support of the monarchy was related to the
    support of this cosmic order.
  • The king was a chief priest as well as political
    leader.
  • Egypt had many gods, many of whom were depicted
    with animal heads, others with human form.
  • There is a correlation between the benevolent
    environment and the development of temples and
    festivals held for the gods.
  • Egyptians believed that the afterlife was a
    journey beset with hazards.
  • There was extensive preparation for this journey
    in the embalming process to help with the
    journey.
  • Later the Book of the Dead provided a map for the
    living on how to maintain this cosmic order

11
One of the most enduring symbols of Egypt is the
pyramids. How does the role of the Pharaoh
engender the construction of the pyramids and
contribute to the strength of Egypt?
  • The Egyptians viewed the pharaoh as a god on
    earth, the incarnation of Horus and the son of
    the sun god Re.
  • The pharaoh had come to earth to maintain maat,
    the divine order of the universe.
  • He was the link between the people and the gods,
    therefore ensuring the welfare and prosperity of
    the country.
  • The death of the pharaoh was a critical moment
    because the well-being of the state depended on
    him.
  • Therefore every effort was made to ensure that he
    had a safe journey back to the gods in his
    afterlife.
  • Massive resources were poured into the
    construction of royal tombs, the celebration of
    funeral rites and offerings in chapels.
  • The tombs started as flat-topped rectangular
    tombs made of mud brick, but this was replaced
    with a pyramid design that has become an enduring
    symbol of ancient Egypt.
  • Between 2550 and 2490 B.C.E. the Egyptians
    erected huge pyramids at Giza, which were the
    largest stone structures ever built by human
    hands.
  • Amazingly this construction was done without
    machinery, with only stone tools and muscle
    power.
  • These construction projects connected the
    Egyptians and allowed them to share culture
    better than even the Nile that brought them
    together.

12
How was the first Egyptian civilization shaped by
its natural environment?
  • Imposing natural barriers of desert and
    harborless seacoast surrounding Egypt protected
    it from outside influences and threats.
  • Egypt was also well endowed with the natural
    resources necessary for forming a civilization.
  • Those barriers and resources allowed Egypt to
    develop a unique culture in isolation and
    security.
  • Except for a narrow stretch of fertile land along
    the Nile River, Egypt is almost entirely desert.
    Without adequate rainfall, agriculture was made
    possible only by the yearly flooding of the Nile,
    which carried rich deposits of silt along with
    it.
  • The Nile was also the primary means of
    communication and transportation. Reeds growing
    in marshy areas along the river were used for
    making papyrus (paper), as well as items such as
    sails and ropes.
  • Egyptians had plenty of stone and clay for
    building materials they also had access to
    metals, from which they could fashion tools and
    decorative objects.
  • Because of the need to predict the Nile floods
    and survey taxable agricultural land, mathematics
    and astronomy became advanced sciences in Egypt.
  • Egyptian religion was rooted in the physical
    landscape of the Nile Valley and the recurrent
    cycles and periodic renewal caused by the
    environment.

13
Discuss the importance of technology and the
various Mesopotamian technological advances.
Would you describe the Mesopotamians as
advanced? Why?
  • In general, technology refers to the tools and
    machinery that humans use to manipulate the
    physical world.
  • Technology is what is used to overcome your
    environment
  • Scholars now use the term technology more broadly
    to describe any specialized knowledge that is
    used to transform the natural environment and
    society.
  • The Mesopotamians developed many different
    technological advances to control their
    environment such as irrigation, which is
    essential for agriculture, and the building and
    maintenance of canals, dams, and dikes.
  • They also developed transportation such as carts,
    sledges, and boats for maneuvering in the varied
    terrain.
  • They also became skilled in metallurgy,
    developing bronze.
  • The advantage of bronze was its malleability over
    stone as well as its strength and durability.
  • Mesopotamians also developed brick building
    materials, which were used for the construction
    of monumental architecture.
  • Therefore they developed the knowledge of
    engineering and architecture.
  • The Mesopotamians also developed the potters
    wheel, weapons and machinery of warfare, and a
    number system.
  • Perhaps one of the most important technological
    contributions of the Mesopotamians was their
    system of writing.
  • Originally developed to keep economic records,
    this system of cuneiform was also used for
    political, literary, religious, and scientific
    purposes.

14
Why did Neolithic peoples form permanent settled
communities? What were the advantages and
disadvantages of those communities?
  • Humans formed permanent settled communities to
    ensure a more dependable food supply.
  • There were numerous cultural and societal
    benefits to community life as well.
  • The religious practices of food producers
    reflected their lifestyles and differed greatly
    from those of hunter-gatherers.
  • Neolithic communities helped develop and spread
    the large language families across the globe.
    Architecture evolved as towns grew.
  • Objects too large and cumbersome for hunting and
    gathering peoples became practical and necessary
    for settled life, creating a demand for such
    items as pottery.
  • Consequently, trade and craftwork became
    important.
  • Early metalworking emerged, but mostly for
    decorative and ceremonial uses.
  • Still, there were drawbacks for agriculturalists
    and pastoralists.
  • Their diets were not as varied or nutritious as
    the diets of hunter-gatherers, and farmers had to
    work longer and harder than foragers.

15
The Egyptian hieroglyphic and Mesopotamian
cuneiform writing systems had similar purpose but
the Egyptian system developed well beyond its
original purpose. How were the systems similar in
development, purpose and results?
  • The earliest form of Egyptian writing, a system
    of hieroglyphics, developed at the beginning of
    the Old Kingdom.
  • Hieroglyphics were picture symbols, made with a
    brush, standing for words, syllables, or sounds.
  • The writing system was developed for government
    administration, but Egyptians used it for
    purposes beyond recordkeeping.
  • Tales of adventure, magic, and love, as well as
    religious hymns and instruction manuals, were
    recorded in hieroglyphics and the simplified
    systems descending from them.
  • The Egyptians also developed writing material
    called papyrus, which was made from the stems of
    the papyrus reed.
  • This is a difference because the plant grew only
    in Egypt but was in high demand throughout the
    ancient world.
  • The Mesopotamians wrote instead on a moist clay
    tablet with a pointed stylus, producing
    wedge-shaped symbols.
  • Both systems of writing were highly specialized
    activities requiring long training and practice.
  • Literacy afforded individuals prestige and
    status, as well as administrative qualifications.
  • Scribes held an elevated social position in both
    societies
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