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Early Societies

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Title: Early Societies


1
Chapter 6
Early Societies in the Americas Oceania
2
Early Human Migrations
By 700 CE, humans had established communities in
almost every habitable part of the world.
3
Major Pre-Columbian Civilizations
4
  • Early Mesoamerican societies
  • 1200 BCE 1100 CE

5
Origins of Mesoamerican Societies
  • Melting glaciers 18,000 years ago began a rise in
    ocean waters.
  • Migration across Bering land bridge?
  • Probably 13,000 BCE, perhaps earlier
  • By sea from Asia?
  • By 9500 BCE reached southernmost part of South
    America
  • Hunter/Gatherer societies
  • evolve into agricultural societies

6
Olmecs
  • 1200-100 BCE
  • The Rubber People
  • Ceremonial Centers
  • San Lorenzo, La Venta, Tres Zapotes
  • Olmec Heads
  • Up to 10 ft tall, 20 tons
  • Transported by dragging, rolling on logs
  • 1000/workers per head

7
The Olmec heartland where the Olmecs reigned from
1400 - 500 BCE
8
  • It is now generally accepted that these heads
    are portraits of rulers, perhaps dressed as
    ballplayers. 17 heads have been unearthed so
    far!

9
Agriculture and Herding
  • Abundant rainfall, so no need for irrigation
  • Drainage systems to divert waters
  • Staple maize
  • Herding turkeys dogs
  • Both food
  • No draft animals
  • No development of wheeled vehicles

10
Olmec Society
  • Probably authoritarian in nature
  • Large class of conscripted laborers to construct
    ceremonial sites
  • Also tombs for rulers, temples, pyramids,
    drainage systems

11
The Olmecs
  • The first major American civilization who built
    ceremonial centers around pyramids.
  • Had an elaborate calendar, writing system and
    widespread trading network.
  • There is evidence that the Olmec practiced ritual
    bloodletting and played the Mesoamerican
    ballgame, hallmarks of nearly all subsequent
    Mesoamerican societies.

12
The Olmecs
  • The first major American civilization who built
    ceremonial centers around pyramids.
  • Had an elaborate calendar, writing system and
    widespread trading network.
  • There is evidence that the Olmec practiced ritual
    bloodletting and played the Mesoamerican
    ballgame, hallmarks of nearly all subsequent
    Mesoamerican societies.

13
Mysterious Decline of Olmecs
  • Ceremonial centers destroyed
  • No evidence of warfare
  • Revolution?
  • Civil war?

14
The Maya
15
Lands of the Maya
The Yucatan Peninsula
16
Maya
  • Huge cities discovered in 19th c.
  • 300 BCE-900 CE
  • Terrace Farming
  • Maize
  • Cotton
  • Cacao beans
  • chocolate
  • currency
  • Major ceremonial center at Tikal (500,000)
  • Chichen Itza Palenque b/w 10-30,000 people

17
  • Temple 1 (also known as the Temple of the Great
    Jaguar) in the Plaza Mayor

18
Chichen-Itza - Pyramid
19
Maya Warfare
  • Warfare for purposes of capturing enemy soldiers
  • Ritual sacrifice of enemies
  • Enslavement
  • Small kingdoms engage in constant conflict until
    Chichén Itzá begins to absorb captives
  • Some nevertheless choose death
  • Center of empire develops

20
Mayan Ritual Calendar
  • Complex math
  • Invention of Zero
  • Calendar of 365.242 days (17 seconds off)
  • Solar calendar of 365 days
  • Ritual calendar of 260 days
  • Management of calendar lends authority to
    priesthood
  • Timing of auspicious moments for agriculture
  • Devise written language
  • Compile astronomical knowledge

21
Mayan Language and Religion
  • Ideographs and a syllable-alphabet
  • Most writings destroyed by Spanish conquerors
  • Deciphering work began in 1960s
  • Popol Vuh Mayan creation myth
  • Humans created from maize water gt flesh blood
  • Agricultural cycle maintained in exchange for
    honors and sacrifices
  • Bloodletting rituals
  • Human sacrifices follow after removal of fingers,
    piercing to allow blood flow

22
The Maya Ball Game
  • Ritual game
  • High-ranking captives, prisoners of war
    contestants
  • Execution of losers immediately follows the match
  • Bloodletting ritual for the gods
  • Most Maya ceremonial centers, towns and cities
    had courts

23
Chichen-Itza - Ball Court
24
A Goal in the Ball Court at Chichén Itzá, Mexico
25
Social Hierarchy
  • Most Maya were farmers who supplied resources for
    an elaborate trading network.
  • Each city had a ruling chief, followed by nobles,
    who served as city officials and military
    leaders.

26
City of Teotihuacan
  • Highlands of Mexico
  • Lakes in area of high elevation
  • Village of Teotihuacan, 500 BCE, expands to
    become massive city
  • Important ceremonial center
  • Extensive trade network, influenced surrounding
    areas
  • Begins to decline c. 650 CE, sacked in middle of
    8th century, massive library destroyed

27
Pirámide del Sol, Teotihuacan
28
The End of the Maya
  • Around 900, the Maya abandoned their cities.
    Historians speculate that war or overpopulation
    made have led to famine or class warfare.
  • Today, millions in Guatemala and Southern Mexico
    speak 28 Mayan dialects.

29
Andean Societies
  • Migration into South America c. 12,000 BCE
  • Climate improves c. 8000 BCE
  • Largely independent from Mesoamerica
  • Highly individualized due to geography
  • Early Societies of Andean South America
  • 1000 BCE 700 CE

30
Food Supply
  • Those who migrated into the Andes Mountains
    hunted deer, llama, alpaca and other large
    animals not found in Central America.
  • Cultivation of maize and squashes spread from
    Mesoamerica, while gold, silver and copper
    metallurgy spread from the Andes north.
  • By 2500 BCE, the earliest Andean cultivators
    relied on peanuts, beans, and sweet potatoes.

31
Chavin Cult
  • New religion in central Andes, 900-300 BCE
  • Little known about particulars of religion
  • Intricate stone carvings
  • Cult may have arose when maize became an
    important crop gt cult for fertility and abundant
    harvests.
  • During the era Andean society became increasingly
    complex
  • Elaborate woven clothing, cotton fishnets,
    metallurgy for jewelry

32
The Mochica State
  • Valley of the Moche River
  • Dominated northern Peru, 300-700 CE
  • Artistic evidence of armed warriors maintaining
    stability throughout region
  • Painting survives, mostly on pottery/ceramics
  • No writing, but complex society with vast job
    specialization
  • One of many states in region, none able to
    consolidate into empire
  • 6th-7th centuries CE saw climactic shifts with
    droughts that led to a decline of early Andean
    civilizations

33
  • Early Societies of Oceania,
  • 1500 BCE 700 CE

34
Oceania
  • Prehistoric land bridges, lower seas permit
    migration
  • Outrigger canoes for open-sea travel
  • Humans in Oceania at least by 58,000 BCE
  • By 8,000 BCE trade between islands ceased due to
    the rising seas.
  • Early hunter-gatherer societies in Australia
  • Early agriculture in New Guinea by 3000 BCE
  • Yams, taro raising pigs chickens

35
Aborigine of the Naomi Tribe
36
Early 19th Century Aboriginal Tribe
37
21st century Aboriginal People
38
Lapita Peoples
  • Earliest Austronesian (language group of Oceania)
    migrants to sail into the Pacific Ocean and
    establish settlements in pacific islands.
  • Found throughout Pacific Islands
  • Agriculture, animal herding
  • Political organization based on chiefdoms
  • Relatives formed aristocracy
  • Trade over open ocean declines 500 BCE
  • Greater independence of settlements
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