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Foundations

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Title: Foundations


1
Foundations
  • Climate, Geography and Empires
  • 6000 BCE- 650 CE

2
Big Geography the Peopling of the Earth
  • Neolithic Overview
  • Early migrations (Discover Magazine 5/20/08)
  • Agricultural Revolution and the resulting
    communities that develop
  • Climate changes
  • Tools
  • Religion
  • Limited Trade

3
Neolithic Age?
  • The Neolithic or New Stone Age (roughly
    8000-3500BCE) is characterized by the movement
    away from a hunter-gatherer, nomadic lifestyle
    towards an agricultural lifestyle. During this
    time period we see the origins of farming and
    domestication of animals, which is often referred
    to as the Neolithic Revolution (though
    agricultural revolution may be more appropriate).
  • These innovations produced the food surpluses and
    rising populations that made possible the
    founding of cities and the increasing
    specialization of occupations within human
    societies.
  • Soon after the introduction of agriculture,
    societies in the Middle East began replacing
    stone tools with those made of metalfirst
    copper, then bronze. These new tools improved
    agriculture, aided in warfare, and benefited
    manufacturing artisans.

4
Early Migration
  1. Who?
  2. Why?

5
The Fertile Crescent and the Birth of Farming
Dark Green By 8,000 years ago Light Green By
6,000 years ago Red Dots Early agricultural
settlements Orange lined area Distribution of
Wild cereals White diagonal lines Distribution
of Wild sheep and goats
6
Civilization
  1. Origins of the term
  2. Standard Criteria?
  3. Problems?

7
  • Historians and anthropologist have noted several
    problems with the term civilization. First of
    all, it tends to be used in an ethnocentric way
    in other words, it is used to assign to others an
    inferior status. For example, the Chinese of the
    Han dynasty thought all others in the world were
    uncivil barbarians likewise, from the Spartans
    to Nazi Germany, designating others as less than
    civilized was often a pretense for conquering or
    destroying them. Secondly, the term marginalizes
    (excludes) other people who have made important
    contributions to history. For example, nomadic
    people are responsible for the diffusion of some
    of the most important technologies in history,
    but most accepted forms of the term civilization
    exclude them.

8
  • From ancient times up to today, some peoples
    have seen themselves as civilized and dismissed
    or criticized their neighbors, or any people
    unfamiliar to them, as barbarians. Another
    problem is that modern historians may focus too
    much on societies such as Egypt, that left more
    of an archaeological and written record, giving
    lesser attention to those societies that did not
    the term is too subjective to have much value in
    understanding world history, and many historians
    refuse to use it altogether. It is not used in
    this text.
  • Craig A. Lockard, Societies, Networks, and
    Transitions A Global History, pg. 26

9
Impact of Agricultural Societies on Environment
  1. Irrigation? Salinization of soil
  2. Slash and burn ? desertification
  3. Population increase
  4. Urbanization

10
Impact of Agricultural Society on social
interaction and social stratification
  1. Increased labor specialization
  2. Increased work-load!!! Especially for children!
  3. Increased conflict over resources, labor, and
    luxury items with new technologies
  4. Social stratification (socio-economic classes
    develop)
  5. Civilization with urban areas, specialized
    institutions, military, religious, social and
    political hierarchies, long distance trade,
    economic (as well as ideas, inventions and germs)
    exchanges between local and regional, as well as
    nomadic pastoralists and settled peoples.

11
Impact of Agricultural Society on Gender Roles
  • How might gender roles change as people stop
    their nomadic lifestyles and become
    horticulturalists?
  • Early Neolithic horticulturalists shared
    responsibility? women farmed with the help of her
    children, men hunted, then helped at home.
  • With population growth and expansion, military
    became more important and women increasingly were
    viewed by society as inferior.
  • goddesses lost out to gods
  • Family line through the father (patrilineal)
    instead of through the mother (matrilineal)
  • Patriarchy in early societies(Code of Hammurabi)

12
Population
  • Demography The study of population size, growth
    and age structure, and of the forces (fertility,
    mortality, migration) that lead to population
    change.
  • What factors may influence population growth and
    decline?

13
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14
Climate and Geography
  1. Imagine how early societies may have been
    affected.
  2. How do you think early peoples responded?
  3. What difference would geography make in the long
    term development of a society?

15
Development of States and Empires
  1. Competition for resources
  2. Expansion
  3. State legitimacy including unity building
    measures
  4. Military growth

16
Emergence of Trans-regional Networks of
Communication and Change
  1. Increase of long distance trade amongst large
    scale empires
  2. Raw materials and luxury goods
  3. Exchanges of technology, religious and cultural
    beliefs, food crops, domesticated animals and
    disease

17
Early Societies
  1. Mesopotamia
  2. Egypt
  3. Indus
  4. Shang
  5. Mesoamerica and Andean South America (Olmec and
    Chavin)

18
Civilizations A Comparative Study(Kevin Reilly
Cities and Civilization)
  • Mesopotamia
  • Irregular flooding
  • Egypt
  • Predictable flood

19
Axial Age Thinkers
20
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Polytheism

21
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Hinduism

22
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Judaism

23
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Confucianism

24
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Daoism

25
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Buddhism

26
Origins of World Belief Systems
  1. Christianity

27
Diffusion of Belief Systems
28
Empire Building
  1. What does an empire require?
  2. What do its subjects expect?
  3. Symbols of legitimacy

29
Empires A Comparison
  1. Rome
  1. Han

30
Fall of Empires Catastrophe
  1. Why?
  2. Do we see commonalities? Or do different empires
    fall for different reasons?

31
Conrad-Demarest Model
  • Empire The term was first used in English in
    1297 to indicate an extensive territory made up
    of formerly independent states. A further
    refinement might be to add that an empire is a
    politically unified state in which one people
    dominates its neighbors.
  • The Conrad Demarest Model of Empire Basic
    Principles
  • I.  Necessary preconditions for the rise of
    empires
  • state-level government
  • high agricultural potential in the area
  • an environmental mosaic
  • several small states with no clearly dominant
    state (power vacuum)
  • mutual antagonisms among those states
  • adequate military resources
  •  
  • II.  The primary reason a state succeeded in
    empire building was an ideology supporting
    personal identification with the state, empire,
    conquest, and militarism. III.  The major rewards
    of empire
  • economic rewards, reaped especially in the early
    years and redistributed to the elite and often to
    all levels of the citizenry
  • population increase, often supported by the
    government and its ideology
  • IV.  Empires fall because
  • the ideology of expansion and conquest fueled
    attempts at conquest beyond practical limits
  • failure to continue conquest indefinitely and to
    continue to bring home its economic fruits eroded
    faith in the ideology that supported the empire
  • revolutions toppled the empire
  •  
  • Homework  Read Chapter 6 in The Earth and Its
    Peoples to find specific examples of each of the
    above indicators for the Roman and Han empires.

32
Imperial Achievements
33
Alexander the Great
34
Interregional Networks of People by 600 C.E.
  • Silk Roads
  • Mediterranean trade
  • Indian Ocean trade

35
Silk Routes
36
Mediterranean Trade Routes
37
Indian Ocean Trade
38
Conclusions
  1. How do we know what we know?
  2. How does change happen?
  3. What results stem from interaction through
    migration, trade or pilgrimage?
  4. Why do world historians need to pose questions
    differently than regional specialists?
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