Civilization - an advanced state of human society, in whicha high level of culture, science, industry, and government has been reached

Conquest – to take over another place

Cooperation – working together for a common purpose

Resources – materials found on Earth that people need and value

Movement – the movement of people, goods, and ideas

Fertile Crescent – a large arc of rich, or fertile, farmland between Asia Minor and the Persian Gulf

Mesopotamia – the land between the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers

Domestication–the process of changing plant or animals to make useful to humans; to tame

Agriculture – the raising of crops and animals

Irrigation – a way of supplying water to a large area of land

Innovation- something new or different introduced

Human-Environment Interaction – ways in which humans interact with their environment; humans adapt, depend and modify their environment

Silt – a mixture of rich soil and tiny rocks

Hammurabi – a king of Babylon who brought all of Mesopotamia into his empire (1792 – 1750 BCE)

Hammurabi’s Code – a set of 282 laws that dealt with almost every part of daily life

City-State – consisting of a city and all of the countryside around it

Cuneiform – the world’s first writing system; using symbols; developed in Sumer

Law – rules or regulation of a place

Social Class – the division of society by rank or class

Polytheism – the belief/worship of many gods

Monarch – a ruler of a kingdom or empire

Empire – land with different territories and peoples under a single ruler

Division of Labor – a type of arrangement in which each worker specializes in a particular task or job

Canals – human-made waterways

Levees – a man-made wall or embankment used to control the flow of water

Rural – countryside

Urban– city

Gilgamesh – one of Uruk’s kings who became a legendary figure in Sumerian literature

Nebuchadnezzar II – famous Chaldean king who rebuilt Babylon

Sargon – King of Akkad who defeated Sumer to conquer much of Mesopotamia

Priests – people who performed religious ceremonies

Surplus – more than one needs

Sumer/Sumerian Empire – a society in southern Mesopotamia who developed the world’s first civilization

Akkadian Empire – a civilization just north of Sumer which conquered much of Mesopotamia.

Babylonian Empire – a civilization centered in Babylon which conquered much of Mesopotamia.

Assyrian Empire – a civilization from northern Mesopotamia which conquered much of the Fertile Crescent

Neo-Babylonia/Chaldean Empire – a civilization controlling much of Mesopotamia

Phoenicians – a wealthy trading society at the western end of the Fertile Crescent

Essential Questions

  1. How did geography shape the development of ancient civilizations?
  2. What conclusions can be drawn based on patterns of settlement?
  3. How did ancient societies use technology to change their environment?
  4. What advantages does civilization offer society?
  5. How have competition, conflict and compromise over resources impacted development?
  6. How have key historical figures and cultural groups influenced society?