Topic 1 / Locating world history in the environment and time
1.Environment
- Geography and climate: Interaction of geography and climate with the development of human society
- Five Themes of Geography – consider these
- Relative location – location compared to others
- Physical characteristics – climate, vegetation and human characteristics
- Human/environment interaction – how do humans interact/alter environ
- Leads to change
- Movement – peoples, goods, ideas among/between groups
- Regions – cultural/physical characteristics in common with surrounding areas
- E. Africa first people
- 750,000 years ago started to move
- moving in search of food
- Role of Climate
- End of Ice Age 12000 BCE –
- large areas of N. America, Europe, Asia became habitable
- big game hunters already migrated
- Geographical changes
- 3000 BCE Green Sahara began to dry up, seeds to forests
- Effect on humans – nomadic hunters didn’t move so much
- Settle near abundant plant life – beginning of civilization
- Sedentary life w/ dependable food supply
- milder conditions, warmer temperatures, higher ocean levels
- Major population changes resulting from human and environmental factors
- 2 million people during Ice Age
- allowed for growth
- big game gone
- more usable land available
- 50-100 million by 1000 CE
- Regional changes altered skin color, race type, quantity of body hair
- Periodization in early human history
- Early Hominids – humans 3.5 million years ago
- Australopithecus – Lucy – found in Africa
- Bipedalism
- sizable brain
- Larynx – voice box
- 3 million – homo habilis – handy human – crude stone tools
- 1 million - homo erectus – upright human
- First to migrate
- Clothed selves – skins/furs
- 100,000 to 250,000 – homo sapiens – wise human
- social groups
- permanent, semi-permanent buildings
- 100,000 to 200,000 – homo sapiens, sapiens
- Out of Africa – started in Africa and migrated
- Multiregional thesis – all developed independently
- Stone Age – First period of prehistory - Tool use separates hominids from ancestors
- Paleolithic – Old Stone Age – 10,000 to 2.5 million years ago
- Crude tools – clubs, axes, bones for shelter, protection, food, cloth
- Natural shelters – cave/canyons
- Began tentlike structures/huts
- Wooden/stone structures by Mesolithic
- 1 million years ago – fire
- Warfare – rocks, clubs – food preparation tools used for combat
- Weapons found in bones
- Clothes from hides/furs and later plant fibers
- Dying cloth for color
- Families, clans, tribes
- Select sexual partners – not seasonal
- Long term sexual bonds – emotions + child rearing
- Family units created clans
- Neolithic – New Stone Age – 5,000-10,000 years ago
- Nature and causes of changes associated with the time span
- Change due to Great Ice Age – Pleistocene Ice Age
- Continuities and breaks within the time span
- Mesolithic – Middle Stone Age – 10,000-12,000 years ago – transition
- Difficult to generalize
- Lack of information
- Regions developed at different times
- What are the issues involved in using "civilization" as an organizing principle in world history?
- Westerncentric meaning
- food producing w/ surplus
- increase in population
- specialization of labor
- social hierarchy
- growth of trade
- centralization of religious/political authority
- monumental buildings
- written records
- technical innovation – the arts
- World historians – more broad view – importance of human creativity
- Interaction of human beings in creative manner
- Cultural and material build
- What is a civilization
- Food surplus
- Advanced cities
- Advanced technology
- Skilled workers
- Complex institutions – government, religion
- System of writing/record keeping
- What is the most common source of change: connection or diffusion versus independent invention?
- Connection/diffusion – due to interaction vs. invented something new or used it in a new way
- Diffusion – ironwork – Assyrians to Kushites
- Invention – Nok people of Nigeria – smelting iron
- Farming of certain crops – diffusion – Middle East > India > Europe > Nile
- Others independent – sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, China, Americas
- After emergence, diffusion takes over – exchange of techniques, seeds, crops
Topic 2 / Developing agriculture and technology/Agricultural, pastoral, and foraging societies, and their demographic characteristics (Include Africa, the Americas, and Southeast Asia.)
- Foraging societies
- small groups of people traveled
- climate/food availability
- Bad - climate, disease, famine, natural disasters
- No permanent shelters
- Limit to how much land can feed
- Mammals, fished, gathered
- Organization
- Some had chiefs, leaders, religious figures
- Coordination needed for hunting large game – later used for warfare
- Worshipped deities – buried dead 100,000 years ago – burial sites
- Sacrifices, ceremonies
- Expression through art – art 32,000 years old, flutes 30,000 years old
- Gender division of labor
- Physical differences – men hunted, made war, heavy labor
- Women gathered, prepared food, maintained home, children
- Roles not seen as superior, just different - debatable
- Pastoral societies – domestication of animals
- Mountain regions, insufficient rainfall
- Small scale agriculture to add to milking
- Extended family important
- Women w/ few rights, men controlled food production
- Power based on size of herd
- Couldn’t settle needed to look for food for herd
- Seasonal migration
- Difficult to become “civilized”
- Began to experiment w/ plants/seeds
- Mix animal husbandry w/ plant domestication
- By accident – latrines sprout veggies, yummy
- Women key role
- Key points – one didn’t disappear
- In one area, could have shifting cultivation + migratory farmers + forage + hunt/fish + nomadic pastoralism
- Polytheism –
- afterlife – matter – neither created or destroyed
- energy > energy
- from animism – spirits in anything
- anthropologists – need control over fate – petition gods
- Emergence of agriculture and technological change
- Neolithic Revolution/Agricultural Revolution – 8000-3000 BCE
- Nomadic > agricultural > town > city
- W/ good soil, water source + cultivate plants – could build homes
- Domesticated animals/simple tools
- Was it a revolution?
- Long period of time
- At different times
- but…no one can argue immense changes
- Psychological Issues
- Shared land vs. ownership, people come on your land - intruders
- Food Surplus
- Time to make tools, dig an irrigation ditch, philosopher, religious leader
- One farms for 100, you can individualize labor
- Armies, towns, writing, art, experiment, technologies – specialization
- Government and religion emerge to keep life orderly
- Organize irrigation efforts which increases scope
- Calendars, pottery containers, baskets, storehouses
- Domestication – dog first – companionship, security hunting
- Later goat – both during Paleolithic – milk/meat
- Advantages of some societies on domestic options
- Regional food
- Central Africa - plantains, bananas, yams
- Americas – maize, beans, squash
- India – millet, barley
- Migratory vs. Slash and burn
- Ashes kept soil fertile
- Replaced with shifting – planting, fallow
- Changes – irrigation, mixing crop types
- Fermentation of alcoholic beverages – end of Neolithic
- Nature of village settlements
- Must be near water – commerce, barter
- Stay in same place
- Sense of unity, create cultural traditions
- People tied to land – property as ownership
- Role of women pre-farming – food gatherers – first to plant/harvest crops
- Men were hunters
- Gender-related differences – women lost status
- Political, economic lives controlled by men
- Community leaders, warriors, priests, traders, crafts
- Patrilineal/patrilocal – tracing decent based on male line/husband’s home more important
- Needed to work together –formation of communities
- Defense against invaders
- A family alone can’t create complex irrigation systems
- Self-sufficient, but some trade occurred
- Religious rituals become more complex – greater variety of gods and goddesses
- Forces of nature + spirits of departed ancestors
- Built permanent sites of worship – shrines, temples, megaliths
- Creation of cities
- Offer protection for defense
- Centers for trading
- Different skills/talents live together
- Major cities
- Jericho – Jordan River
- Catal Huyuk – Turkey
- Danpo – China
- No longer can rely on oral communication – need writing
- Keep records
- Pass on information
- Transfer information
- Sumerians first 3500-3000 BCE, Incas civilized without
- Impact of agriculture on the environment
- Land – land reconfigured to fit needs of humans
- Diverts water
- Clears land for farming
- Roads built
- Stones unearthed for buildings/monuments
- Animal kingdom
- Animals as food, clothing, beast of burden – oxen
- Increase food production
- Overfarmed – depleted land of fertility
- Move on to new land – sometimes called slash and burn
- Introduction of key stages of metal use
- Hard granite stones – farming tools – hoes, plows – farm tools priority
- Plow key prerequisite of society?
- Allowed for food surplus
- Pottery for cooking
- Weaving for baskets/nets
- Complex/comfortable clothing
- Wheels for carts sails for boats
- Combine copper with tin to make bronze
- Weapons, tools – Bronze Age
- Iron follows
- Neolithic Age – New Stone Age – ends with metalworking
- 6600 BCE – Copper used in Europe, Asia
- Metalurghy – extracting from raw ore and metalwork – crafting – quite difficult
- Jewelry predates 6400 BCE, but tools not efficient until later
- 3500-3000 BCE – Bronze from copper/tin discovered in Middle East, Balkans, Southeast Asia – later part Neolithic Age – Bronze Age
- Americas and Asia never had a bronze age – tin scarce
- Scarcity of tin pushed need for international trade
- 1500-1200 BCE – Iron Age – Hittites
- Spread to Europe in 1000 BCE, Africa in 500 BCE
- Possible to cultivate hard packed soil/more land
- Wave of invasions from outside Mesopotamia
Topic 3 / Basic features of early civilizations in different environments: culture, state, and social structure
- Mesopotamia
- Culture
- Independent innovation that passed to Egypt/Indus
- 4000 BCE bronze, copper
- Wheel, irrigation canals
- 3500 Sumerians – cuneiform – first writing – stylus – objects > sounds
- Number system – 60 – movement of heavenly bodies
- navigation
- time
- Architecture – ziggurats – 1) glory of civilization, 2) many gods
- Clay primary building material
- First epic – Epic of Gilgamesh – 1) great flood story
- King’s quest to achieve immortality
- great traders
- State
- Unpredictable flooding – need for government – irrigation
- City-states – controlled city + surrounding area
- Geography – lack of natural barriers – invasion – defensive walls
- Conflicts over water/property rights
- Akkadians/Babylonians – spread Sumerian culture
- Code of Hammurabi – first written law code
- Different rules for gender/social classes
- Very harsh, favored upper class
- Systematic, consistent set of regulations, not arbitrary will of a ruler
- After 900 BCE –Assyrians and Persians ruled
- king-like figure – lugal “big man”
- Social structure
- Ruled by elite, rulers, priests
- Farmed by slaves – could purchase freedom
- Patriarchal – men could sell wives/children to pay debts
- 1600 BCE women wearing veils
- But…women could gain power courts, priestesses, scribes, small business
- Egypt
- Culture
- 3000 BCE – Nile River
- pharaoh – pyramids – tombs for self/families
- Decorated w/ colorful paintings
- polytheists – afterlife > mummification
- Egyptian Book of the Dead – what happened to soul, how to reach happy
- afterlife > mummification and tombs
- bronze tools weapons after Mesopotamia
- Kush – independent innovation iron – spread to Egypt
- some trade w/ Kush and Mesopotamia
- hieroglyphics – from trade contacts Mesopotamia
- papyrus – paper making
- geography – protected – could create unique civilization
- less urban than Mesopotamians
- 365 day calendar, medicine, math, astronomy
- State
- Nile overflowed annually – predictable
- irrigation led to organization/government
- agricultural villages engaged in trade
- pharaoh – king – power
- living incarnation of sun god
- geography – protected from invading people
- beginning 3100 when Menes unites Upper and Lower Egypt
- 2040-1640 BCE Middle Kingdom – culturally dynamic
- New Kingdom – 1500 – regained from foreign invaders Hyksos – focused on military
- by 900 in control of foreign invaders – internal disorder, invasions
- Social structure
- Social classes, but commoners could enter government service – rise in social status
- Patriarchal, but women had some privileges
- Women sometimes acted as regents for young rulers, priestesses, scribes
- managed household finances/education of children
- right to divorce husbands/alimony
- could own property
- Queen Hatshepsut
- Indus – 2500 BCE Indus River - Pakistan
- Culture
- Streets laid out in precise grid – houses had running water/sewage
- Harappan writing not deciphered – much unclear
- active trade w/ Indus valley and Sumer – ores from one place found in others
- blend of Aryans and Indus valley people affected future course of history
- quite large – size of France/urbanized
- State
- unpredictable flooding
- Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro
- Because of similarities of cities, tightly unified, centrally controlled
- Overtaken by Indo-Europeans – Aryans
- Already dying out – 1) river change or 2) earthquake, 3) erosion of soil 4) salt in wells
- whole societies – all over – Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro only tip, last
- Social Structure
- little known – Dravidians relatively egalitarian
- not as patriarchal
- Aryans – based it on color – Varnu
- Aryans eventually control politically, but Dravidians would win out culturally
- Shang – most isolated – Huange He valley – Yellow River – “China’s Sorrow”
- Culture
- Still some trade w/ Southwest Asia and South Asia
- Knowledge of bronze metallurgy – from Southwest Asia
- Strengthened Shang war machine
- 1000 BCE Ironworking
- Fortune telling and ancestor worship started here
4.Writing – oracle bones
- Oracle scratch person’s question on bone/shell – heat it
- Resulting cracks read to learn message from gods
- State
2.Central rule to oversee irrigation/flood-control projects
3.Walled cities – center of cultural, military, economic – set precedent in villages
4.Zhou replaced Shang – “mandate of heaven” – if leader governed wisely and fairly, he could claim right to divine rule
- Warrior aristocracy
- fought northern/western neighbors – barbarians – expanded empire
6.Began as small agricultural cities along Yellow River
- Social Structure
2.Patriarchal – father needs to know children are his
- Subservient
- multiple marriages
- preference for sons - infanticide
4.Matrilineal society before Shang
- Mesoamerica and Andean South America
- Culture
2.Olmecs/Maya – pyramids/temples
3.Polytheistic
4.Cultural diffusion – maize, terraced pyramids
- Calendars
- Ball game on a court
- Quetzalcoatl – god who would return to rule world in peace
- system of writing – pictographs
- value of zero
- astronomy – predicted eclipses
- length of year within a few seconds
- State
- Prisoners of war – slaves/sacrifices to gods
3.Inhabitants cooperated for irrigation systems
4.Rugged terrain of Andes prevented central gov’t from organizing
- Social structure
- Geography – not in valleys of major rivers
2.no large animals/beasts of burden – llama biggest animal – human labor
(Students should be able to compare two of the early civilizations above.)
Topic 4 / Classical civilizations - China, India, and the Mediterranean
Classical Civilizations – those with lasting influence over vast numbers
Political Developments
Major themes
- Recurrent invasions from people from North
- Flooding a problem – how to control rivers
- China
- Zhou – 1027-771 BCE replaced Shang – mandate of heaven – rationalization
- Expanded territory – added southern rice valley
- further centralized gov’t
- Feudal system
- Too large to control
- Developed bureaucracies – bureaus - departments
- Worked for couple centuries
- But nobles build up wealth/power
- Split off into individual kingdoms
- Nobles given power over small regions
- King gave noble protection for loyalty
- Emperors lived lives of luxury
- Standardized language
- Classical age
- Hundreds Schools of Thought
- Philosophers – practical and metaphysical
- Wanted to see political reform
- Longest lasting dynasty
- Mandate of Heaven
- Power as long as gods allowed
- Corruption/military defeat weakened a ruler > gods no longer in favor
- Lasted until 500 BCE when internal conflict – Era of Warring States
- Qin – after Era of the Warring States – 221-202 BCE
- Shi Huangdi – “First Emperor” > dictatorial
- name applied to country
- Unified country by conquering warring feudal states
- Abolished feudalism
- Instituted centralized gov’t that would be model
- one of briefest dynasties
- Major precedents
- Strong emperor
- Large Bureaucracy
- Expanded territory to Vietnam
- Defensive wall – Great Wall
- Shows empire well organized, centralized, brutal
- Weights, measures, coinage standardized
- Silk cloth encouraged
- Established uniform laws
- Legalism – state sponsored alternative to Confucianism/Taoism
- People are basically evil – must be kept in line w/ strict laws
- Rule cruel/autocratic
- Refused to tolerate any dissent
- Dissent in book > burned
- Dissent in scholar > killed
- Heavy taxes for peasants
- Overburdened peasants revolted and overthrew in 207 BCE
- Han – 200 BCE – 220 CE
- Governmental bureaucracy grew stronger
- Effective administration, postal service, tax-collecting
- Territory expanded to Central Asia, Korea, Indochina
- Under Emperor Wu (140-87 BCE) expanded furthest
- Wu Ti = Warrior Emperor
- Chinese civil service exam
- Excellent communicators/highly educated
- Test lasted for days
- Open to everyone, but only wealthy could afford to prepare
- Bureaucracy highly skilled
- Time of peace settled across China
- Threat of Huns not as significant as in Europe
- Government