Chapter 2: Western Asia and Egypt
Section 1. Civilization begins in Mesopotamia
The Fertile Crescent
- Mesopotamia “land between the rivers”
- Tigris and EuphratesRivers
Controlled water flow leads to:
- growing crops on regular basis
- Civilization develops
First Civilization
- The Sumerians 3500 BC
1. Cities
- City-State: basic unit of the Sumerian civilization
2. Government
- Theocracy – ruled by divine authority
- Kings got their power directly from the gods
- Priest & priestesses supervised the temples and had a great deal of power
3. Religion
- Temples were dedicated to the chief god or goddess of the city
- Built on a massive stepped tower called a ziggurat
- Polytheistic – belief in may gods
- The Ziggurat
4. Social Structure
- Nobles – royal & priestly officials
- Commoners – farmers, merchants, craftspeople
- Slaves – belonged to palace officials
- Education for wealthy boys only
5. Writing
- Cuneiform – “wedged shaped” system of writing
- Scribes held the most important positions in society
6. Art & Technology
- Wagon wheel
- Potter’s wheel
- Sundial
- Astronomy
- Number system based on 60
- Geometry
First Empires
- Large political state or unit, usually under a single leader, that controls many people or territories
- Easy to create & difficult to maintain
Babylon
Hammurabi – leader
- Established a legal code based on strict justice
Code of Hammurabi
- Based on the principle of retaliation – “An eye for an eye, tooth for a tooth”
- Patriarchal society – dominated by men
- Page 41 & 44 in your textbook
Chapter 2 – Section 2: Pyramids of the Nile
Cultural Hearth: NileRiverValley
- Lower Egypt – land upstream
- Upper Egypt – land to the south
The Gifts of the Nile
1. Water - food
2. Transportation
3. Protection
4. Sense of security & confidence
1. Cities
- Established in the NileRiverValley at the tip of the delta – the point at which the Nile divides
- Cairo
- Giza
- Saqqara
2. Government
- Theocracy – “God-Kings”
- Dynasty
- Pharaohs
Famous Pharaohs
- Hatshepsut – first woman pharaoh
- Akhenaton – worshiped only one god – Aton (god of the sun disk)
- Tutankhamen – “King Tut” – restored the worship of multiple gods
Ramses II
- Ruled 60 years
- Put Egypt back on the offensive
- Wars and building projects weaken Egypt
- New Kingdom collapses 1085 BC
Cleopatra VII
- Tried to reestablish Egypt’s independence
- Involvement with Rome led to suicide & defeat
- Egypt became part of Rome’s empire
3. Religion
- Polytheistic
- Gods associated with heavenly bodies & natural forces – sun gods & land gods (p. 46, 47)
- No word for religion – inseparable from their world
- Anubis, god of mummification
4. Social Structure
- Organized like a pyramid
- Upper class – pharaoh, nobles, priests
- Middle class – merchants, artisans, scribes, tax collectors
- Lower class – peasants who farmed the land & military service
5. Writing
- Emerged around 3000 BC
- Hieroglyphics – “priest carvings” or “sacred writings”
- Hieratic script
- Papyrus
- The Rosetta Stone
6. Art & Science
- Pyramids, temples, monuments
- Math and engineering
- Accurate calendar
- Effective medicine
Chapter 2 - Sections 3 & 4: New Centers of Civilization
Phoenicians
- Best known for their alphabet
- Simplified writing by using 22 different signs to represent the sounds of speech
- Passed on to the Greeks and eventually to us
The Children of Israel (Judaism)
Movement of the Jews
- 7000 B.C. move from Ur to Palestine
- Drought around 1650 B.C. moved them from Palestine to Egypt
- Jews were enslaved in Egypt
- Moses leads Jews back to Palestine
Monotheists
- Believed in only one God
- All other religions at this time were polytheistic
- Covenant, Commandments, Prophet
- Torah - “Bible” of the Jews
922 BC Split in 2
Zoroastrianism
- Religion of the Persians
- Founder was Zoroaster
- Teachings written in the Zend Avesta
- Monotheistic
- Pg. 64