Name ______Period ______

Unit 1: Characteristics of Civilization Guided Notes

Please keep this packet in your World History class folder or binder.

Unit Essential Question: How does one characterize a civilization?

Section 1. This section on geography will be completed as part of a group discussion in class.

Lesson Essential Question: How do the Five Themes of Geography influence the development of civilization?

______is the study of the earth and of the ways people live and work on it.

Geography helps explain why ______

and the ______it had on how ______developed.

Five Themes of Geography: Review from last year!

1. ______: where a place is ______on the earth. Relative location

is the location of a place in ______to other places. Absolute location is the

______location of a place on the earth.

______Location: Harrisburg is west of Philadelphia, east of Pittsburgh, and along the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania.

______Location: Harrisburg is the capital of Pennsylvania. No other place is located where Harrisburg is found on the earth: Coordinates: 40.2732° N, 76.8867° W

2. ______: A place can be identified by ______

characteristics—climate, mountains, animals, bodies of water, etc. Places can also be identified by their

______ characteristics—language, population, jobs, etc. These include features and characteristics that give an area its own identity or personality.

·  Nationalism: Feelings of ______and ______for one’s country

·  Economics: The way the world’s ______are distributed (trade, imports, exports, quota, etc.)

·  Government: Systems by which people ______and ______a civilization

3. ______/______: This is how people ______,

______, or ______- their environment. Building irrigation systems

for farming is an example of how people have changed their environment.

4. ______: Movement centers on how ______and

______are connected through ______and ______

systems. Cars, trucks, planes, trains, and ships have transformed the way goods and people travel around the

globe in modern times.

5. ______: Geographers have defined various types of ______around the world.

These have been set based on ______and ______characteristics.

Regions are areas that share one or more common ______.

______Characteristics: The Mojave Desert is a dry desert region in the Southwestern United States. This region is identified by its physical geography.

______Characteristics: French is a common spoken language in Quebec, Canada. This is a region of a country that is identified by a common language.

Section 2. This section on the Paleolithic Age will be completed as part of a group discussion in class.

Lesson Essential Question: How did the Neolithic Revolution lead to the rise of civilization?

Vocabulary to Know for this Part of the Unit!

Civilization / Archeology / Anthropology / Prehistory
Migrate / Domestication / Specialization / Code of Law

Prehistory vs. Civilization

Define archeology - ______

Define anthropology - ______

Why It’s Important

Ø  Most archaeologists believe people have lived on the earth for ______of years.

Ø  Define prehistory ______

Ø  ______lasted until about five thousand years ago when people learned how to ______.

Ø  Through the use of ______, archeologists have traced the milestones that paved the way from prehistory to the rise of ______, a time when people progressed culturally and began to live in cities.

The Paleolithic Age

Ø  Although there were no written records during prehistory, scientists have learn a great deal about prehistoric people.

Ø  Many scientists believe that until about 900,000 years ago people only lived on the ______of eastern and southern ______.

Ø  Due to climatic changes, people were able to ______, or make their way, around the desert of northern Africa and across land bridges.

Ø  Scientists call the first age in which people lived in the ______Age, or ______Age.

Ø  It lasted from about 2.3 million years, until 10,000 years ago.

Ø  During this period, people obtained their food by ______and ______.

Ø  People in the Paleolithic Age were concerned with

o  Obtaining ______

o  Making ______

o  Making ______

o  Seeking ______

o  Making ______

o  Developing ______

Ø  Two types of early people were ______and

______-______.

Section 3. This section on the Neolithic Age will be assigned for homework. Complete after reading pages 41-46 in the textbook.

The Neolithic Age (Page 41)

Ø  In the ______or New Stone Age, about ______B. C., people change from food gatherers to food ______.

Ø  Over several thousand years they began to obtain most of their food from ______.

Ø  This brought about such great changes in the way they lived that experts call the beginning of farming the ______.

Farmers and Herders (Pages 41-42)

Two important discoveries brought on the Neolithic Revolution.

Ø  One was learning to ______.

Ø  The other was learning to ______.

Ø  Scientists believe agriculture developed independently in different parts of the world.

Ø  People probably learned they could herd animals when a hunting band built fences to enclose a herd of wild animals they had chased into a ravine.

Ø  Soon captured animals began to lose their fear of people and became ______, or tamed, and the hunters became herders.

Ø  The Neolithic Revolution greatly increased people’s ______.

Ø  With more food available, the ______, or number of people, began to grow.

Early Villages (Pages 42-45)

Ø  Once people began to produce food, they were able to settle in ______place.

Ø  The earliest known villages in the world have been found in Southwestern Asia.

Ø  Two of the oldest are ______in present-day Israel, which dates back to about 8,000 B. C., and Abu Hureyra in present-day Syria, which was established about 500 years later.

Ø  Another early village is ______located in present-day Turkey.

Ø  Archeologists know a great deal about Catal Hüyük because it was struck by a fire that blackened rather than destroyed wooden and cloth objects.

Ø  Evidence shows the houses in Catal Hüyük were made of ______.

Ø  As protection against attack, the houses in this village had two or three rooms and no doors.

Ø  Among the houses stood courtyards with large ovens for baking bread.

Specialization (Page 45)

Ø  A result of increased food supplies was ______, or the development of occupations.

Ø  As fewer people were needed to produce food, they became ______, ______, and ______.

Ø  Specialization was aided by a number of developments.

o  People learned to make pottery by ______.

o  People learned to ______.

o  People also learned to ______.

Government (Page 45)

Ø  Another development of Neolithic times was village government.

Ø  It was more ______than government in earlier times due to ______and the disputes that arose.

Ø  To keep order in Neolithic villages, a single ______was chosen.

Religion (Pages 45-46)

Ø  Experts believe that the chiefs of most Neolithic villages were also ______.

Ø  At first, Neolithic people prayed to the forces of ______that they saw around them.

Ø  After a time, they created______and ______to represent these forces.

Ø  Archeologists believe that more elaborate religious customs and ceremonies appeared at this time.

Section 4. This section will be completed as part of a group discussion in class.

Lesson Essential Questions: Why are ancient cultures considered civilizations? How do early civilizations demonstrate the characteristics of civilization?

Characteristics of Civilization

Characteristic / Definition or Description
Social Structure / Ø  A system of levels in society.
Ø  This can be ______(jobs and wealth) or ______(popularity).
Ø  As jobs became ______so did the status and needs of certain individuals.
Ø  The need for a ______and ______religious leader was more respected than an ______worker.
Ø  Herders were needed and respected for the food, while masons were needed for building.
Ø  The ______was on the lowest rung of the social ladder warriors and kings were on top.
Government and Laws / Ø  A group of people who keep law and order and make laws.
Ø  As cities developed and expanded, the food supply and irrigation systems needed to be maintained.
Ø  ______, such as councils or religious leaders, began to oversee the business and existence of the cities.
Religion / Ø  A set of beliefs, usually in a god or gods, together with forms of worship such as holidays, prayer services, and rituals.
Ø  Religious leaders would conduct elaborate ceremonies to appease the gods (______) and insure a bountiful harvest.
Ø  Floods and droughts were blamed on the gods’ anger so rituals were conducted in the temples.
Language / Ø  Records were needed to keep accounts on trade goods and food storage.
Ø  ______was needed because the information became too great.
Ø  In addition, one needed to express more complex ideas such as "belief" and "social order" where pictures and words simply would not suffice.
Arts and Literature / Ø  This expressed the ______and ______of a civilization.
Ø  Different styles were developed and copied by societies.
Ø  Often the art was used to impress visitors and people about the beauty and power of a king or a community.
Economics / Ø  The system a community uses to ______and ______goods.
Customs and Traditions / Ø  ______are a practiced followed by people of a particular group or religion.
Ø  ______are beliefs, values, stories and ways of doing things that are passed on to us from our ancestors.

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