Unit 2- Ch 3- Mesopotamia and the Fertile
Download
Report
Transcript Unit 2- Ch 3- Mesopotamia and the Fertile
BELL WORK
HW: Read WORKBOOK pages 16-17 and complete
page 18.
TODAY’S TITLE: #15 The Fertile Crescent
TODAY’S GOAL: SWBAT explain how civilization,
farming, and industry developed in SE Asia and
identify the characteristics of civilization.
WAR: Read the top of page 54 under “If You Were
There…” and answer the following question- “How
can you control the waters of the river?”
Chapter 3
MESOPOTAMIA AND THE FERTILE
CRESCENT
PRE-AP NOTES
Make a Cause and Effect Chart in your WOW
section. Skim Section 1 of Chapter 3 and fill in
the chart as you go.
CAUSE
EFFECT
Tigris and Euphrates Rivers
flood frequently
Crops can die and homes get
destroyed, make fertile soil
Fertile Soil
Produce more food
More food
Healthier people, population
growth, surplus
Surplus
More business and trade,
less farming
Less people farming
More specialized jobs
More jobs
Increased technology,
expansion of society
SECTION 1: GEOGRAPHY OF THE FERTILE
CRESCENT
People settled near water so crops could grow
One region that was ideal for settlement sat
between 2 major rivers, the Tigris and
Euphrates
This area of rich soil was called….
The
Fertile
Crescent!
WHAT IS THE LAND BETWEEN THE RIVERS?
Mesopotamia is Greek for “between 2 rivers”
Mesopotamia lies between the Tigris and
Euphrates Rivers
It has 2 parts:
-the North is a plateau bordered by
mountains
- the South is a flat plain
Mesopotamia is part of a larger area called the
Fertile Crescent, which has VERY rich soil
HOW DID THE FIRST CIVILIZATION RISE?
H-G groups first settled in Mesopotamia
12,000 years ago
The floods of the Tigris and Euphrates brought
silt, a mixture of rich soil and tiny rocks which
the land great for farming
1st farming settlements formed in 7000 BC
Plentiful
Food
Population
Growth
Village
Formation
Rise of
Civilization
WHAT MAKES A CIVILIZATION?
To be a civilization, a society must have the following:
Central government
Cities
Division of labor
Social levels (hierarchy)
Trade
Advanced farms
Use of metal tools
Writing system
Religious system
Calendar
WHAT WAS MESOPOTAMIAN FARMING LIKE?
Received very little rain and flooding of the
rivers could be dangerous
Farmers needed to control the rivers’ flow
Used irrigation, a way of supplying water to an
area of land
Dug basins and canals that brought water to
the fields and built up river banks to hold back
floods
HOW DID IRRIGATION AFFECT THE
CIVILIZATION?
Irrigation increased the amount of food farmers
grew and provided water for domesticated
animals
Produced a food surplus, or more than they
needed
Fewer people needed to farm because there
was so much food
HOW DID IRRIGATION AFFECT THE
CIVILIZATION?
People were more free to do other jobs
Division of labor formed (arrangement in which
each worker specializes in a particular task or
job)
Society could accomplish more tasks such as
building and construction
Consequently, we need rules and structure to
complete tasks
We need a government!!
HOW DID CITIES FORM?
Settlements grew in size and complexity
Cities began to appear between 4000 and
3000 BC
Society in Mesopotamia is still mostly based on
farming, but cities became the political,
religious, cultural, and economic centers of
civilization
REG WIO
Draw a chart like the one below. We will fill in the
Causes and Effects of the Fertile Crescent
together.
BELL WORK
HW: Finish today’s WIO and Study for Mini-Quiz for tomorrow!
TODAY’S TITLE: #16 RISE OF SUMER
TODAY’S GOAL: SWBAT determine the impact of key figures on
Mesopotamian history
WAR: Do your period’s assignment!
REG- Answer this question- How did irrigation help farmers?
Pre-AP: Choose ONE of the following questions to answer
1.
What effects did irrigation have on farming settlements?
2.
How might big construction projects lead to laws and government?
SECTION 2: THE RISE OF SUMER
Sumer was the world’s first official civilization
Settled in Mesopotamia and created an
advanced society
WHAT WERE THE CITY-STATES OF SUMER LIKE?
Most people were farmers who lived in rural, or
countryside areas
Sumer had urban, or city areas as well that
were the centers of their civilizations and had
over 100,000 people living there by 2000 BC
Rural
Urban
WHAT WERE THE CITY-STATES OF SUMER LIKE
(CONT)
Sumerian cities soon became city-states, which
consisted of the city and the countryside
around it
City-states fought each other to get more
farmland
They had strong armies and walls to protect
their land
Kish, Uruk, Ur were examples of very strong
city-states
HOW DID THE AKKADIAN EMPIRE RISE?
Lived north of the Sumerian city-states and
were peaceful in the beginning
2300 BC- Sargon built a new capital called
Akkad and had a permanent army
He defeated all the city-states of Sumer and
conquered northern Mesopotamia
He established the world’s 1st empire, land with
different territories and people under single
rule
HOW DID THE AKKADIAN EMPIRE FALL?
Sargon ruled for 50 more years
After his death, the empire only lasted a
century more because it was invaded by
outsiders
Chaos followed for 100 more years
The Sumerian city-state of Ur eventually
became the more powerful and rebuilt stability
in the region
Sumer’s #1 again!
WIO
Draw a gravestone for SARGON with the following
requirements:
Here Lies… (Insert name)
Born:____
Died:____
He is remembered for…(list at least 2 things)
Then draw at least 2 symbols that represent his
achievements.
HOW DID RELIGION SHAPE SUMERIAN SOCIETY?
Religion played a role almost all aspects of life
The Sumerians practiced polytheism, the worship of
MANY gods
-Examples of gods: Enlil, Enki, Inanna, Utu, Nanna,
Shamash (sun god shown below!)
Each city-state had a special god as their protector
Believed their gods controlled natural events like
weather and illness
Success in life depended on how you worshipped the
gods
HOW DID RELIGION SHAPE SUMERIAN SOCIETY?
Priests, people who performed religious
ceremonies, had great power
People relied on them to interpret the gods’
wishes
Priests made offerings to gods in temples and
performed religious ceremonies
WHAT WAS THE SUMERIAN SOCIAL ORDER?
Kings
Priests
Craftspeople, merchants,
traders
Farmers and laborers
Slaves
Social Hierarchy: the division of society by rank or class
WHAT WERE MEN AND WOMEN LIKE IN SUMER?
Men held political power and made laws
Women took care of the home and children
(ladies, get used to hearing this!)
Education was usually only for men, but some
upper-class women received it as well
Women could be priestesses if they were educated
-example: the priestess Enheduanna wrote
hymns. She is the first known female writer in
history!
BELL WORK
HW: Read WORKBOOK pages 22-23 and
complete page 24.
TODAY’S TITLE: #18 Sumerian Achievements
TODAY’S GOAL: SWBAT summarize important
achievements of Sumer.
WAR: Answer ONE of the following questions
1. Why were scribes important?
2. How was cuneiform used to express ideas?
SECTION 3: SUMERIAN ACHIEVEMENTS
The Sumerians developed many different
inventions and ideas that have influenced us
today.
When we discuss achievements, we usually
divide it by subjects very similar to what you
have in school (literature, science, math, art,
etc.)
WHAT WERE THE SUMERIAN ACHIEVEMENTS IN
WRITING?
They invented the FIRST writing system called cuneiform
Used styluses to make wedge-like shapes on clay tablets
Earlier written communication used pictographs, or picture
symbols
Cuneiform used symbols to represent syllables of words, and
would combine the symbols to form words
SUMERIAN WRITING (CONT)
Cuneiform was first used to keep business records
Scribes, or writers, would keep track of business and had a
high place in society because they were the only ones who
knew cuneiform
Later used cuneiform to write history, law, grammar, and math
Also wrote stories, proverbs, songs, and epics, which are long
poems that tell heroic stories
example: The Epic of Gilgamesh
WHAT WERE SUMERIAN ACHIEVEMENTS IN
TECHNOLOGY?
The wheel
The potter’s wheel for sculpting
The plow
The “falling water” clock
Sails on boats
Underground sewers
Learned to use bronze for stronger tools and
weapons
Makeup and glass jewelry
WHAT WERE SUMERIAN ADVANCES IN MATH?
Number system based on 60
360 degree circle
12 month calendar
Areas of rectangles and triangles
WHAT WERE SUMERIAN ACHIEVEMENTS IN
SCIENCE?
Observing the natural world using lists and
recordings
Medicine advancements such as healing drugs
and cataloging treatments for specific
problems
WHAT WERE SUMERIAN ACHIEVEMENTS IN
ARCHITECTURE?
Architecture is the science of building
Large palaces for Sumerian rulers
Large and small houses for others
Used mud bricks
Made ziggurats, pyramid-shaped Sumerian temples, were in
each city
Used outdoor staircases and columns
WHAT WERE SUMERIAN ACHIEVEMENTS IN
ART?
Statues of gods
Used ivory and rare woods
Sumerian pottery is not known for its beauty!
Jewelry made of gold, silver, and gems
Cylinder seals to imprint designs into clay
Musical instruments include reed pipes, drums,
tambourines, and lyres
Song and dance were popular forms of
entertainment
WIO
Pre-AP: A commercial for a museum exhibit that
showcases a Sumerian achievement.
6- Unit 2- Ch 3- Museum Commercial.docx
REG: An advertisement that persuades people
that their certain Sumerian achievement was the
most influential.
6- Unit 2- Ch 3- Advertisement of Sumerian
Achievement.docx
BELL WORK
HW: Read WORKBOOK pages 25-26 and
complete page 27.
TITLE: #19 Later People Part 1
Goal: SWBAT explain how one culture can
influence another.
WAR: Read the “If You Were There” paragraph on
page 72 and answer the question: How would
you advise the king?
SECTION 4: LATER PEOPLES OF THE FERTILE
CRESCENT
FYI: “Peoples” is not a typo! It is an actual
word!
The city-state of Ur began to lose power by
2000 BC because of invasion.
Other invaders began to move into
Mesopotamia
HOW DID BABYLON RISE TO POWER?
Located on the Euphrates River near presentday Baghdad, Iraq
1800 BC- had a very powerful government
1792 BC- Hammurabi becomes king of Babylon
He is Babylon’s greatest monarch, ruler of a
kingdom or empire
WHO IS HAMMURABI?
Brilliant war leader
Brought all of Mesopotamia under his rule through the
use of his powerful army
His empire became known as the Babylonian Empire
He was a good ruler because he oversaw building and
irrigation projects, improved the tax system, and
increased wealth and trade
Ruled for 42 years and made Babylon the most
important city in Mesopotamia
He is best known for his law code!
WHAT IS HAMMURABI’S CODE?
It is a set of 282 laws that dealt with daily life
Contained laws on trade, loans, theft, marriage,
injury, and murder
Specific crimes had specific penalties
Social class did matter
example: injuring a rich man had a
bigger penalty than injuring a poor man (not fair!)
Was written down for all to see
HAMMURABI’S LAW CODE EXAMPLES
“If a man put out the eye of another man, his
eye shall be put out.”
“If he break another man’s bone, his bone shall
be broken.”
“If a builder builds a house for someone, and
does not construct it properly, and the house
which he built fall in and kill its owner, then that
builder shall be put to death.”
WHAT WERE OTHER INVASIONS OF
MESOPOTAMIA?
After Hammurabi’s death, the Babylonian
Empire lost power and fell.
Other civilizations began to move into the
Fertile Crescent and fight over land
examples: The Hittites, Kassites,
Assyrians, and Chaldeans
WHO WERE THE HITTITES AND KASSITES?
The Hittites built their kingdom in Asia Minor
(present-day Turkey)
The first to use iron, which made stronger
weapons, and they used the chariot, a wheeled
horse-drawn cart used in battle.
Captured Babylon in 1595 BC
Kingdom fell when king was assassinated
The Kassites overtook Babylon and ruled it for
almost 400 years
BELL WORK
HW: Complete Study Guide
TITLE: #20 Later People Part 2
WAR: Do you think Hammurabi’s law code was
fair? Why or why not?
WHO WERE THE ASSYRIANS?
1200s BC- the Assyrians from northern Meso.
take Babylon, but were soon invaded by others
300 years later, the Assyrians recover strength
and begin to conquer all of the Fertile Crescent,
parts of Asia Minor, and Egypt.
Capital city was called Nineveh
WHY WERE THE ASSYRIANS SO STRONG?
Used iron weapons and chariots
Army was well-organized
Were fierce in battle
Harsh punishments for law-breakers
Ruled their large empire by having local leaders
who collected taxes, enforced laws, and raised
troops for the army
Built roads to connect the empire
WHO WERE THE CHALDEANS?
652 BC- Assyrian Empire became weak
because of civil wars within the empire
The Chaldeans attacked the empire and in 612
BC destroyed Nineveh and the Assyrian Empire
The Chaldeans set up own empire with a rebuilt
Babylon as their capital
WHO WAS NEBUCHADNEZZAR? (WHO?!)
Most famous Chaldean king
Rebuilt Babylon as the richest city in the world
Built the Hanging Gardens of Babylon (One of
the 7 Ancient Wonders of the World) as a gift to
his depressed wife
http://joseph_berrigan.tripod.com/ancientbaby
lon/id14.html
http://www.unmuseum.org/hangg.htm
WHAT WAS BABYLON LIKE UNDER THE
CHALDEANS?
Babylon was a major stop on a trade route b/w
the Persian Gulf and Mediterranean Sea
Babylon was a center of trade, Sumerian
culture, and science (astronomy)
They tracked stars and weather events, created
a calendar, and solved complex geometry
problems
Trade helped the spread of ideas…how?!
Chaldean Empire fell to the Persians in 539 BC
WHAT WAS PHOENICIA LIKE?
Located at the western end of the Fertile
Crescent near present-day Lebanon
Was a wealthy trading society
Sits on the Mediterranean Sea
Had few resources, but had cedar, a type of
timber and valuable in trade
Overland trade routes were blocked by
mountains, so they used the sea for trade
transport
HOW DID THE PHOENICIANS EXPAND THEIR
TRADE?
Became expert sailors
Built harbors (ex: Tyre)
Built fast ships that traveled to Egypt, Greece,
Sicily, and Spain
Created colonies along trade routes (ex: Carthage
in N. Africa)
Traded cedar, silverwork, ivory carvings, slaves,
glass-blown objects, purple dye
Grew VERY wealthy
WHAT WAS THE PHOENICIANS’ MOST
IMPORTANT ACHIEVEMENT?
The alphabet!!!
An alphabet is a set of letters than can be
combined to form words
Made writing much easier
Our English alphabet is based on the
Phoenician one
Other civilizations such as Greece and Rome
also used it and changed it