Literature of the Ancient World
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Transcript Literature of the Ancient World
Literature of the
Ancient World
3000 B.C. – A.D. 500
What Ancient Texts Teach Us,
Today
In the selections we are going to read, you will
be introduced to literature from the ancient
Middle East and ancient India.
– As we begin to study the literature from the oldest
known civilizations—Mesopotamia, Egypt, Hebrew, and
India—spiritual beliefs and religious ideals of these
ancient cultures will be revealed.
These works are among the world’s oldest, most
beloved, and most influential—many of them
continue to shape modern cultures.
– Selections from the Hebrew Bible will also be looked at,
as this text is one of the foundations of Western
literature.
Part 1:
Mesopotamia, Egypt, and
Hebrew
Why Does Reading “This Stuff”
Matter?
The ancient Middle East is often called the
“cradle of civilization.”
– In prehistoric times, people gathered in the
fertile river valleys of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and
Canaan—the “Fertile Crescent”—to farm.
From their interactions arose the basic
elements of civilization: law, commerce,
arts, religion, education, and literature.
– On this foundation were built many later
cultures—including our own.
What Time Period Are We In?
Where Are We?
Time Period:
– 2500 B.C. – A.D. 300
Geographical Location:
– Ancient Middle East (“cradle of civilization”)
– Mesopotamia, Egypt, Canaan (“The Fertile Crescent”)
Mesopotamia
(c. 3500 B.C.-539 B.C.):
Where Was Mesopotamia?
Between the Tigris and
Euphrates Rivers in presentday Iraq is a fertile valley
known in ancient times as
Mesopotamia (“the land
between rivers”).
Here, the first cities arose,
each existing independently
as a city-state.
– Each city-state had its own
ruler, its own army, and its
own patron deity.
Who Were Its People?
Mesopotamia was
dominated by a series of
empires created by
successive invaders. As a
rule, however, the
conquerors preserved the
culture of the peoples they
defeated.
The Groups:
–
–
–
–
–
Sumerians
Akkadians
Babylonians
Assyrians
Neo-Babylonians
Sumerians
(c. 3500-2350 B.C.):
Recorded history began
with the Sumerians.
– The Sumerians invented
writing around 3000 B.C.
The Sumerians settled
southern Mesopotamia,
which became known as
Sumer.
– The Sumerians were
believed to have migrated
from central-Asia
By 3000 B.C. their villages
had grown into city-states,
such as Ur and Uruk.
– Each city-state had a
different ruler and
worshipped a different god
or goddess.
Akkadians
(c. 2350-2000 B.C.)
A group of Semites (people
who spoke a language
related to Hebrew and
Arabic) invaded Sumer
from the north.
– Led by Sargon of Akkad,
the Akkadians conquered
the city-states of Sumer
and unified them and the
adjoining regions into the
world’s first empire.
The Akkadians adopted
much of Sumerian culture,
including its religion and
literature.
Babylonians
(c. 2000-1570 B.C.)
The Babylonians—a Semitic people who
spoke Akkadian—conquered
Mesopotamia in about 2000 B.C.
– This established an empire with its
capital of Babylon on the Euphrates
River.
– Like the Akkadians, the Babylonians also
adopted the culture of the Sumerians.
Under King Hammurabi, the Babylonian
empire reached its peak from 1792 to
1750 B.C.
– King Hammurabi established the first set
of laws (the “Code of Hammurabi”).
In 1570 B.C., the Babylonian empire
fell to Kassite invaders, who ruled for
more than 400 years.
Assyrians
(c. 850-612 B.C.)
Following the Kassite rule,
various people vied for control
of the region for the next 300
years.
– Around 850 B.C. one of these
groups, the Assyrians—a
warlike people from northern
Mesopotamia, began to
consolidate the empire.
The Assyrians extended their
rule from Mesopotamia to
Egypt and present-day Turkey.
– Known for their ruthlessness in
battle, the Assyrians destroyed
the kingdom of Israel and
dispersed its inhabitants.
The Assyrian capital of Nineveh
became an important learning
center.
– King Ashurbanipal established
an early library, preserving
many Sumerian and Babylonian
Neo-Babylonians
(c. 612-539 B.C.)
In 612 B.C. Chaldean
invaders conquered
the Assyrians,
destroying Nineveh,
and founding the
second Babylonian
empire.
– The empire, which
conquered and enslaved
the remaining Jews of
Palestine, endured until
it was conquered by the
Persians in 539 B.C.