City-States in Mesopotamia
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Transcript City-States in Mesopotamia
City-States in
Mesopotamia
Rivers=Life Blood
Tigris and Euphrates Rivers
Flow
From modern day Turkey
To Persian Gulf
Geography
Mesopotamia
Greek=“Land Between the Rivers”
Fertile Crescent
Fertile plains
Rain=Flooding
Flooding=Silt
Silt=Farmland
Wheat & Barley (villages grow)
Environmental Challenges
Settling & farming began Southern
Mesopotamia
Sumerians 3500 B.C.
Mixed w/ farms
Language b/c dominant
Attracted
Good soil
Flat
Swampy
Land of Sumer
Disadvantages
Flooding = unpredictable rivers
Becomes desert
Little/no rain
Sumer small region
Massachusetts
Open plain
Clusters of reed huts
Natural Resources limited
No supply of stone, wood, metal
Solutions
Irrigation ditches
Defense (mud make city walls)
Traded grain, cloth, & tools w/ mountain
people
Solutions = ?
Organization
Leadership
Laws
Government
Sumerians create City-States
5 characteristics of civilizations
3000 B.C. had # of cities
Uruk
Kish
Lagash
Umma
Ur
What is City-State?
Ziggurat
Center of city
Place of worship
Government center (pay taxes)
Priests have power
Political
Religious
Sumerian Culture
Religion
Polytheistic
Enlil (most powerful god)
Udugs (wickedness gods)
3,000 gods
Cause disease
Misfortune
Any human trouble
Like humans
We are servants
Angry gods = natural
disasters
Sacrifices
Death = “Land of no return”
Sumerian Social Classes
Priests & Kings
Wealthy Merchants
Farmers
Slaves
Science & Technology
Inventions
Wheel
Sail
Plow
Bronze
Writing
Known maps 2300 B.C.
Recorded scientific
investigations
Geometry & arithmetic
# system based on 60
60 seconds = 1 minute
360°
Empire Builders
Wars
City-states @ war w/ one another 3000-2000 B.C.
Weaken state
Culture survived
Sargon of Akkad
2350 B.C. defeats Sumer
From North
Semitic language = related to Hebrew & Arabic
1st Empire
Mediterranean coast in West
To present day Iran in East
Lasted 200 years
Civil War
Famine
Invasions
Babylonian Empire
2000 B.C. nomadic warriors (Amorites) invade
Overwhelm Sumerians
Babylon b/c capital
Hammurabi 1792-1750 B.C. (peak)
Hummurabi’s Code
Uniforming code in kingdom
Collected
Existing rules
Judgment
Laws
Code cont.
Engrave in stone
Places throughout empire
282 Laws
Laws apply to everyone different punishments
Community
Family relations
Business conduct
Crime
Rich & poor
Men & women
Eye for an Eye
Significance
Government responsible