Early River Civilizations
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Transcript Early River Civilizations
BELLWORK (Entry 6)
In notebook, write down the
question and answer:
List three reasons why early
civilizations settled near rivers.
Also, send one person from your
group to get two pieces of paper for
each person (on front table)
Neolithic Revolution
The first agricultural revolution –
the shift from hunting and
gathering to agriculture and
settlement.
Civilization
Advanced cities
Specialized workers
Complex institutions
Record keeping
Improved technology
Mesopotamia
Also known as
the Fertile
Crescent or the
Cradle of
Civilization.
People settled
here in 4500
BCE.
There were LOTS of disadvantages
to living here…
Unpredictable flooding and
droughts
No natural barriers for protection,
defenseless against attack
Limited natural resources, building
materials were scarce
…but, they were problem solvers!
Dug irrigation ditches that brought
water to crops
Built city walls with mud bricks
Traded their grain, cloth and crafted
tools with people of the mountains and
deserts and as a result, got the raw
materials that they needed: stone,
wood and metal
Mesopotamia - CIVILIZATION
st
1 Civilization – advanced
cities, specialized workers,
complex institutions, record
keeping, and technology.
4500 BCE
Mesopotamia - CONTRIBUTIONS
Hammurabi’s Code, Wheel, Sail, Plow,
geometry, 60 seconds in a minute
(units to measure time), 360 degrees in
a circle, cuneiform (written language),
architecture (arches, columns, ramps)
CHOOSE THREE TO WRITE DOWN
Mesopotamia - GEOGRAPHY
Present day Iraq
Awesome farming
Limited natural resources
Flooding and drought
No natural barriers
Nile River
Yearly floods made the land
surrounding the river fertile,
predictable
However, there were still risks
Low river – crops reduced and
thousands of people starve
High river – floods destroyed homes,
granaries, and seeds
Deserts surrounding region isolated
people, reduced interaction with
other people
Egyptian Culture
Polytheistic – belief in many gods
Believed in ka, or eternal life
Theocracy – Pharoahs were rulers
and were thought to be almost as
powerful as gods themselves
Social classes
Nile - CIVILIZATION
Theocracy
Pyramids
Social Classes
Nile - CONTRIBUTIONS
Hieroglyphics, papyrus, 365 day
calendar, system of numbers used for
counting, adding and subtracting,
pyramids, measuring heart rate, first
surgeries, set bones
CHOOSE THREE TO WRITE DOWN
Nile - GEOGRAPHY
Egypt
Predictable weather
isolated
Bellwork:
Please take out your foldable from
Friday. Review the major contributions
made by the Mesopotamian and Nile
River civilizations.
If you were absent, come to the front
table to get two pieces of paper and set
your foldable up by looking on with a
neighbor.
Indus and Ganges Rivers
Area between Himalayas and
Arabian Sea
Mountains in the north and desert
in the east help prevent invasion
Annual monsoons – June-October - winds
blow eastward from the southwest carrying
massive amounts of rain
Environmental challenges existed
Yearly floods deposit rich soil, but
unpredictable
Rivers changed course
Cycle of wet and dry seasons
unpredictable
Indus and Ganges - CIVILIZATION
Indus River was key trade route
Theocracy – links to modern Hinduism
No social divisions
Had excess
Peaceful
Written language – has not been
deciphered
Indus and Ganges - CONTRIBUTIONS
Domesticated sheep and goats, bricks
were oven-baked and uniform in size,
plumbing and sewage systems, strong
central government, three-story
buildings.
CHOOSE THREE TO WRITE DOWN
Indus and Ganges - GEOGRAPHY
Indian subcontinent
Natural barriers for
protection – mountains and
deserts
Monsoons
Yellow and Yangtze Rivers
Huang He (Yellow River) and Chang Jiang
(Yangtze River)
Like all of the other river civilizations, they
faced challenges as well
Flooding
Geographic isolation – had to provide
everything for themselves
Consistent invasions from the west and
north
Dynasties
Family was the center of culture – respect for elders
Women were considered inferior, but could boost their
status by bearing sons
Social divisions
Believed in spirits of ancestors, a supreme God, and
lesser gods
Written language – characters – consistent throughout
China
Feudalism
Yellow and Yangtze - CIVILIZATION
Dynasties
Feudalism
Social divisions
Yellow and Yangtze - CONTRIBUTIONS
Horse drawn chariot, coined money,
blast furnaces produced cast iron and
the emergence of weapons – daggers,
swords, farm tools, etc. Construction
of roads and canals to stimulate trade.
CHOOSE THREE TO WRITE DOWN
Yellow and Yangtze - GEOGRAPHY
China
10% China suitable for
farming
Geographic isolation
Susceptible to attack
Map
Use an atlas to complete the following:
Label the seven rivers we discussed
Indus
Ganges
Tigris
Euphrates
Nile
Yellow
Yangtze
Highlight/shade the four ancient river civilization regions
and label them.
Pages 90-91 and page 18