Lecture 2 - Upper Iowa University
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Transcript Lecture 2 - Upper Iowa University
Hist 100
World Civilization I
Instructor: Dr. Donald R. Shaffer
Upper Iowa University
Lecture 2
Sumerians (1)
Generally credited as the first
“civilization” appearing in what
is today Iraq around 3,000 BCE
Sumerian civilization grew
around the Tigris and Euphrates
(Mesopotamia), rivers that while
they nourished civilization,
because of their unpredictable
flow lent a pessimistic and
capriciousness to the Sumerian
worldview
Sumerian civilization centered
around “city-states”
City states sometimes went to
war with each other, at other
times cooperated
Tigris and
Euphrates
Rivers
in
Mesopotamia
Lecture 2
Sumerians (2)
Cuneiform
A system of writing devised
by the Sumerians
Scribes pressed wedges into
damp clay tablets
Partly symbolic, partly
phonetic, it enabled the
Sumerians to express
symbolic ideas in writing
Difficult to learn, hence
literacy largely limited to
scribes and the elite
Scribes also scholarly class,
studying math, botany and
language
Sumerian
Cuneiform
Lecture 2
Sumerians (3)
Sumerian Culture
Religion:
Polytheistic: believed in a
hierarchy of gods
Anthropomorphic: gods
behaved like human beings,
had constantly to be
appeased
Literature
Suggested by some scholars
as source for creation myth in
the Bible
Epic of Gilgamesh
Three social classes
Nobles
Commoners
Slaves
Ziggurat
Lecture 2
Sumerian successors
The proof of the success of
Sumerian civilization is the
extent to which they were
copied by successors
Successors were various
Semitic peoples that moved
into Mesopotamia
Copied Sumerian writing
system, Gods, etc.
Akkadian Empire
Sumerians conquered by
Sargon in 2331 BCE,
leader of the Semetic
Akkadians
Babylonians (Amorites)
Another Semetic people
who conquered Mesopotamia 100 years later
Code of Hammurabi
Code of Hammurabi
(on display at the Louvre)
Lecture 2
Egypt (1)
The Nile
Just as the Tigris and
Euphrates defined life in
ancient Mesopotamia, the
River Nile shaped ancient
Egypt
It flooded regularly and
gently, replenishing the fields
of the Nile Valley
These fields produced
abundant crops which made
the great achievement of the
ancient Egyptians possible
The easy navigation of the
river also made it easy to
unify the country and keep it
unified
The Nile Valley as
seen from space
Lecture 2
Egypt (2)
Periods of Egyptian History
Archaic
Old Kingdom
1st Intermediate
Middle Kingdom
2nd Intermediate
New Kingdom
3100-2600 BCE
2660-2180 BCE
2180-2080 BCE
2080-1640 BCE
1640-1570 BCE
1570-700 BCE
Unification of Egypt
Construction of Pyramids
Political chaos
Recovery & political stability
Hyksos “invasion”
Creation of Egyptian Empire
Akhenatan’s “heresy”
Lecture 2
Egypt (3)
Egyptian Culture
Religion
Like the Sumerians, the
Egyptians were polytheistic
Because of the political unity
of Egypt, they all worshipped
the same gods
The pharaoh was at the
center of this religion, as a
god in human form
Egyptian religion was less an
attempt to appease the gods,
but to prepare for the afterlife
Many monumental structures,
most notably the pyramids,
had that purpose
Mortuary Temple of
Hatschepsut
near Thebes (modern Luxor)
Lecture 2
Egypt (4)
Egyptian Culture (cont.)
Social Structure
Egyptian population mostly
free, but subject to labor calls
The pyramids were built this
way
No caste system—a person
of humble origins could rise
as high as their talent would
take them
The deserts surrounding
Egypt largely isolated the
country during its early
history
Hyksos “invasion” (c. 1640
BCE)
Ended Egypt’s relative
isolation from the world
Contemporary depictions of
Ancient Egyptian peasants
Lecture 2
Indus Valley Civilization (1)
Like in other areas,
civilization in on the Indian
subcontinent began in a river
valley
Centered in the Indus River
Valley in modern Pakistan
Knowledge of the Indus
Valley civilization is limited
because no one has been
able to decipher its written
language
What historians have learned
primarily comes through
archeology
Lecture 2
Indus Valley Civilization (2)
Evidence seems to suggest a
gradual evolution from
Neolithic until civilization
emerged about 2500 BCE
They built impressive cities
Mohenjo-Daro may have had
a population of 100,000
Some city neighborhoods
laid out in a grid. Something
thought to have originated
later with the Greeks
Impressive drainage systems
to funnel wastes out of the
cities
Lecture 2
Indus Valley Civilization (3)
There appears to have been
contact between the Indus
Valley Civilization and
Mesopotamia
Pottery and other artifacts
of Indus Valley have been
found in Mesopotamian
archeological sites
The decline of the Indus
Valley civilization is as
obscure as its origin and
history
Your textbook makes the
case for decline due to a
man-made ecological crisis
Other scholars have
suggested natural
calamities
Also hard to make connections
to later Indian civilizations