Civilization
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Transcript Civilization
THE ORIGINS OF
CIVILIZATION
Early Forms of Man
Hominids
Human-like creatures that walk upright
Appear about 4 million years ago
“Lucy” found in Ethiopia, about 3.5 million
years old
Homo habilis
Able to make and use tools
Appear 2.5 million years ago
Start of the Paleolithic Era (Old Stone Age)
Early Forms of Man
Homo erectus
Appear 1.6 million years ago
First to migrate from Africa
First to use fire
Maybe first to use language
Early Forms of Man
Homo Sapiens: Neanderthals
Appear 200,000 years ago
Larger brains
Sophisticated stone tools
Lived in caves, huts of wood & animal skin
Developed religious rituals
Created music
Early Forms of Man
Homo Sapiens: Cro-Magnon men
Appear 40,000 years ago
More than 100 different tools
Created painting
Our ancestors
The Life of Early Men
Hunter-gatherers
From 4 million BC to 10,000 BC
Hunted animals for meat
Gathered wild grains, vegetables, fruit
Nomads
Wandered the earth in search of food
supplies
Improved tools helped them gain more food
Technology
The way in which humans used applied
knowledge to create more and more advanced
tools to improve their lives
The stone axe
The wheel
The sail
The compass
The printing press
The telephone
The computer
The Neolithic Revolution
Neolithic Era = New Stone Age
One of the two greatest changes in the
existence of the human race
10,000-5,000 BC
Men began to raise and grow food where
they lived
Kept and bred livestock – domestication
Sowed seeds for crops
Secure, local sources of food
The Neolithic Revolution
Took place in different parts of the world
Mesopotamia
Nile valley of Egypt
China
Indus valley of India
The Mediterranean basin
Central America
Peru
The Neolithic Revolution
Men could settle down in communities
Communities grew, became more
complex
New institutions, rules needed
Civilization
Civilization
Advanced form of culture
Linked to growth of life in cities: civitas =
city state in Latin
Marked by five major changes in
human life
Hallmarks of Civilization
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Creation of institutions – government,
kings, priests, laws
Separation of roles – farmers, artisans,
merchants, administrators, priests,
scribes
Record keeping – invention of writing
Advanced technology
Large cities
River Valley Civilizations
Earliest civilizations grew in river valleys
Water essential for
Drinking – humans and herds
Irrigation of crops
Transportation
The River Valley Civilizations
Mesopotamia
Egypt
China
Indus valley
Geographic division led to development
of different cultures
Culture
The way of life of one distinctive group of
people. Marked by common
Language
Beliefs and values
Symbols
Social customs
Family structure
Food and drink
Clothing
The Bronze Age
Began around 3000 BC
Marked by use of bronze tools and
weapons
Bronze an alloy of copper and tin
Sumeria
In Mesopotamia – between two rivers
City-states
Ur – about 3000 BC, 30,000 people
Led by priests (defense against the
gods) and warrior kings (defense against
enemies)
Sumerian Technology
Ziggurats – temples in pyramid-form
Irrigation systems
Arithmetic, based on 60
60 minutes to an hour
360 degrees to a circle
Cuneiform writing
Wheel
Plow
Sail
Bronze armor and weapons
Potter’s wheel
The Civilizations of
Mesopotamia and Egypt
The Babylonian Empire
Babylonians conquered Mesopotamia c.
2000 BC
Created the first great empire
Hammurabi ruled Babylon, 1792-1750 BC
Created the world’s first law code, focused on
Property rights
Commercial law – laws governing trade
Personal violence
Egypt
Ruled by pharaohs – kings believed to
be gods
Belief in after-life
Pyramids
Mummification
Papyrus – paper
Hieroglyphic writing
Egypt
Solar calendar
365 days, 12 months per year
Written numbers, geometry
Indo-European Migrations
Nomads from north of the Black Sea and
Caspian Sea
Pastoral people
Herded wandering flocks of cattle, sheep,
goats
1700-1200 BC: moved to populate
Europe, Iran, India, South Asia
ANCIENT GREECE
Minoan Civilization
Based on Crete
Flourished 2000-1400 BC
Sea traders
Produced painted pottery, precious
metals, bronze weapons
Mycenaean Civilization
Indo-European invaders
Entered Greece c. 2000 BC
Established city-states
Mountainous terrain made travel,
communications difficult
Led to growth of independent cities
Imitated Minoan writing, religion, art,
sea-borne trade
The Trojan War
c. 1200 BC
War between the Mycenaeans and the
city-state of Troy
Ended in Greek victory, destruction of
Troy
The Dorians
Invaded Greece c. 1200 BC
Era of Homer
Blind poet, wrote the first great epic poems
Epic = narrative about great events, heroic
deeds
The Iliad, about the Trojan War
The Odyssey, about the return home of
Greek king Odysseus
The Dorians
Lost the art of writing
Homer’s works memorized, passed
down by oral transmission
Did Homer actually exist?
The Rise of Athens
Greek Political Terms
Polis = city-state in Greek
Politics
Monarchy = rule by one man
Oligarchy = rule by a few men
Tyranny = single rulers, who seized
power outside the system
Often supported by the common people
Greek Political Terms
Democracy = people power
Aristocracy = power in the hands of the
best people
Autocracy = power in the hands of one
person
Athens Develops Democracy
621 BC: Draco as tyrant
Established equality under the law
Famous for very harsh laws – many death
penalties, slavery for debt
594 BC: Solon
Organized Athenians into classes based on
wealth
All citizens could speak and vote
Only top three classes could hold office
Athens Develops Democracy
500 BC: Cleisthenes
Organized citizens by district, not wealth
All citizens could submit laws
Council of 500 chosen by lot as the
executive
NOTE: What is a citizen?
An adult male, born in Athens, who owns
property
Sparta
Mixed constitution
Two elected kings, controlled the army
Five elected officials carried out laws
Council of Elders (30) proposed laws
All Spartan citizens voted on laws, elected
kings and officials
Sparta
A militarist society
Whole state devoted to military power
All male citizens, aged 7-30, in the army
The most powerful army in Greece
Sparta
No value placed on literature, art
Duty, discipline, strength valued more
than freedom, individuality, learning
Large population of slaves – helots
The Persian Wars
Darius the Great
546 BC: Persian Empire reached the
Aegean Sea
Included many Greeks, who revolted
against Persian rule
Athens helped the Greek rebels
Persia crushed the rebellion
490 BC: Darius invaded Greece
The Battle of Marathon
Marathon, a plain NE of Athens
25,000 Persians vs. 10,000 Athenians
Greeks had developed the phalanx – army
with iron spears and shields, marching in tight
formation
Greek phalanx defeated the lightly-armed
Persians
Pheidippides ran to Athens with news of the
victory
The Battle of Thermopylae
480 BC: Xerxes invades Greece
Met Greek army at Thermopylae, a
narrow pass
300 Spartans held back the Persians
while the Greek army escaped
All Spartans killed
The Battle of Salamis
Xerxes advanced on Athens, set fire to it
Sent his fleet to destroy the Athenian
navy while he watched
Instead, saw a great Athenian naval
victory
1/3 of the Persian fleet destroyed
The Battle of Plataea
479 BC: Greeks crushed the Persian
army
478 BC: Greek city-states form the
Delian League
Turns into an Athenian empire, based on
sea-power
The Golden Age of Athens
Pericles 461-429 BC
Elected leader of Athens
Three goals
Strengthen democracy
Strengthen the Athenian empire
Glorify the city
Established direct democracy
All citizens could speak, vote, hold office
All citizens equal before the law
Athenian vs. American Democracy
Differences:
Direct democracy vs. representative
democracy
Definition of a citizen
Duties of a citizen
The Glory of Athens
Architecture:
Acropolis
Parthenon
Sculpture
Phidias
Myron
The Glory of Athens
Theater
Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides (tragedies)
Aristophanes (comedies)
History
Herodotus
Thucydides
The Peloponnesian War
Athens vs. Sparta
Two states hated and distrusted each
other
Athens = sea power
Sparta = military power
Each had allies among other city-states
Wanted to avoid war
Agreed not to seek or accept city-states that
wanted to switch sides
The Peloponnesian War
431 BC: Dispute between allies of
Athens and Sparta leads to out break of
war
Athenian strategy
Avoid land battles
Keep Athenians inside city walls – which
extended to the sea
Wait for a chance to attack Sparta by sea
The Peloponnesian War
429 BC: plague strikes Athens
1/3 population dies
Pericles dead
421 BC: temporary truce
415 BC: Athens attacks a Spartan ally,
Syracuse
Athenian fleet and army wiped out
404 BC: Athens surrenders
Greek Philosophy
Philosophy in Athens
Philosophy = love of wisdom
Based on two ideas
That the universe is orderly
That humans can understand its order
through the use of reason
Emphasis on reason
Humans can understand ethical and
physical laws through exercise of the mind
Socrates
Taught by the Socratic method –
questions and answers
Forced his students to question received
beliefs
Taught self-examination as a route to
find truth and justice
399 BC: condemned to death for
“corrupting the youth of Athens”
Plato
Student of Socrates
Believed that ideas were more real and
perfect than things
Wrote The Republic – a description of
the perfect form of government
No, NOT a democracy!
A philosopher-king, governing three classes
of rulers, warriors, and farmers/artisans
Plato
Why did Plato, an Athenian, distrust
democracy?
Aristotle
Developed formal rules of logic
Syllogism
Analyzed and summarized many fields of
learning
Poetry, science, nature, ethics
Believed in observation, leading to
deduction of rules
Taught Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great and
Hellenism
Macedonia Conquers Greece
Peloponnesian War left all Greek citystates weakened
338 BC: Philip II of Macedonia
conquered Greece
336 BC: succeeded by his son,
Alexander
Alexander the Great
Ruled 336-323 BC
Conquered the Persian Empire
Captured Egypt
Established the great city of Alexandria
Advanced as far as India
Died in Babylon, aged 32
His empire divided among his generals
Hellenism
Greek culture, blended with additions
from the conquered lands of Alexander
Egypt, Persia, India
Became the dominant culture of the
whole East Mediterranean, Middle East
Alexandria became the main center of
Hellenistic civilization
Hellenism
Koine Greek
Became the common language of the
eastern Roman Empire
The language of the New Testament
Hellenism
Mathematics
Euclid developed modern geometry
Pythagoras – the Pythagorean Theorem
Archimedes calculated π, explained the law
of the lever, and invented…
Archimedes screw
The complex pulley
A method of calculating the mass of irregular
objects
Hellenism
Astronomy
Aristarchus – proved the Earth revolves
round the Sun, the Sun is at least 300 times
bigger than the Earth
Eratosthenes – calculated the equator to be
28,000 miles long
Ptolemy – argued the Sun and planets
revolve around the Earth in fixed circles
Hellenism in Philosophy
Stoicism
Zeno (335-263 BC) argued
People should live lives of harmony and virtue
They should obey natural laws established by
God
Human desires, power and wealth are
dangerous distractions from virtue
Virtuous people control these desires
Hellenism in Philosophy
Epicureanism
Epicurus taught that
Gods are not concerned with humans
The only real objects are those perceived by the
five senses
The greatest good is the absence of pain
Virtuous conduct involves harmony of mind and
body, to minimize pain – moderation, not
abstinence
Hellenism in Politics
The eastern Mediterranean was a region
of monarchies
Plato had already accepted kingship as
the best form of rule
People of Greek civilization accepted
kings as their natural rulers
In the east, the Ptolemy dynasty became
the new pharaohs of Egypt