Early civilisations CIVILISATION is the set of ideas sciences arts customs beliefs that characterise a human group such as a people or nation 1 The birth of the first civilisations Around 6000 BC Neolithic Age in Europe various groups settled on the banks of the great rivers Nile ID: 239365
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Slide1
Unit 9Early civilisationsSlide2
CIVILISATION is the set of ideas, sciences, arts, customs, beliefs,…, that characterise a human group, such as a people or nation.Slide3
1. The birth of the first civilisations
Around 6000 BC (Neolithic Age in Europe), various groups settled on the banks of the great rivers (Nile, Tigris and Euphrates).These rivers sometimes overflowed and flooded the valleys. It left silt that fertilised the soil
Abundant harvests Population growth.Slide4Slide5
There was sufficient food New skills
:Gold and silver smithing.Pottery.
New social groups
.
Agricultural products were exchanged
Trade and transport developed. A system of government and public administration
was created to organise the city and to distribute the harvest.
The
government
was formed by kings and priests.Governments demanded that people paid taxes to construct monuments and finance the army.Writing appeared in Mesopotamia and Egypt (around 3500 BC) to meet the needs of administration and commerce. It is the beginning of History.
Economic and social changes
Political
changesSlide6
Writing in Mesopotamia and Egypt
In Mesopotamia, people wrote on clay tablets that were then left to dry. They wrote with a sharp reed. This kind of writing is known as cuneiform, because the signs they wrote were composed of wedges (
cuñas
)
In
Egypt
, people usually wrote on papyrus, using brushes and ink, or on stone, using a hammer and chisel. The writing, called hieroglyphics, represented word through pictures of figures, animals…Slide7
NAME OF WRITING
IT IS WRITTEN ON
TOOLS USED
TO WRITE
MESOPOTAMIA
Cuneiform
Clay tablets
A sharp reed
EGYPT
Hieroglyphics
Papyrus or stone
Brushes and inkHammer and chiselSlide8
MESOPOTAMIA
The natural environment:
Mesopotamia means ‘land between two rivers’: Tigris and Euphrates. It was an urban civilisation situated between the Persian Gulf, the Syrian Desert, the Taurus Mountains and the Zagros Mountains
Upper
Mesopotamia
Lower
MesopotamiaSlide9
Timeline of mesopotamiaSlide10
SUMERIANS
AKKADIANS
BABYLONIANS
ASSYRIANSSlide11
2. THE EVOLUTION OF MESOPOTAMIA
SUMERIANS
(3500-2500
BC)
AKKADIANS
(2500-2100 BC)
BABYLONIANS
(1950-1250
BC)
ASSYRIANS
(9TH
CENT.-625 BC)NEO-BABYLONIANS
(625-539 BC)PERSIANS AND GREEKSSlide12
2. THE EVOLUTION OF MESOPOTAMIA
SUMERIANS
(3500-2500
BC)
They lived in lower Mesopotamia.
They invented writing. They were organised
in city states (Ur, Lagash). They built canals to control the river floods.
AKKADIANS
(2500-2100 BC)
They were from Akkad, in the centre of Mesopotamia. They conquered the Sumerians. The most important king was Sargon I.BABYLONIANS
(1950-1250 BC)Nomadic tribes conquered Mesopotamia. Babylon is the most important city state, in the centre of Mesopotamia. They unified it and founded the first Babylonian Empire. The main king was Hammurabi.
ASSYRIANS(9TH CENT.-625 BC)
After several invasions, the Assyrians conquered Mesopotamia. They were from the Upper Mesopotamia. The main king: Ashurbanipal.
NEO-BABYLONIANS(625-539 BC)
The Babylonians
conquered the Assyrians and created the Neo-Babylonian Empire. The main king was Nebuchadnezzar II.
PERSIANS AND GREEKS
In 539 BC Cyrus II conquered Babylon
and Mesopotamia became a province in the Persian Empire. In 331 BC, they were conquered by the Greeks, with Alexander the Great.Slide13
HAMMURABI’S CODE
Hammurabi’s code is one of the earliest law codes we know about. It was engraved on a rock in Mesopotamia around 1800 BC. It is based on the law of retaliation (‘an eye for an eye), which established that the punishment should match the crime.Slide14
3. Life and culture in mesopotamia
People carried out various economic activities.
Society was divided into different closed groups. (They couldn’t move from one group to another).Slide15
3.1. The economy
Agriculture: Crops were irrigated by river water thanks to a system of canals and dykes.
The staple diet: Cereals and vegetables.
Livestock
: Cows, sheep, goats and asses.
Craftwork
: Ceramics, making clothes, leatherwork.Trade: Really important. They imported products (stone, wood, metals) and exported wool and cereals.Slide16
3.2. society
The levels of society are:
The king
: Was all-powerful, but was not considered a god.
The ruling caste
: Priests, important public servants, important merchants, artisans and landowners.
Other free people: farmers, herdsmen, merchants and artisans.Slaves.Slide17
3.2. SocietySlide18
Society was organised into cities with defensive
walls. Houses were built
around an inner courtyard
.
Women could participate in society, but laws were harsher for themSlide19
3.3. religion
They were polytheistic.
They believed in
life after death
.
They combined their religious beliefs with
magic and divination.
AN
GOD OF THE SKY
ENLIL
GOD OF THE AIR AND STORMS
ENKI
GOD OF WISDOM
ISHTAR
GODDESS OF LOVESlide20
3.5 Architecture and art
Ziggurat:Slide21
Sculpture:Slide22
egypt
The natural environment:
Egypt is located in a
large desert
crossed by the
River Nile, which flows from Lake Victoria to the Mediterranean Sea. In Ancient Times, the Nile overflowed its banks once a year,
fertilising the surrounded land
.
The Egyptians
worshipped the Nile like a god, because it was the source of life. It was also the main transport route.Slide23Slide24
Ancient Egypt was divided into two areas:
Lower Egypt (the delta).Upper Egypt
(the Nile River Valley)
Around 3100 BC these two kingdoms were unified by King Menes
It was the beginning of the Historic Egypt and the first dynasties of pharaohs appeared.Slide25
2. THE HISTORY OF EGYPT
THE OLD
KINGDOM (2700-2200 BC)
THE MIDDLE KINGDOM
(
2052-
1786
BC
)
THE NEW KINGDOM (1567-1085)
THE LATE PERIOD (1085-30 BC)Slide26
THE OLD
KINGDOM (2700-2200 BC)
The period of greatest splendour in Egypt. Pyramids were
built during this period. The capital was Memphis.
THE MIDDLE KINGDOM (2052-
1786
BC)
It
began a
fter the Intermediate Period (2200-2052 BC). The capital moved to Thebes and the kingdom’s territory increased.
The period ended with the invasion of the Hyksos.THE NEW KINGDOM (1567-1085)The capital was Thebes. (Pharaohs:
Akhenaten, Tutankhamun,...)
THE LATE PERIOD (1085-30 BC)It was
a period of decline: Egypt disintegrated into small independent states and was invaded by Assyrians, Persians,...In 332 BC Alexander the Great conquered Egypt and later it was ruled by Rome.Slide27
3. economy
The economy was based on agriculture
(mainly cereals and linen) and
livestock
(Cows).
They also produced
crafts (pottery, metalwork and jewellery) and traded with Mesopotamia, Greece,...Slide28
4. society
Egyptian society was divided into different groups,
strictly separated
:
The pharaoh and his family
: He was considered to be both king and god and he held absolute power.
The ruling caste: Less powerful than the pharaoh: Priests, vizier, important public servants.Other free people: Soldiers, craftsmen, farmers, foreigners.
The slaves
: In the mines and in domestic duties.Slide29