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Chapter 2'4 Empires of the Fertile Crescent

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... writings included the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh, one of the earliest works of literature ... to escape the Flood - from the Epic of Gilgamesh. B. The Assyrians ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 2'4 Empires of the Fertile Crescent


1
Chapter 2.4 - Empires of the Fertile Crescent
2
The Story Continues You dolt, numskull, school
pest, you illiterate, you Sumerian ignoramus,
your hand is terrible it cannot even hold
the stylus properly it is unfit for dictation.
So wrote one Sumerian scribe about another,
criticizing his writing skills. More serious
infighting so weakened the Sumerians that they
were left vulnerable to attack.
3
Empires of the Fertile Crescent
  • I. The Akkadians

4
I. The Akkadians
  • About 2330 B.C. the Akkadians conquered the
    Sumerians

5
I. The Akkadians
  • The Akkadians spoke a Semitic language related to
    Arabic and Hebrew

6
The Little Tower of Babel, by Pieter Brueghel
7
The Tower of Babel by Pieter Brueghel the Elder,
c.1563
8
I. The Akkadians
  • 2334 to 2279 BC - King Sargon established an
    empire reaching to the Mediterranean Sea

9
I. The Akkadians
  • The Akkadian Empire lasted about 150 years before
    Sumerian city-states returned to power

10
II. The Babylonians
  • About 1792 BC, Babylonians led by Hammurabi
    conquered the Tigris-Euphrates Valley

Shamash, the supreme sun god and judge, offers to
Hammurabi the rod and ring that symbolize
authority.
11
A. The Code of Hammurabi
  • The Code of Hammurabi contained laws for all
    aspects of life - commerce, working conditions,
    property rights, etc.

In 1750 BC, at the height of his power, Hammurabi
codified 282 laws on an eight-foot-high stele
made of black basalt. Although the Code of
Hammurabi is not the first legal code, it is the
best preserved ancient law the world has today.
12
A. The Code of Hammurabi
  • Punishment was harsh under the code and was based
    on the idea of an eye for an eye

195 If a son strike his father, his hands shall
be cut off. 196 If a noble-man put out the
eye of another noble-man, his eye shall be put
out. 197 If he break another noble-man's
bone, his bone shall be broken. 198 If he put
out the eye of a commoner, or break the bone of
a commoner, he shall pay one silver mina.
199 If he put out the eye of a man's slave, or
break the bone of a man's slave, he shall pay
one-half of its value. 200 If a man knock out
the teeth of his equal, his teeth shall be
knocked out. 201 If he knock out the teeth of a
commoner, he shall pay one-third of a silver
mina.
13
B. Babylonian Culture
  • The Babylonians farmed and kept domestic animals

14
B. Babylonian Culture
  • They wove cotton and wool cloth and were active
    traders

15
B. Babylonian Culture
  • Babylonian women had some rights and could be
    merchants, traders, or scribes

Lilith?Babylonian terra-cotta relief, c. 2000
BCE
16
C. Religion
  • Babylonians adopted many of the Sumerian
    religious beliefs

17
C. Religion
  • They sacrificed to their gods seeking good
    harvests and believed priests could predict the
    future

18
III. Other Conquerors
  • A. The Hittites

19
A. The Hittites
  • The war-like Hittites invaded the
    Tigris-Euphrates Valley during the 1600s B.C.

20
A. The Hittites
  • They were among the first people to successfully
    use iron

21
A. The Hittites
  • Their government was efficient and their laws
    were less harsh than Babylonian law

22
A. The Hittites
  • Hittite kings were also the chief priests

23
A. The Hittites
  • The Hittites conquered and looted Babylon but
    were too far from their homeland to maintain
    control

24
(No Transcript)
25
Chapter 2.4 - Empires of the Fertile Crescent
III. Other Conquerors
26
B. The Assyrians
  • From ca. 900 BC to 650 BC the Assyrians built an
    empire across the Fertile Crescent and into Egypt

27
B. The Assyrians
  • Assyrians were fierce warriors and were the first
    to use cavalry

28
B. The Assyrians
  • They often enslaved the people they conquered

29
B. The Assyrians
  • About 700 BC the Assyrians captured and destroyed
    Babylon

John Martin, Fall of Babylon from Illustrations
from the Bible, 1835.
30
B. The Assyrians
  • The Assyrian capital, Nineveh, was surrounded by
    a huge double wall for protection

The walls of Nineveh (partly reconstructed)
31
B. The Assyrians
  • A great library in Nineveh held clay tablets with
    writings from throughout the empire

Portion of old Babylonian story of the flood from
Assurbanipals library at Nineveh. This flood
story tells how the hero, Ut-napishtim, built a
great ship and thus survived a terrible flood, in
which all his countrymen perished.
32
B. The Assyrians
  • The writings included the Sumerian Epic of
    Gilgamesh, one of the earliest works of literature

Enkidu (God) tells Utnapishtim (Noah) to build a
shipto escape the Flood - from the Epic of
Gilgamesh.
33
B. The Assyrians
  • About 635 BC - civil war broke out and the
    Assyrian empire collapsed

34
C. The Chaldeans
  • 612 BC - the Chaldean leader Nebuchadnezzar
    destroyed Nineveh and conquered the Fertile
    Crescent

35
C. The Chaldeans
  • Babylon was rebuilt with magnificent buildings
    and canals

36
C. The Chaldeans
  • The kings palace had the Hanging Gardens of
    Babylon, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient
    World

37
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World
38
C. The Chaldeans
  • Chaldeans were skilled astronomers, were advanced
    in math, and had accurate calendars

39
C. The Chaldeans
  • When Nebuchadnezzar died, the Chaldean empire
    collapsed

40
III. The Persians
  • By 850 BC the Persians were living in present-day
    Iran, ruled by the Medes

41
III. The Persians
  • About 550 BC, Cyrus the Great of Persia rebelled
    against the Medes, conquering Babylon and the
    Fertile Crescent

42
III. The Persians
  • Later rulers expanded the Persian Empire

43
A. Government
  • Persian kings were fair in taxing and enforcing
    the law and used secret agents to keep informed

44
A. Government
  • They allowed conquered people to keep their
    religion and culture

Legend states that the wise men - Balthasar,
Melchior, Caspar - were from Persia
45
A. Government
  • The Persians built over 1,250 miles of roads,
    allowing the exchange of customs, goods, and
    ideas

46
B. Religion
  • Until about 600 B.C. the Persians worshipped many
    gods

Ruins of the royal city of Persepolis, capital of
ancient Persia.
47
B. Religion
  • A prophet named Zoroaster introduced a
  • religion based on the struggle between good
  • and evil

48
B. Religion
  • People choosing good would gain eternal
    blessings, but those choosing evil would be
    punished

Zarathustra
49
B. Religion
  • Zoroaster believed good would triumph and Earth
    would disappear

Zarathustra also warned the people that there
would be a Last Judgment. At the end of times,
angels were to lead all men and women across a
narrow bridge, where they would be judged by
Spenta Manyu (which is described as a beautiful
maiden) the friends of The Lie would fall into a
large chasm of fire called Worst Existence, but
the followers of Zarathustra were to reach
Paradise, which goes under the name of House of
Best Purpose
50
C. End of the Empire
  • The Persian Empire ended when Alexander the Great
    conquered Persia in 331 B.C.
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