Title: Mesopotamia Theme: Comparing civilizations
1MesopotamiaTheme Comparing civilizations
2ID SIG
- Babylon, Code of Hammurabi, cuneiform, Epic of
Gilgamesch, lex talionis, metallurgy, temple
communities, Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, wheel
3Mesopotamia
- Greek for land between the rivers
- Tigris and Euphrates
- Modern-day Iraq
4Empires and Dominance
- Sumer 3200-2350 B.C.
- Babylonian 2350-1600 B.C.
- Sargon of Akkad 2334-2315 B.C.
- Hittite 1450-1200 B.C.
- Assyrian 1000-612 B.C.
- New Babylonian 605-550 B.C.
5Sumer
- Population growth was especially rapid in Sumer
- By 3000 B. C., the population of Sumer approached
100,000 and Sumerians were the dominant people of
Mesopotamia
6Babylonian Empire
- Akkadians and Babylonians of northern Mesopotamia
began to overshadow Sumerians - Sargon of Akkad defeated Sumerian city-states one
by one - By 2000 B.C. Sargons empire collapsed from a
combination of internal rebellion and external
aggression - Babylonians dominated from about 2350 to 1600
B.C. - Most prominent king was Hammurabi (1792 to 1750
B.C.)
7Assyrian Empire
- After the fall of the Babylonian Empire, the
Assyrians gradually came to power, extending
their authority to Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine,
much of Anatolia, and most of Egypt - Preserved much from Mesopotamia
- Extremely unpopular rule
- Couldnt administer far-flung empire
- Collapsed in 612 B.C.
8New Babylonian Empire (Chaldean Empire)
- 605 to 550 B.C.
- Known for its wealth and excess
- King Nebuchadnezzar ruled from 605 to 562 B.C.
- Built Hanging Gardens of Babylon
- Captured Judah in 586, destroyed the great temple
in Jerusalem, and forced many Hebrews into exile
in Babylon.
9Characteristics of a Civilization
- Intensive agricultural techniques
- Specialization of labor
- Cities
- A social hierarchy
- Organized religion and education
- Development of complex forms of economic exchange
- Development of new technologies
- Advanced development of the arts. (This can
include writing.)
10Agriculture
Sumerian sledge
11Agriculture
- Tigris and Euphrates brought large volumes of
water to an otherwise dry region - As early as 6000 B.C., people began small scale
irrigation - Artificial irrigation increased food supplies
which in turn supported a rapidly increasing
population
Fertile Crescent
12Irrigation
- Tigris and Euphrates irrigation allowed
Mesopotamians to grow barley, wheat, and peas
Map of fields and irrigation canals near Nippur,
Mesopotamia from cuneiform tablet, ca 1300 B.C.
13Agricultures Impact
- Abundant harvests supported increased populations
- Semetic people (those who spoke Akkadian,
Aramaic, Hebrew, and Phoenician) began to migrate
to Sumer
14Cities
Ur and Babylon
15Cities
- Beginning around 4000 B.C., as populations
increased in southern Mesopotamia, the Sumerians
built the worlds first cities
16Cities
- Unlike earlier villages, these cities were
centers of political and military authority, and
their jurisdiction extended into the surrounding
regions - Economic centers where buyers and sellers
congregated - Cultural centers where priests maintained
organized religion and scribes developed
traditions of writing and formal education - Mesopotamians had numerous, densely-populated
city-states
17Ur
- Built around 2100 B.C.
- Sometimes called the worlds first city
- Sumerian capital of Mesopotamia
- Believed to have been surrounded by a moat
- Home of Abraham (Genesis Chapter 11)
18Ur
Leonard Woolley Archeologist who excavated Ur in
the 1920s and 30s
Ziggurat at Ur
19Babylon
- Made a lavish showplace by Nebuchadnezzar
- More than 2,100 acres
- 1,179 temples
- Massive defensive walls
- Hanging Gardens
- Fell to Cyrus the Great in 539 B.C.
20Specialization
Mesopotamian potters wheel from Uruk
Sumerian earrings
Engraving
21Specialization
rivers
agriculture
- Abundant food supplies and cities as population
centers allowed some people to perform tasks not
associated with agriculture - People expanded into the areas of pottery,
textile manufacture, woodworking, leather
production, brick making, stonecutting, and
masonry
populations
cities
specialization
hierarchy
22Social Hierarchy
23Social Hierarchy
- Kings and nobles originally won their positions
by community election based on valor and success
as warriors - Soon royal status become hereditary
- Nobles were mostly members of the royal family
- Closely allied with the ruling elites were
priests and priestesses, many who were younger
relatives of the rulers - Lived in temple communities
24Social Hierarchy
- Free commoners worked mostly as peasant
cultivators in the countryside on land owned by
their families, although some worked in cities - Dependent clients usually worked on agricultural
estates owned by others - Both free commoners and dependent clients paid
taxes to support the ruling classes, military,
and temple communities
25Social Hierarchy
- Slaves came from
- Prisoners of war
- Convicted criminals
- Heavily indebted individuals who sold themselves
into slavery to satisfy their obligations - Patriarchal society
- Authority over public and private affairs vested
in adult men - Law recognized men as heads of households and had
disproportionate punishments for men and women
26Religion and Education
27Religion and Education
- Polytheism
- The ancient Mesopotamians worshipped hundreds of
gods, each with his/her own name and sphere of
activity. - Every city had its own patron god or goddess, and
there were also deities connected with various
professions such as scribes and builders. - Individual people also had their own personal god
who protected them and interceded for them with
the great deities.
Enki, god of water
28Religion and Education
- Kings often portrayed as offspring of gods or
gods themselves - Priests intervened with the gods to ensure good
fortune for their communities - In exchange, priests and priestesses lived in
temple communities and received offerings of
food, drink, and clothing from the city
inhabitants - Temples also generated income and work
- Epic of Gilgamesh taught there is no afterlife
- Death is dark, dank, and inert
29Ziggurats
- Ziggurats were huge stepped structures with a
temple on top - Built in honor of the citys god (other gods
might have smaller temples) - Intended to reach nearer to the heavens
Tower of Babel
30Code of Hammurabi
- Hammurabi (King of Babylonian Empire from 1792 to
1750 B.C.) maintained control of empire by a code
of law - Claimed the gods had chosen him to promote the
welfare of the people, to cause justice to
prevail in the land, to destroy the wicked and
evil, so that the strong might not oppress the
weak, to rise like the sun over the people, and
to light up the land.
31Code of Hammurabi
- High standards of behavior and stern punishments
for violators - Death penalty for murder, theft, fraud, false
accusations, sheltering of runaway slaves,
failure to obey royal orders, adultery, and
incest - Civil laws regulating prices, wages, commercial
dealings, marital relationships, and the
conditions of slavery
32Code of Hammurabi
- Relied on lex talionis the law of retaliation
- Offenders suffered punishments resembling their
violations - If a man put out the eye of another man, his eye
shall be put out. An eye for an eye (196) - If he break another man's bone, his bone shall be
broken. (197) - If a man knock out the teeth of his equal, his
teeth shall be knocked out. A tooth for a tooth
(200)
33Economic Exchange
34Economic Exchange
- Trade occurred by ship and donkey caravan
- Sumerians traded woolen textiles, leather goods,
sesame oil, and jewelry with India for copper,
ivory, pearls, and semi-precious stones - Babylonians imported silver from Anatolia, cedar
wood from Lebanon, copper from Arabia, gold from
Egypt, tin from Persia, lapis lazuli from
Afghanistan, and semiprecious stones from India - Barter was the main form of commerce until silver
became popular around 1750 B.C.
Cylinder seals were used to record a contract,
record, or official receipt. By affixing a seal
to a tablet, the user validated its contents.
35New Technologies
36Metallurgy
- Metallurgy ranks among the most important aspects
of technology and specialization - Metallurgy evolved from copper to bronze and by
1000 B.C., Mesopotamians were working with iron
as well - Important implications for agriculture and
weaponry
37The Wheel
- First use of wheels probably occurred about 3500
B.C. - Sumerians were building wheeled carts by 3000
B.C. - The wheel increased the mobility of society and
allowed heavy loads to be moved over great
distances
Chariot model, discovered in the Royal tomb of Ur
in Sumer around 6000 BC
38Development of the Wheel
39Art and Writing
Dragon of Marduk
Gudea of Lagash
Winged Guardian
40Art and Writing
- Cuneiform
- Epic of Gilgamesch
- Hanging Gardens of Babylon
41Cuneiform
- Latin for wedge-shaped
- Beginning around 2900 B. C., Sumerians developed
a flexible writing system that combined
pictographs and other symbols - Scribes used a reed stylus to impress symbols on
wet clay leaving lines and wedge-shaped marks - Babylonians, Assyrians, and others later adapted
the Sumerians script to their own languages and
cuneiform writing continued for three thousand
years
42Cuneiform Examples
43Epic of Gilgamesh
- Classic example of Mesopotamian literature
- Began in the Sumerian city-states, but the entire
epic represents the work of compilers during the
days of the Babylonian empire - Originally written on 12 clay tablets in
cuneiform script - Recounts experiences of Gilgamesh and Enkidu
- Gilgamesh was the legendary king of Uruk, ca.
3000 B.C., and Enkidu was a wild-man, raised by
animals that became the friend of Gilgamesh after
they fought.
44Epic of Gilgamesh
- Principle vehicle for Mesopotamian reflection on
moral issues - Friendship
- Relations between humans and the gods
- The meaning of life and death
45Excerpt from the Epic of Gilgamesh
- When their heart led the great gods to produce
the flood. There were Anu, their father, Valiant
Enlil, their counselor, Ninurta, their herald,
Ennuge, their irrigator. Ninigiku-Ea was also
present with them - Their words he repeats to the reed-hut
- Reed-hut, reed-hut! Wall! Wall!
- Reed-hut, hearken! Wall, reflect!
- Man of Shuruppak, son of Ubar-Tutu,
Tear down (this) house, build a ship! Give
up possessions, seek thou life. Despise property
and keep the soul alive. Aboard the ship take
thou the seed of all living things. The ship
that thou shalt build, Her dimensions shall be
to measure. Equal shall be her width and her
length. Like the Apsu thou shalt ceil her.
46Hanging Gardens of Babylon
- One of the Seven Wonders of the World
- Built by King Nebuchadnezzar II around 600 B.C.
on top of stone arches 23 meters above ground and
watered from the Euphrates by a complicated
mechanical system. - Series of terraces filled with plants.
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