Title: Prehistory vs' History
1Prehistory vs. History
- Those who forget their past are condemned to
repeat it philosopher George Santayana - The one duty we owe to history is to rewrite
it playwright Oscar Wilde - The past is a foreign country they do things
differently there novelist L P Hartley - The winners get to write history anonymous
2Regionalization
3Transition from Paleolithic Neolithic
Neolithic Civilization
- Prehistory to Postclassical World
- 8000 BCE to 600 CE
4Paleolithic Era (3 million/250,000 ca. 10,000
bce)
- Type of tools
- Stone
- Basic survival or subsistence level
- Influenced by climate and climate changes
- Nomadic
- Hunters and gatherers
- Bands
- About 30-50
- Family and culture groups
- General social equality
- Economic roles a little different but the burden
of the tasks and the level of responsibility and
decision making was based on need not
pre-established roles - Women gathered berries, nuts etc.
- Men hunters
- Natufian society of the eastern Mediterranean
5Pre-Historic Man in the Paleolithic Age
(Different than ancient man)
6Population Urban areas
- Steady increase in population following Neolithic
Revolution - 4 million in 10,000 bce
- 5 million in 5000 bce
- 14 million in 3000 bce
- 100 million by 500 bce
- Change from villages to urban city-states
- First major urban areas
- Jericho
- Catal Huyuk
- Economic activity diversifies (Industries)
- Pottery (useful, technological advancements,
artistic) - Metallurgy (copper, bronze, iron)
- Textile (fabrics)
710,000 BCE 1000 CE
From 4 million in 10,000 BCE to 100 million at
the beginning of the classic era or 500 BCE
81000 CE 2000 CE
Current life expectancy 67
9Technology links
10Regional discoveries of cultural representations
during Paleolithic and early Neolithic Eras
11Neolithic Era - New Stone Age
- Actually transition from nomadic society to
sedentary society - Type of living changed from caves and open areas
to actual dwellings - Migration continues but slows
- Population numbers increase causing the need for
more complex relationships and systems to support
them
12Venus Figures
- Mother Goddess
- Fertility icons
- Prehistoric
- Earliest findings dated 35,000 years ago
- swollen belly, wide-set thighs, and large breasts
Venus Malta
Venus of Willendorf
13Example of some early houses in Neolithic villages
14Villages to cities (states)
- The villages become walled cities and urban areas
- Catal Huyuk and Jericho
- The new agricultural civilizations had to protect
their land and develop complex systems to support
the growing population
15Neolithic or Agricultural Transition
- Shift from food gathering to food producing
- Result is people begin to settle in one place
- Cities develop
- Surplus begins
- Impact is complex societies or civilizations that
have trade networks and are interconnected - Neolithic Revolution is the basis for more
complex societies to be formed - Sedentary
- Surplus
- Diverse economic activity
- Division of labor
- Gender roles begin to change and become less
equal - Need for complex record keeping
- Writing systems
- Pictographic (drew pictures to represent physical
aspects) - Ideographs (drew pictures to represent abstract)
- Phonographs (drew symbols to represent sounds)
- Alphabet and writing systems
16Development of Writing
- Out of economic need to keep records
- Impacts social hierarchy (those who can write and
those who cant) - For historians the issue is from whose
perspective do we receive the written history - Develops in similar pattern but final style is
different as are other cultural representations
17Civilization or complex societies
- When do we know it is a civilization or matches
other complex societies and is no longer
Neolithic and able to sustain itself over
generations. - It may adapt/evolve over many generations
- Rates of adaptation are influenced by geography,
type of culture, and creation of technology - 5-6 elements of Civilization
- Division of labor
- Advanced technology
- System of Writing
- Calendar
- Cities with Government or system of control
- Usually some element within culture of philosophy
that holds them together and explains the forces
of nature
18Urban areas
- Population (biological)
- Culture
- State
- Gender
- Work
- Leisure
- Ritual centers (temples)
19Revolution or Transition?What does the
transition impact
- What causes the impact?
- Ability to control environment
- Slash and burn techniques
- Irrigation
- People stop roaming and build villages first then
cities as population grew and methods developed - Impact is civilization
- Subsistence to surplus
- Trade networks within area creates relationship
with the cities and culture groups creating
empires - Empires and areas connect through trade
exchanging technology and goods that assist in
overcoming environment and cause adaptation rate
to increase - Also causes more conflict
- Luxury items traded longer distances
- You can track these items to see who traded with
who