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Chapter Two

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Title: Chapter Two


1
Chapter Two
  • Mesopotamia

2
  • Geography

3
(No Transcript)
4
http//www.earth-history.com/_images/ancient-sumer
.gif
5
The Fertile Crescent
  • the area between the Tigris-Euphrates Rivers.
    Presently Iraq
  • Unpredictable rivers vulnerable geographic
    situation erratic climate

6
The Fertile Crescent
  • Mesopotamia had no natural barriers to invasion.
    Feeling themselves surrounded by incomprehensible
    and often hostile forces, Mesopotamians lived in
    an atmosphere of anxiety, which pervaded their
    civilization (12, Perry, Western Civilization)

7
  • Mesopotamias unpredictable rivers, vulnerable
    geographic situation, and erratic climate
    contributed to the mood of fear and insecurity
    that is reflected in all forms of Mesopotamian
    expression (Fiero 38).

8
  • Timeline

9
  • 3500-2350 BCE Sumerian Period
  • 2350-2150 BCE Akkadian Period
  • 2150-1900 BCE Neo-Sumerian Period
  • 1900-1600 BCE Babylonian Period-- Babylon, chief
    city (presently, Baghdad, Iraq)

10
  • 1600-1150 BCE Kassite Period
  • 1150-612 BCE Assyrian Period(Ninevah, chief
    city)
  • 600-540 BCE The Chaldean (New Babylonian) Empire
  • 550-330 BCE The Persian Empire

11
  • Religion

12
  • Monotheism the Hebrews
  • Polytheism everyone else

13
The Epic of Gilgamesh (1)
  • Gilgamesh, king of Uruk, is two-thirds god and
    one-third man. His mother, the goddess Aruru,
    creates a companion for him-the wild man Enkidu,
    who is taken to Uruk, where he wrestles with
    Gilgamesh. The match is a draw and the two become
    inseparable companions.

14
The Epic of Gilgamesh (2)
  • One day, Gilgamesh, always looking for adventure,
    proposes that he and Enkidu travel to the distant
    cedar forest to kill Huwawa, its evil guardian.
    Enkidu protests that the journey is very
    dangerous and Huwawa very fierce, but Gilgamesh
    is determined and finally they set out. The
    undertaking is successful and the two are covered
    with glory.

15
The Epic of Gilgamesh (3)
  • But Enkidu has already had premonitions of
    disaster. On their return to Uruk, the goddess
    Ishtar sees the beauty of Gilgamesh and proposes
    to him. He rejects her, reminding her of the
    fates of her previous lovers. She is furious and
    has Anu send the sacred bull of heaven to attack
    him. When Gilgamesh and Enkidu slay the bull, the
    gods become very angry-this is too presumptuous.
    As punishment, Enkidu must die.

16
The Epic of Gilgamesh (4)
  • Enkidu's death is the occasion for the section
    which we have included here, the climax and
    culmination of the Epic. For the first time
    Gilgamesh has had to face the fact of death, and
    it bewilders and terrifies him. Hoping to learn
    the secret of immortality, he makes a long and
    difficult journey in search of Utnapishtim, the
    one human being who has acquired it.

17
http//www.actorssceneunseen.com/images/Gilgamesh/
GilgameshCover420.jpg
18
The Epic of Gilgamesh (5)
  • Utnapishtim tells his story-the famous story of
    the flood. But Gilgamesh is, after all, human and
    very tired. He falls asleep. Utnapishtim is about
    to send him away when his wife intervenes in
    pity. Gilgamesh is told about a wonderful plant
    of immortality that grows at the bottom of the
    sea. He obtains it but as he stops to cool
    himself in a quiet pool a snake carries off the
    plant. Gilgamesh, completely unsuccessful,
    returns to Uruk, and the text concludes as he
    proudly shows his city to his ferryman.
  • http//alexm.here.ru/mirrors/www.enteract.com/jwal
    z/Eliade/159.html

19
The Epic of Gilgamesh
  • The major theme The human protest against
    death
  • (12, Perry, Western Civilization)

20
  • Politics

21
Sumerians
  • City-states
  • A very hierarchical society with the king at the
    apex of the social pyramid. Priests as
    intermediaries between King and people.
  • http//vandyck.anu.edu.au/work/teach/context/www.c
    aup.washington.edu/courses/LARC352/oct10.htmHDR2
    02201

22
Sargon I
  • ca. 2350 BCE
  • Created the first empire, which extended from the
    Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea

23
Sargon I
24
Hammurabi
  • Babylonian king
  • Author of the Code of Hammurabi

25
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26
The Code of Hammurabi
  • an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth
  • Shows class distinction and womens subordination
    to men

27
The Hebrews (1)
  • 1. The Period of the Patriarchs Abraham of Ur
    took his people from Mesopotamia to Canaan (ca.
    2000 BCE).
  • 2. The Period of the Exodus Moses led the
    Hebrews out of Egypt (ca. 1750 BCE).

28
The Hebrews (2)
  • 3. The Period of the Conquest The Hebrews
    struggled to conquer Canaan.
  • 4. The United Monarchy There were three kings ?
    Saul, David, and Solomon.

29
Temple of King Solomon
http//www.templemount.org/solomon.html
30
http//www.templemodels.com/temple/goodfullbig600.
jpg
31
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32
The Hebrews (3)
  • 5. Divided Kingdom and Exile The Northern
    Kingdom was destroyed by the Assyrians in the 8th
    century BCE. In 587 BCE the Babylonians conquered
    the Southern Kingdom, destroyed Solomons temple
    in Jerusalem, and carried the Hebrew people into
    an exile know as the Babylonian Captivity.

33
The Hebrews (4)
  • 6. The Return The Hebrews returned from exile
    about 520 BCE. The subsequent history was marked
    by a series of foreign rulers, one brief period
    of independence (c. 165 BCE), and rule by Rome
    after 63 BCE. In 70 CE, after a Jewish revolt,
    the Romans destroyed Jerusalem. Jews did not hold
    political powers in Palestine until 1948.

34
  • Art

35
The Standard of Ur (ca. 2700 BCE)
36
Ziggurat man-made hill with temple on top
dominating each city
http//www.hope.edu/bandstra/RTOT/CH1/CH1_F4.JPG
37
http//faculty.evansville.edu/rl29/art105/img/zigg
urat_diagram.gif
38
http//faculty.evansville.edu/rl29/art105/img/ur_z
iggurat.jpg
39
The "Little" Tower of Babel, by Pieter Bruegel
(c. 1525-69)
http//www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/bruegel/littl
ebabel.jpg
40
Peter Bruegel the Elder, The Tower of Babel
(1563)
http//www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/bruegel/babel
.jpg
41
http//www.ldolphin.org/babel.html
42
  • (1) The story of the tower of Babel can be found
    in Genesis 111-9 as follows The whole human
    race spoke the same language, and formed one
    community. This community settled in a place not
    far from the Euphrates River. Here they built a
    city and a tower of such materials as a great
    river-basin would afford and the genius of man
    could manufacture. This was done to make a great
    center about which they might gather, and to
    obtain for themselves a name.

43
  • (2) God came down to investigate the purpose of
    all this unusual enterprise. The self-confidence
    and unity of the people were everywhere
    prominent. Mindful that the accomplishment of
    this project might embolden them to still more
    independent movements, God said, "Let us go down,
    and there confound their language." Consequently
    they were scattered abroad upon the face of all
    the earth "and they left off to build the city."

44
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the 7
wonders of the ancient world.
http//www.faculty.fairfield.edu/jmac/rs/7hanging.
gif
45
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
http//www.atlastours.net/iraq/the_hanging_gardens
.jpg
46
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon
http//vandyck.anu.edu.au/work/teach/context/www.c
aup.washington.edu/courses/LARC352/006.gif
47
The Ishtar Gate of Babylon, Neo-Babylonian,
612-530 B.C.
http//faculty.evansville.edu/rl29/art105/img/isht
ar_recon.jpg
48
Old Babylon
http//www.item.ntnu.no/malek/pixIraq/bab3.jpg
49
Winged Human-headed Bull from the palace of
Sargon II
http//xenohistorian.faithweb.com/worldhis/figure1
5.jpg
50
Wounded Lion, Assyrian bas-relief sculpture,
Palace at Nineveh, 668-630, London, British
Museum
http//iws.ccccd.edu/Andrade/WorldLitI2332/Meso/wo
undedlion.jpg
51
http//iws.ccccd.edu/Andrade/WorldLitI2332/Meso/wa
rrior.jpg
52
Warrior, Assyrian bas-relief sculpture, Palace at
Nineveh, 668-630, London, British Museum
http//www.item.ntnu.no/malek/pixIraq/ash2.jpg
53
  • The End
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