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Inquiry 2 Emergence of a Civilization

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Title: Inquiry 2 Emergence of a Civilization


1
Inquiry 2 Emergence of a Civilization
  • Writing
  • Its a means of communicating.
  • Plays a big part of our lives!

2
The Importance of Law in Our Society
  • What is the importance of law today? In order to
    establish this we must first establish what the
    point of law is. Law and order is essential in
    all communities. In an orderly law-abiding
    community people can plan ahead, work in safety
    and do business in trust. In most modern
    societies order means stability. The guarantees
    of this order take place in the form of laws.
    Laws are rules and customs that the citizens of a
    community regard as binding upon them and can be
    enforced by the courts. Laws provide boundaries
    so that people realize where and when they are
    committing an offence. One of the principal
    objects of the law is to safeguard (make safe)
    the rights of citizens. Our basic rights are what
    give us our freedom in daily life. The freedom of
    speech, the right to a fair trial etcRead
    more http//www.coursework.info/GCSE/Law/The_Impo
    rtance_of_Law_in_Our_Society_L81992.htmlixzz0Vfl4
    TjAN

3
First seeds of civilization
  • The Nile Valley Civilization (green)
  • The Mesopotamian Civilization (purple)
  • The Indus Valley Civilization (red)
  • The Chinese Civilization (blue)

4
Irrigation use in agriculture
  • All four (4) civilizations developed on fertile
    land and near rivers.
  • Each spring, the water levels rose and spilled
    over the banks and flooded the area for several
    months.
  • Water levels eventually receded and left behind
    fertile mud (silt) on the ground.
  • Farmers now had fertile soil to grow crops.

5
Major Irrigation projects
  • Farmers were forced to develop an irrigation
    system because of dry seasons no water!
  • Floods occurred once a year they were periodic.
  • An irrigation system involves capturing water
    and sending it across the crop fields on a
    regular basis throughout the year.

6
Irrigation projects involved
  1. Building canals to get water to fields.
  2. Building dikes to retain water in canal.
  3. Building a reservoir to store floodwaters.

7
How did agriculture affect civilizations?
  • It allowed more people to be fed and families to
    grow in numbers.
  • Small villages grew into large cities.
  • Large cities required a leader.
  • A chief would rule and pass laws which everyone
    had to follow.
  • Written laws were formal, permanent and
    undisputable.
  • These cities became organized.
  • This is what a civilization is!

8
Why did the Mesopotamians invent writing?
  • Mesopotamians needed to record and communicate
    information to others.
  • Keeping track of food surpluses would be
    impossible without recording quantities.

9
Food surpluses lead to the creation of more trade
groups
  • Trade groups needed and relied on each other.
  • They provided each other with goods and services.
  • Labour was organized into four (4) trade groups
  • Peasants
  • Artisans
  • Merchants
  • Soldiers

10
1. Peasants
  • They produced food.
  • These crops included wheat, barley, sesame, and
    millet
  • They raised livestock.
  • Most of the population was peasants.
  • 2. Artisans
  • Made tools, pots, weapons, bricks, etc.
  • Built houses, public buildings, boats and wagons.

11
3. Merchants
  • Bartered with other Mesopotamian cities and with
    people living outside of Mesopotamia.
  • 4. Soldiers
  • Protected the goods and territory from robbers.
  • Protected roads travelled by merchants.

12
Trade
  • Merchants travelled long distances to trade.
  • Mesopotamia traded food surpluses for products
    that they did not have.
  • What products did other civilizations give to
    Mesopotamia?
  • Hittites offered copper, lead, silver, iron

13
  • 2. Canaanites offered copper, bronze, tin, gold

3. People from the Zagros mountains offered
iron and steel
14
Evolution of Writing
  • People began writing around 3,500 BC.
  • They started by drawing objects, and engraved
    their drawings (called pictograms) on moist clay
    tablets.

15
Pictograms
  • Pictograms represented animals and objects (i.e.
    number of cows, bags of grain).
  • What about more complex explanations that
    involved emotions and detailed thoughts?
  • Pictograms were simple and quite limited in what
    they could describe.

16
From Pictograms to Cuneiform Writing
  • A writing system invented by the Sumerians in
    ancient Mesopotamia.
  • It pre-dates letters by 1500 years.
  • It is the earliest known writing system in the
    world.
  • It was often inscribed on damp clay tablets using
    a special shaped tool called a stylus.
  • Cuneiform had approximately 700 symbols.
  • Only scribes knew how to read and write in
    cuneiform.

17
How was the Mesopotamian Society Organised?
  • It was a hierarchical society.
  • A persons hierarchical position depended on his
    wealth, his job and/or who he knew.
  • An artisan was considered more valuable than a
    peasant because he was skilled and harder to
    replace.
  • The peasants, who simply worked the fields, were
    unskilled and less valued than highly trained
    warriors who were given the important role of
    defending the city from invaders.

18
Political Power in the Cities
  • Mesopotamia had 10 major cities.
  • Each city was
  • Independent from the others
  • Built near crop fields
  • Surrounded by protective walls
  • Composed of two (2) parts
  • Lower city
  • Higher city

19
  • Lower city
  • This part of the city was inhabited by the
    peasants. In the event of an attack, the lower
    city would be overtaken by the enemy and the
    peasants would be killed.
  • Higher city
  • This part of the city was inhabited by all the
    important people. It was harder to get to because
    it was built on a mound. Its where all of the
    important institutions/buildings were located
    (temples, the ziggurat, the royal palace and
    food/supply warehouses etc.).
  • It was safer to be in the higher city because the
    enemy would have a harder time overtaking it
    because it was more elevated than the lower city.

20
Social groups in Mesopotamia
  • The king (inherited this position)
  • He was the supreme ruler of all major
    Mesopotamian cities.
  • He managed the army, irrigation projects and food
    supplies.
  • He represented the Gods on Earth.
  • The Elite
  • They were the high priests, army commanders, rich
    merchants.
  • They advised the king and carried out his orders.

21
  • The Free people
  • Priests, artisans, peasants, merchants, soldiers,
    and civil servants.
  • Peasants gave part of their harvest to the king
    in the form of a tax.
  • The slaves
  • They were prisoners of war.
  • They had no rights.
  • They received no wages () for their work.

22
Law and Justice
  • The kings authority ensured stability and unity
    within society
  • Written laws ensured/guaranteed that justice was
    served!
  • Anyone caught violating/breaking laws were
    punished.
  • These laws applied to everyone.
  • The Code of Hammurabi
  • It is the oldest written law code that exists.
  • Hammurabi had these laws engraved on a stele.

23
Were these laws just? Fair?
  • These laws were not fair because the punishment
    for breaking the law was not the same for
    everyone.
  • What you did for a living, who you knew and what
    you owned played (called social status) a big
    part on the severity of the punishment for
    breaking a law.
  • The punishment was harsher for a peasant than a
    member of the elite.
  • For crimes against persons
  • The code applied the law of retaliation (an eye
    for an eye!) which meant that the criminal would
    receive the same damage he had inflicted onto his
    victim.
  • Family issues
  • The code sought to protect women and children.
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