Title: Foundations: 8000 B.C.E.- 600 C.E.
1Foundations 8000 B.C.E.- 600 C.E.
2 The Bookends 8000 BCE 600 BCE
- 8,000 BCE marks the development of Agriculture
and its spread to the four River Valley
Civilizations (Mesopotamia, Egypt, Indus Valley,
Huang He valley) - 600 BCE marks the end of the Complex
Civilizations and the beginning of the Classical
Empires
3Themes
- Interaction and Exchange
- Urbanization
- Nomadic Peoples
4 The Big Thematic picture
- Technological and Environmental Transformations
- Big Geography and Peopling of the Earth
- The Neolithic Revolutions (Agricultural
Transformation) and Early Agricultural Societies - The Development and Interactions of Early
Agricultural, Pastoral, and Urban Societies
5Big Geography and Peopling of the Earth
- Archeological evidence indicates during the
Paleolithic Era, hunting-foraging bands of humans
gradually migrated from East Africa to other
areas adapting their technology and cultures to
new climates and regions. - Used Fire in new ways
- Developed a wider range of tools
- Economics focused on small kinship groups that
could make what they needed but also exchanged
people, ideas and goods.
6Some Things to Remember
- The discovery/use of agriculture and surpluses
of food quickened the pace of life, and organized
areas into sedentary civilizations - As sedentary civilizations developed, social
structures and gender roles cemented. - Civilizations became more complex and structured
as time moved on.
7 Neolithic Revolution
- Early modern humans seemed to have developed
farming over time, dropping seeds one year and
then harvesting the crops the next. This led
to settled, formal farming - Domestication and breeding of Animals was also an
important invention - Some humans decided to settle in villages and
soon were able to create a surplus of food. This
lead to diversification of labor, the creation of
governmental structures, and the payment of
taxes! - Other humans chose to become pastoral nomads and
move with their animal herds
8Rise of Agriculture
- Spontaneous separate development why, where and
when? - Diffusion of specific plants and techniques
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10Birth of New Technologies
11 Technology
- Metallurgy- First copper, then bronze, then Iron.
These increasingly harder metals aided
agriculture tremendously. They also provided
increasingly sophisticated weapons. - Wheel- first used by the Sumerians proved helpful
in agriculture, trade, and warfare - Hydrological technology- waterwheels, windmills,
aqueducts proved instrumental in meeting the
water needs of large populations as well as the
irrigation required in drier areas.
12 Demography
- Worlds population increased rapidly with the
advent of farming and domesticated animals. - Waves of diseases plagues increase in frequency
with increased population density
13What is a Civilization?
- Origins of term-
- Standard criteria
- Use of term?
14Civilizations?
15 Social and Gender Structures
- Ownership of land signified power
- Kings were usually divine and had absolute power
- Religions emerge (Vedic, Hebrew, Zoroastrianism)
- Gender roles emerged as farming expanded. Men
worked in the fields while women stayed in the
house. - Whos Your Daddy phenomenon. Women lost power.
- Religion cements and justifies social and gender
structures
16Cultural and Intellectual Expressions
-
- Monumental architecture- Kings show off their
power by building big buildings for either
themselves or the states religion
17Cultural and Intellectual Expressions
- Writing -as record-keeping becomes paramount,
writing develops
18Cultural and Intellectual Expressions
- Literature as an expression of culture and values.
19Cultural and Intellectual Expressions
20Structure and Function of State
- First- relatively small states. City-states
- Then- large Coercive tribute empires.
- Taxes paid by the farmers/ peasants for the
enjoyment of the elite. Agricultural surplus
allows for large armies.
21 Trade- Cant live without it!
- Trade, especially over land, is important.
- Begins as relatively informal networks.
- Expands from local, to regional, to
transregional. - Nomadic pastoralists instrumental in development
of long-distance trade.
22 Movement of people
- Bantu Migration across Africa
- Polynesian migration across Pacific Ocean
23Population
- Demography-
- What factors influence population growth and
decline?
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25Role of Climate and Geography in Early Societies
- Imagine how were early societies may have been
affected. - How do you think early peoples responded?
- What difference would geography make in the long
term development of a society?
26Environmental Impact
- Use of water resources
- Clearing of land
- Use of building materials
- Roads
- Use of fuel materials
- Animals, disease
- Mining
27Early Societies
- Mesopotamia
- Egypt
- Indus
- Shang
- Mesoamerica and Andean South America
28River Valley Civilizations
- Mesopotamia
- Tigris, Euphrates Fertile Crescent
- Sumer, Babylon, Persia
- Unpredictable flooding
29Sumer The first
- Successful agriculture, river management
- Writing, cuneiforms
- Use of wheel
- 12 month calendar, base 60, geometry
- Polytheistic
- Ziggurats
- Ur, Erech, Kish 3000 BCE
- Overthrown by Akkadians 1700 BCE
30Sumer to Babylon to Nineveh to Babylon
- Overthrew Akkadians 1700 BCE
- Hammurabi, Code of Law
- Fell to Kassites, then Hittites 1500 BCE
- Hittites-iron, then fell to
- Assyrians-organized, cruel, Nineveh, exiles,
cultural diffusion - Conquered by Medes, Chaldeans, rebuilt Babylon
31Persian Immersion
32- By 500 BCE Nile to Turkey/Greece to Afghanistan
- Great Royal Road, 1600 miles
- Transportation, Communication
- Multi-cultural Empire, Tolerance
- Smaller Civilizations co-existed
- Lydians-coined money
- Phoenicians-22-letter alphabet, naval power
- Hebrews-Judaism, monotheism
33Walk Like an Egyptian
- Rich soil, gentle flooding
- 3 Kingdoms
- water management, pyramids, astronomy,
hieroglyphs, calendar, gold, spices - Polytheistic
- Women rulers, buy, sell property, inherit, will
property, dissolve marriages, still subservient
to men - Hierarchy pharaoh, priest, nobles, merchants,
artisans, peasants, slaves - Conquered by (1100 BCE) Assyrians, Persians,
Greeks, Romans, Islam, Ottomans, Euros
34Comparison of Egypt and Mesopotamia
- Mesopotamia
- Irregular flooding
-
-
-
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36Indus Valley 2500-1500 BCE
- Outside contact more limited
- Kyber Pass connection to outside
- Harrappa, Mohenjo-Daro 100,000 each
- Master-planned, water system, strong central
govt, polytheistic, written language - Pottery, cotton, cloth
- Cities abandoned, reason unknown
- Aryans arrive 1500 BCE
37Aryans
- From Caucasus Mtns. Black/Caspian Sea
- Nomads who settled
- Vedas, Upanashads basis for Hinduism
- Caste system
- warriors, priests, peasants
- later re-ordered Brahmins (priests), warriors,
landowners-merchants, peasants, untouchables (out
castes)
38China Shang on the Hwang
39Shang 1600-1100 BCE
- Stable agri-surplus, trade-centered
- N. China, walled cities, strong army, chariots
- The Middle Kingdom World View
- Trade with Mesopotamia
- Bronze, pottery, silk, decimal system, calendar
- Patriarchal, ancestors as advocates w/the gods
40Its Zhou Time
- Replaced Shang around 1100 BCE
- Ruled 900 years, kept customs, traditions
- Mandate of Heaven
- Feudal system, nobles gained, bureaucracies, war
amongst feudal kingdoms, collapse 256 BCE
41Exceptions to the Rule
- Olmecs (Mexico), Chavin (Andes) developed
similarly to others urban, polytheistic,
irrigation, writing, calendar, monumental
building - The point Similar pattern of development in
different part of earth, no contact - The difference Not River Valley Civs. No major
river to use as transportation or generator of
agri-production
42Nomadic Peoples
- Hunting-gathering lifestyle (!Kung people)
- Labor/ leisure
- Population growth
- Gender relations
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44Early Societies
- Mesopotamia
- Egypt
- Indus
- Shang
- Mesoamerica and Andean South America
45Shared Features
46Unique characteristics
47Urbanization
- Comparisons between urban, pastoral and nomadic
life
48The Bookends 600 BCE 600 CE
- 600 BCE marks the end of the Complex
Civilizations and the beginning of the Classical
Empires - 600 CE marks the end of the last of the Classical
Empires
49Themes
- Axial Age
- Empires
- Spread of Religion
50The Classics India-China
- 4 key empires 300 BCE-500 CE
- India
- Maurya
- Gupta
- China
- Qin
- Han
-
51Empire Building
- What does an empire require?
- What do its subjects expect?
- Symbols of legitimacy
52Classical Societies
- Axial age-
- Why then?
- Results
- Religion
- Politics
- Social Structure
- Gender relations
53Axial Age
- time between approximately 900 - 200 BCE when
The spiritual foundations of humanity were laid
simultaneously and independently and these are
the foundations upon which humanity still
subsists today. - It was a pivotal time in early human history when
human beings began to reflect for the first time
about individual existence, and the meaning of
life and death.
54- Increasing urban civilization initially brought
about under the leadership of a priestly ruling
class, encouraged trade and brought different
societies closer together. But, as urban life
accelerated and expanded, it disrupted the old
sense of order. In addition, this new way of
living generated unprecedented social and
political conflict and an increase in violence
and aggression. - Old customs could no longer be taken for granted.
People began to question their own beliefs once
they came into contact with others whose beliefs
were different. They were challenged to look at
themselves in different ways and entertain new
ideas or cling steadfastly to their old ones.
55- Plus the increase in population and the mixing of
cultures exposed more people to the realities of
life, such as, sickness, greed, suffering,
inhumanity and social injustice. As a result of
all this, people began to experience themselves
as separate from others for the very first time. - The idea of the self brought with it the problem
of what happens to the self after death. In
answer to this, people began searching for more
comprehensive religious and ethical concepts, and
to formulate a more enlightened morality where
each person was responsible for his own destiny.
So, between approximately 900 and 200 BCE, a new
mode of thinking developed almost simultaneously
in four distinct areas of the world.
56Axial Age Thinkers
57The Development and Codification of Religious and
Cultural Traditions
- Codification and development of existing
religions and traditions provided a bond among
people and a code to live by. - Development of monotheism.
- Jewish Diaspora
- Core beliefs outlined in religious
textsVedics/Hinduism.
58New Belief Systems and Cultural traditions
emerged and spread often asserting universal
truths
- Emergence of salvation religions
- Christianity and Buddhism
- Emergence of Confucianism promotes social harmony
- Daoism promotes balance between humans and
nature. Also influence Chinese culturemedicine,
poetry, architecture. - Core ideas in Greco-Roman philosophy and science
emphasize logic, nature of political power.
59Other religions and cultural traditions continued
parallel to the codified, written beliefs in core
civilizations
- Shamanism and animism continue to shape lives
outside the core civilizations. - Ancestor veneration persist in many regions
- Africa
- East Asia
- Andean Areas
60Diffusion of Belief Systems
61Belief Systems through 600 CE
- Polytheism
- Confucianism
- Daoism
- Legalism
- Hinduism
- Buddhism
- Judaism
- Christianity
62Commonalities
- Schisms-Divisions resulting in subgroups, sects
- Consider social, political, cultural, military
impacts as well as theological and philosophical - Where did it start? Where did he spread? How?
63Origins of World Belief Systems
64Polytheism
- Majority of ancient civs
- Through 600 CE all Med and Mesop Civs were poly.
Exceptions were Hebrews and Christians - In the East, all were poly Aryans, Hindus,
traditional Chinese, Daoists, some Buddhists,
Americas, Africa
65The Deity Details
- Multiple gods, may be good or bad
- Deities impact daily life
- Human attributes (Grk-Rom)
- Egypt Benevolent and kind
- Sumer, Aztec Feared, to be appeased
66The Big Deal?
- major impact on civ development
- Art architecture
- Ritual based
- Rise of priestly class
- Rigid social structures
- Gods for culture as whole, city-state as well
rise and fall seen as battle of gods as well as
city-states
67Origins of World Belief Systems
68Hinduism
- Aryans, and empires of Indian subcontinent
- Brahma-supreme force
- Gods are manifestations of Brahma
- Vishnu-preserver
- Shiva-destroyer
- Reincarnation
- Dharma rules and obligations
- Karma fate based on how dharma was met
- Moshka highest state of being, release of soul
69The Big Deal?
- Religion as well as social system
- Caste system, accept lot in life, next one will
be better (if dharma met) - Close relationship w/Indian culture, caste system
have limited its spread - Treatment of animals
- Hinduism spawns Buddhism
70Origins of World Belief Systems
71Judaism
- The Hebrews
- Chosen by God, special status
- Personal relationship with God
- Afterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy,
personal salvation - To honor, serve God, promote prophets, maintain
cultural identity - A religion culture
- The First Monotheistic Belief System
- Christianity
- Islam
72Compare Confucianism, Hinduism, Judaism
- Seem very different
- Confucianism, not a religion
- Hinduism, polytheistic
- Judaism, monotheistic
- All tied to the culture where the came from, not
evangelical, converting others
73Origins of World Belief Systems
74Confucianism
- Specifically Chinese (Kong Fu Tse) 400 BCE onward
- Political-social philosophy, not religion
- Moral, ethical, also practical
- How to restore political-social order?
- 5 key relationships political, parental,
spousal, sibling, friends
75Confucianism
- Right relationships right society
- Put aside personal ambition for good of state
- Ren-humanity, benevolence, kindness
- Li-propriety, courtesy, respect, deference
- Xiao-filial piety, family obligation, extended
- Lead by good example
- Women, 2nd status, honored by kids
76The Big Deal?
- As a ethical, social, political belief system it
was compatible with other religions, could
practice Buddhism and Confucianism simultaneously - Flexible
- Embraced by leaders as well, ordered society,
tight families - Exclusively Chinese, only in context of Chinese
culture
77Origins of World Belief Systems
78Daoism-Taoism
- China 500 BCE onward
- The Way (of nature/cosmos)
- Lao-tzu, philosopher
- Eternal principles, passive, yielding
- Like water, yet strong, shaping
- Opening of a pot, nothing, yet not a pot without
it - Wu wei- non-doing, harmony with nature
79The Big Deal?
- Self-sufficient communities
- Counter to Confucian activism
- Emphasis on harmony w/ nature leads gains
astronomy, botany, chemistry - Co-existed w/Confucianism, Buddhism, Legalism
- Added to complexity of Chinese culture
80Contrast Confucianism-Daoism
- Shared belief in spirits of the dead
- Confucianism
- creating orderly society
- active relationships, active govt
- To guide relationships
- Daoism
- harmony with nature, internal peace
- Simple, passive life
- Little govt interference
- To guide individual in meditation
81Legalsim
- The Qin Dynasty
- Peace order through centralized, tightly
controlled state - Mistrust of human nature reliance on tough laws
- Focus on things the practical and sustainers of
society - 2 most worthy jobs farmer, soldier
82The Big Deal?
- Accomplished swift reunification of China
- Completion of projects like the Great Wall
- Caused widespread resentment among common people,
led to wider acceptance of Confucianism-Daoism
83Contrast Confucianism-Legalism
- Social belief systems, not religions
- Intended to create orderly society
- Confucianism-fundamental goodness
- responsibilities
- Legalism-fundamental evil
- punishments
84Origins of World Belief Systems
85Buddhism
- India, China, SE Asia
- Hindu prince, Siddartha Gautama
- Nepal 563-483 BCE
- Search for meaning of human suffering
- Buddha enlightened one
- No supreme being
86Buddhism 4 Noble Truths
- Four noble truths
- All Life is suffering
- Suffering caused by desire
- One can be freed of desire
- Freed by following Eightfold path
87Buddhism Eightfold Path
- Eightfold Path
- Right views
- Right aspirations
- Right speech
- Right conduct
- Right livelihood
- Right endeavor
- Right mindfulness
- Right meditation
- Following the path
- Leads to nirvana
- State of perfect peace harmony
- May take several lifetimes
- 2 forms
- Theraveda meditation, harmony, Buddha not a god
(Lesser Vehicle) - Mahayana more complex, greater ritual, reliance
on priests. Buddha a diety, bodhisattvas, nirvana
helpers
88The Big Deal?
- Did not recognize castes
- Appealed to lower classes (duh!)
- Not attached to social structure, spread rapidly
to other cultures - Ashoka adopted, thrived
- Eventually reabsorbed into Hinduism
- Thrived in China, Japan, SE Asia
- Force of cultural diffusion via trade,
missionaries
89Origins of World Belief Systems
90Christianity
- Splinter group of Jews, quickly spread throughout
Roman Empire - Jesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish prophecy
- Devotion to God, love of fellow man
- Jesus sent to redeem man from sin
- Salvation by faith in divinity, death, and
resurrection of Jesus. - Crucified by Jewish leaders and Roman govt 30
CE
91The Big Deal
- Emphasis on compassion, grace through faith,
salvation, eternal life after death appealed to
lower classes, women - By 300 CE, most influential in Med. Region
- Spread north and west throughout Europe
- Combo of religion empire huge impact on
political, social development of Europe
92Origins of World Belief Systems
93Mauryan Empire 321-180 BCE
94Mauryan Empire
- Founded by Chandragupta Maurya
- Unified smaller Aryan kingdoms
- Greatest extent under Ashoka
- Big time traders silk, cotton, elephants (much
more) to the west - Strong military, Ashoka converts to Buddhism
non-violence, moderation - Rock Pillar edicts, Buddhism spread
95Gupta Dynasty 320-467 CE
96Rise of Gupta
- Ashoka dies 232 BCE, Mauryans rapidly decline
econ problems, attacks from NE - 375-415 CE, revival under Chandra Gupta
- Smaller, more decentralized Golden Age, peace,
Arts Sciences pi, zero, 0-9, skilled iron
workers - Hinduism resurgent
- Women lost rights own property, study religion,
child marriages common - (6-7 years-old)
- Collapsed 550 CE (White Huns)
97 Qin Empire
98Qin Ups in China 221-209 BCE
- Same same strong agri-econ, strong army, iron,
expansiononly lasted 10 years. Significance? - GREAT WALLso what?
- Strong centralized, brutal govt
- Qin Shihuangdi emperor
- Unified kingdom, standardized weights, measures,
laws, written lang., zero dissent policy,
patriarchal society - Legalism
- Peasant rebellion brings down 209 BCE
99A big hand for the Han!
100Han Dynasty 200 BCE-200 CE
- Resisted the Huns
- Expanded into Central Asia
- Silk Road to the Mediterranean
- Buddhism spread, culture spread
- Civil Service system, bureaucracies, resulting in
stable govt. - paper money, sundials, calendars, metallurgy
101Classical Civs in the Med
102Greece and Rome Roots of Western Civilization
- Simply they put it all together
- Representative govt
- Art
- Architecture
- Literature
- Science
- Philosophy
103Its Greek to me!
- Impact of geography
- Trade, not agri.
- Est. colonies, strong military
- Communications
- Transportation
- Governance
104The Polis
- City-states
- Common identity, culture in each
- Athens
- Political, commercial, cultural center
- Sparta
- Agricultural, militaristic, equality w/o
individuality
105Hierarchy
- Citizens-adult males, business-commerce
- Free people w/ no political rights
- Non-citizens (included slaves 1/3 of the Athenian
pop!) - All citizens expected to participate in public
life - Monarchy to aristocracy to democracy
- Solon/Draco aristocrats who worked to ensure
fair, , open participation
106Religion
- Polytheistic
- Had human failings got drunk, cheated on
spouses, jealous, angry, took sides, etc. - Greek mythology remains a large part of Western
heritage and language
107War with Persia
- Persia invades Greece twice. Despite great odds,
Greece survives. Key battles Marathon 490 BCE
(land), Salamis 480 BCE (sea) - Greece controls Aegean
- Period of peace and prosperity
108Golden Age of Pericles
- Athenian culture excels
- Democracy for all adult males (citizens)
- Delian League-city-state alliance
- Socrates, Plato, Aristotle
- Truth through rational thought and observation
- Math, Science, Architecture, Literature
109Super-power, super mistake
- Athens dominated the Delian League
- Peloponnesian War with Sparta (431 BCE)
- Weakened, Macedonian conquest
- Philip encouraged Greek culture
- Followed by son, Alexander, unified Greece,
invaded Persia
110Alexander the Great?
111Live fast, die young
- Alexander conquered Persia
- Pushed to Egypt
- Stopped at India
- Empire divided into three
- Antigonid (Greece/Macedonia)
- Ptolemaic (Egypt),
- Seleucid (Bactria/Anatolia)
112Hellenistic Era
- Greek Culture and ideas flourished and spread
- Alexandria (Egypt) became wealthy, center for
learning - After death (323 BCE), empire crumbled
- Macedonian focus on the east and Egypt left the
door open for
113The Romans 509 BCE-476 CE
114Rome
- Good Geographic position
- Protected by mtns in north
- Peninsula
- Cross-roads in the Mediterranean
- Polytheistic, borrowed many Greek gods, mythology
still evident in West
115Social-Political Structure
- Patricians
- Senate, Assembly
- Plebians
- Assembly
- Consuls
- Representative (as opposed to Direct in Greece)
- 12 Tables (innocent until proven guilty)
- Patriarchal/Paterfamilias
- Women influential in family, own property, still
considered inferior - Slaves (up to 1/3) city better than country
116Military Domination
- All Directions, all the time
- Punic Wars 264-146 BCE
- Gained control of W. Med
- Defeated Macedonians
- Gaul
- Spain
- Road net, navy, aqueducts
- Cultural diffusion
117Republic, no-Imperialism, yes
- Increased slavery, displaced plebians, inflation
social unrest - Senate weakened, Triumvirate, Caesar, Pompey,
Crassus, Civil War - Caesar assassinated 44 BCE
- 2nd Triumvirate, civil war
- Imperial Rome
- Pax Romana
118Pax Romana
119Peace and Prosperity
- Rome, capital of western world
- Military expansion
- Rule of law, common coinage. Civil service,
secure travel for merchants - 200 years of stability
- Uniform laws, but traditional cultures in
territories survived ie Egyptians, Hebrews - Growth of arts and sciences
120A New Religion
- Christianity competes with paganism
- Christians persecuted
- Conversion of Constantine ended persecution 312
CE - Edict of Milan-Christianity official religion of
Rome
121COMPARE
- Golden Ages of Rome, Greece, Gupta, Others
- Expansion of Territory, flourishing of art and
science - Wealth flows in due to military expansion,
confidence
122Symbols of Legitimacy
123Artistic Expressions including literature and
drama, architecture and sculpture, show
distinctive cultural development
124 125 Technology
126Achievements
- Greek science and philosophy
- Roman law and architecture
- Political organization in Han China
- Spiritual and artistic developments in Gupta India
127 Details- Cultural and Intellectual Expressions
- Emergence of religions- The emergence of the
Classical age or Axial Age (Emergence of core
belief or philosophical structures of a society.
) - Mathematics- number systems develop. India
creates the Arabic numbers and algebra. - Engineering
128 Development of States and Empire
- Number and size of states and empires grows
dramatically by
129Structure and Function of State
- large Coercive tribute empires.
- Centralized governments
- Use of military to control conquered areas
- Elaborate Legal systems and Bureaucracies
- Pax Romana
- Empires follow Conrad-Demarest model- grow large
and wealthy, then too large, corrupted and
fragment. Often from outside pressureHuns in
Rome. - Large empires cause environmental problems
- Silted rivers, Deforestation, Desertification,
soil erosion.
130Urbanization and Gender
- How might gender roles be affected as peoples
settled?
131 Social and Gender Structures
- Class/Caste structures divide societies.
- Use of slave/coercive labor
- Extremely Patriarchal societies
- Enforced through religion/philosophies
- Women's rights become less pronounced
- Child marriage
- Role in Confucian society
- Role as Mother (in warrior cultures)
132Emergence of Transregional Networks of
Communication and Exchange
- Ideas, diseases, religions, goods travel
- Silk Roads, Mediterranean Sea, Indian Ocean,
Trans-Saharan Caravan Routes - Silk, Spices,Cotton travel east to west
- Glassware, Wool and Linen, Olive Oil travel west
to east - Domesticated Pack Animals to transport longer
distances - Horses, Oxen, Llamas, Camel (saddle)
133Collapse of Empires
- Why do Empires fall?
- Conrad-Demarest Model
134What goes up
- Empires fall
- Late Classical Period 200-600 CE
- Steppe People on the move, dominoes fall
- Han, Gupta, Roman Empires fall
135Collapse of the Han
- Wang Mang 9-23 CE, Socialist Emperor
- Economic
- Military drained budget
- Confiscate land, raise taxes
- Actions discouraged manufacture and trade
136Collapse of the Han
- Social
- Rising tensions between rich and poor
- Poorly conceived land reform program
- Famine
- Revolt, murder of Wang Mang
- Han Dynasty briefly restored, full recovery
impossible, collapse in 220 CE - 400 years of regional kingdoms
137Collapse of the Gupta
- Huns 24/7
- Gupta able to hold off for a while, at great cost
- Hun kingdoms emerged in western northern India
- Culture survived, Hinduism, caste system, Gupta
Empire did not
138Western Rome, you are the weakest link, good-bye
- 284 CE, Diocletian splits W-E Empire
139Why?
- Attempt to re-gain control of
- Military under imperial control
- Co-emperors
- Economy
- Govt budget
- Price caps to control inflation
- Strengthen currency
140Collapse
- No singular reason
- Rome sacked 410 CE, 476 CE
- Internal decay
- Weak or bad leaders
- Expense of empire
- Epidemics
- External pressures
- Huns, Visigoths
- Sheer size
141CONTRAST Fall of Han, Gupta, Rome
- Two major causes threaten all empires
- Internal economic depression, natural
catastrophes, social unrest - External Invading Armies
- Internal Han
- External Gupta
- Combo Meal Rome
142 Movement of people
- Bantu continue movement to Southern Africa
- Swahili
- Farming
- Iron Working
- Autroneasian across the Pacific
- Movement along trade routes
143Early Migrations
144Interregional Networks of People by 600 C.E.
- Silk Roads
- Mediterranean trade
- Indian Ocean trade
- Meso and Andean American trading
145Silk Routes
146Mediterranean Trade Routes
147Indian Ocean Trade
148Cultural Diffusion via the Silk Road
149Ideas, Culture, Invention
- Trade routes brought various peoples in contact
- Pastoralists provided protection, services,
supplies - Disease and armies also traveled the routes,
plague, small pox, Mongols - Religion-Buddhism to China, SE Asia
- Christianity through Med, Europe, Britain
- Peoples Anglo-Saxons to Britain, Huns to India,
Germanic Tribes to Italy
150Conclusions
- How do we know what we know?
- How does change happen?
- What results stem from interaction through
migration, trade or pilgrimage? - Why do world historians need to pose questions
differently than regional specialists?