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Chapter 2 Out of the Mesopotamian Mud The Land Between Two Rivers  Western Civilization (What is it?) came from the cultures of the Ancient Near East The Land Between Two Rivers  Iran, Iraq, Israel, Syria and Jordan (Google Map) The Land Between Two Rivers The Land Between Two Rivers  Mesopotamia means – “the land between two rivers”  Tigris and Euphrates Rivers  3500 BC would begin to give rise to the 1st cities and nation states  Endless plain of mud with little vegetation  Reeds and small date palm trees  Few rocks The Land Between Two Rivers  Winds and storms would bring sudden death and     destroy crops and homes Worst floods usually came before harvest time Land was harsh and poor in every natural resource Destruction came quickly and without warning Zagros mountains were at the end of the mudflats to the north The Birth of the Gods  People believed the gods lived in the mountains  1st gods were linked to sky, rain, storms and agriculture  Mesopotamians saw the world as controlled by the gods and not random  They could not predict disasters so they felt gods acted arbitrarily  Felt that gods were punishing them for their sins with disasters  Felt world was hostile to humans with distant and uncaring gods The Birth of the Gods  People were very pessimistic  “Pleasure is beer” was found on stone tablets The World’s First Civilization  No natural borders to divide areas into states  Large empires could form because of no natural     barriers Many paths into Mesopotamia for invasions Sumerians began to pool labor, set up irrigation systems and develop a surplus of food Surplus of food allows cities to form Surplus requires administration which leads to government Mud and Reeds Mud and Reeds Mud and Reeds  Sumerians had no wood or stone which are basic     building materials Mud and reeds were used for a number of things Reeds: baskets, mats & firewood Mud: houses, palaces, tools, pots, & storage containers Mud was made into bricks with reeds or vegetables and dried in the sun Mud and Reeds  Pictures of mud and reed items Mud and Reeds  Floods would dissolve the mud  Sumerians erected temples to the gods that were made on      top of artificial mountains Ziggurats were the names of the temples 3000 years temples were built the same way Represent the 1st monumental structures and the beginning of architecture Saddam Hussein parked planes by ziggurats to avoid being bombed Technology in the 2nd Iraq War let the U.S. destroy them Mud and Reeds The Cuneiform Writing System  Sumerians developed the 1st form of writing on mud tablets  Tablets were baked if you wanted something permanent  Cuneiform = wedge writing = based on shapes on tablets The Cuneiform Writing System The Cuneiform Writing System  Profoundly important to develop a storehouse of       information that could be passed down over time Thoughts, dreams and fears could be carried forward Oldest documents were 1st used for tax records Oldest recipe is for beer Earliest form was simple pictures and then symbols Eventually symbols represent sounds that develop an alphabet Our language goes back to this time in some forms to 3500BC The Cuneiform Writing System  Cylinder seal is most common artifact found today  Round stone inscribed with an image that represents your signature to approve agreements  Cylinder seal was a status symbol worn around your neck The Cuneiform Writing System  Sumerians also developed a number system  One in base 10 and one in base 6  Base 10 is most common because of fingers and toes  Base 6 was used for timekeeping that is still used today The Cradle of Empires  Earliest cities had kings who ruled city and surrounding territory  King Sargon becomes the 1st king of Sumeria and founds Akkadian Empire The Cradle of Empires  King at the top and slaves below  This structure lasted 1000s of years and influenced     later civilizations for or against the system Akkadians developed a 7 day week, Romans 8, and Chinese 10 Future civilizations were based on Akkadian week Constant struggle with nature as cities dissolved into nothing Babylonians, Hittites, Chaldeans & Assyrians followed Akkadian Empire The Cradle of Empires