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Mesopotamia:
“The Cradle of Civilization”
Earliest Civilization: the
Fertile Crescent


earliest of all civilizations as people formed
permanent settlements



Mesopotamia is a Greek word that means
“between the rivers”, specifically, the area
between the Tigris River and Euphrates River
(present day Iraq)



Lasted for approximately 3000 years



Its peoples were the first to irrigate fields,
devised a system of writing, developed
mathematics, invented the wheel and learned to
work with metal
Geographic Conditions


Little rainfall



Hot and dry climate



windstorms leaving muddy river valleys in
winter



catastrophic flooding of the rivers
in spring



Arid soil containing little minerals



No stone or timber resources
Then why live in
Mesopotamia?

NATURAL LEVEES: embankments produced by build-up of sediment
over thousands of years of flooding
Natural Levee



create a high and safe flood plain



make irrigation and canal construction easy



provide protection



the surrounding swamps were full of fish &
waterfowl



reeds provided food for sheep / goats



reeds also were used as building resources
History of Mesopotamia
 Over the centuries, many different people

lived in this area creating a collection of
independent states
 Sumer- southern part (3500-2000 BCE)
 Akkad- northern part (2340 – 2180 BCE)
 Babylonia- these two regions were unified
(1830-1500 BCE and 650-500 BCE)
 Assyria- Assyrian Empire (1100 -612
BCE)
Religion




gods were worshipped at
huge temples called
ziggurats
Polytheistic religion consisting of
over 3600 gods and demigods

Position of King was enhanced
and supported by religion
Kingship believed to be created
by gods and the king’s power
was divinely ordained



Belief that gods lived on the
distant mountaintops



Each god had control of certain
things and each city was ruled
by a different god



Kings and priests acted as
interpreters as they told the
people what the god wanted
them to do (ie. by examining the
liver or lungs of a slain sheep)

Prominent Mesopotamian gods
Enlil (supreme god & god of air)
Ishtar (goddess of fertility & life)
An (god of heaven)
Enki (god of water & underworld)
Shamash (god of sun and giver of
law)
Ziggurat
s




Ziggurat of Ur -2000BCE







Large temples dedicated to
the god of the city
Made of layer upon layer of
mud bricks in the shape of
a pyramid in many tiers
(due to constant flooding
and from belief that gods
resided on mountaintops)
Temple on top served as
the god’s home and was
beautifully decorated
Inside was a room for
offerings of food and goods
Temples evolved to
ziggurats- a stack of 1-7
platforms decreasing in size
from bottom to top
Famous ziggurat was
Tower of Babel (over 100m
above ground and 91m
base)






Political structure an early form of
democracy
Frequent wars led to the
emergence of warriors as leaders
Eventually rise of monarchial
system
co-operation was the basis of
government
Followed leadership of god of the
city which was interpreted by a
council of leading citizens > or >
priests > or leader of the city (ie.
king)
Sumerians













social, economic and intellectual basis
Irrigated fields and produced 3 main
crops (barley, dates and sesame seeds)
built canals, dikes, dams and drainage systems
develop cuneiform writing
invented the wheel
Abundance of food led to steady increase of population (farm, towns,
cities)
first city of the world
Developed a trade system with bartering: mainly barley but also wool
and cloth for stone, metals, timber, copper, pearls and ivory
Individuals could only rent land from priests (who controlled land on
behalf of gods); most of profits of trade went to temple
However, the Sumerians were not successful in uniting lower
Akkadians






Leader: Sargon the Great
Sargon unified lower Mesopotamia (after conquering Sumerians in
2331 BCE)
Established capital at Akkad
Spread Mesopotamian culture
However, short-lived dynasty as Akkadians were conquered by the
invading barbarians by 2200 BCE
Babylonians

KING HAMMURABI’S BABLYON









• Babylonians reunited Mesopotamia in
1830 BCE


• central location dominated trade and
secured control
• YET AGAIN, Mesopotamia was not
unified for long…



(6th Amorite king) who conquered
Akkad and Assyria (north and south)
He build new walls to protect the city
and new canals and dikes to improve
crops
Economy based on agriculture and
wool / cloth
individuals could own land around
cities
Artisans and merchants could keep
most profits and even formed guilds /
associations
Grain used as the medium of
exchange > emergence of
measurement of currency: shekel =
180 grains of barley; mina = 60
shekels
Mina was eventually represented by
metals which was one of first uses of
money (but it was still based on grain)
Hammurabi’s Legacy: law code
Code of Hammurabi


To enforce his rule, Hammurabi collected all the laws of
Babylon in a code that would apply everywhere in the land



Most extensive law code from the ancient world (c. 1800
BCE)



Code of 282 laws inscribed on a stone pillar placed in the
public hall for all to see



Hammurabi Stone depicts Hammurabi as receiving his
authority from god Shamash



Set of divinely inspired laws; as well as societal laws



Punishments were designed to fit the crimes as people must
be responsible for own actions



Hammurabi Code was an origin to the concept of “eye for an
eye…” ie. If a son struck his father, the son’s hand would
be cut off



Consequences for crimes depended on rank in society (ie.
only fines for nobility)









10 th century BCE, Assyria emerged as dominant force in the
north
City of Assur - became important trading and political centre
After Hammurabi’s death, Babylon fell apart and kings of
Assur controlled more of surrounding area and came to
dominate
Made conquered lands pay taxes (food, animals, metals or
timber)
Rule by fear as kings were first to have a permanent army
made up of professional soldiers (estimated 200 000 men)
Made superior weapons of bronze and iron
iron changed lifestyles in Mesopotamia in weapons and in
daily life ie. replaced wooden wheels and applied to horse
drawn chariots
• Assyrian reunited Mesopotamia and
established the first true empire
• However, states began to revolt and
ONCE AGAIN, Assyrian Empire
collapsed by late 7th century BCE

• By 539 BCE, Mesopotamia part of the
vast Persian Empire (led by Cyrus the
Great)
• Persian Empire dominated for 800
years until Alexander the Great
Development
Of
WRITING
Development of Writing


Click here to see the
development of writing
from pictograms to
cuneiform



Pictograms: picture to show meaning
Ideograms: signs to represent words / ideas
Phonetics: signs to represent sounds




*Phonetics are the basis of most writing systems
Writing


Greatest contribution of Mesopotamia to
western civilization was the invention of
writing



allowed the transmission of knowledge,
the codification of laws, records to
facilitate trade / farming



Sumerians wrote on wet clay tablets with
the point of a reed > then dried in the
sun to make a tablet



Scribes were only ones who could read
and write and served as priests, record
keepers and accountants



As society evolved, the first form of
writing was developed called
CUNEIFORM (meaning “wedge
shaped”), dating to 3500 BCE



Cuneiform spread to Persia and Egypt
and became the vehicle for the growth
and spread of civilization and the
exchange of ideas among cultures
Gilgamesh


Gilgamesh is an ancient story or epic
written in Mesopotamia more than
4000 thousand years ago



Gilgamesh is the first known work of
great literature and epic poem



Epic mentions a great flood



Gilgamesh parallels the Nippur
Tablet , a six-columned tablet telling
the story of the creation of humans
and animals, the cities and their
rulers, and the great flood



ANALYSIS
Gilgamesh and the Nippur tablet both
parallel the story of Noah and the
Ark (great flood) in the Old
Testament of the Jewish and
Christian holy books



Modern science argues an increase
in the sea levels about 6,000 years
ago (end of ice age)



the melting ice drained to the oceans
causing the sea level to rise more
than ten feet in one century
Royal Tombs
of Ur


From 1922 to 1934, excavation of
the ancient Sumerian city of Ur



City famed in Bible as the home of
patriarch Abraham



discoveries such as extravagant
jewelry of gold, cups of gold and
silver, bowls of alabaster, and
extraordinary objects of art and
culture



opened the world's eyes to the full
glory of ancient Sumerian culture

Great Death Pit

mass grave containing the bodies
of 6 guards and 68 servants
 grave was a great funeral
procession
 drank poison, choosing to
accompany the kings and queens in
the afterlife
Interesting Facts!






Mesopotamia, specifically Babylon used a
mathematical system based on sixty as all their
numbers were expressed as parts of or multiples
of sixty
Some parts of the ‘base-sixty’ system still remain
today: 360 degrees in a circle, 60 seconds in a
minute and 60 minutes in 1 hour
Devised a calendar base on cycles of the moon
(number of days between the appearance of two
new moons was set as a month; 12 cycles made
up a year
Who was the best?
Sumer










Closely tied to
environment
Irrigation
techniques for
farming
wheel
Trade- bartering
Writing- cuneiform
Religion tied to
government as
priests and kings
made decision for
gods
ziggurats

Babylon
Production of food
through farming
 Private ownership
of land vs
ownership by the
gods
 Developed
mathematics and
calendar system
and system of units
for currency
 Hammurabi’s law
code


Assyria
Kings conquered
lands to create
empire of Assyria
 Cooler climate could
produce crops with
little irrigation
 Deposits of ore
allowed for
development and use


of iron
 Assyrian army
became most
effective military
force
Legacies of Mesopotamia
Revolutionary innovations emerged in
Mesopotamia such as:
 codified laws
 ziggurats
 Cuneiform
 Irrigation
 Metal working, tools
 Trade
 transportation
 wheel
 Writing
 mathematics
 prosperous living based on large scale agriculture

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Mesopotamia power point

  • 2. Earliest Civilization: the Fertile Crescent  earliest of all civilizations as people formed permanent settlements  Mesopotamia is a Greek word that means “between the rivers”, specifically, the area between the Tigris River and Euphrates River (present day Iraq)  Lasted for approximately 3000 years  Its peoples were the first to irrigate fields, devised a system of writing, developed mathematics, invented the wheel and learned to work with metal
  • 3.
  • 4. Geographic Conditions  Little rainfall  Hot and dry climate  windstorms leaving muddy river valleys in winter  catastrophic flooding of the rivers in spring  Arid soil containing little minerals  No stone or timber resources
  • 5. Then why live in Mesopotamia? NATURAL LEVEES: embankments produced by build-up of sediment over thousands of years of flooding
  • 6. Natural Levee  create a high and safe flood plain  make irrigation and canal construction easy  provide protection  the surrounding swamps were full of fish & waterfowl  reeds provided food for sheep / goats  reeds also were used as building resources
  • 7. History of Mesopotamia  Over the centuries, many different people lived in this area creating a collection of independent states  Sumer- southern part (3500-2000 BCE)  Akkad- northern part (2340 – 2180 BCE)  Babylonia- these two regions were unified (1830-1500 BCE and 650-500 BCE)  Assyria- Assyrian Empire (1100 -612 BCE)
  • 8. Religion   gods were worshipped at huge temples called ziggurats Polytheistic religion consisting of over 3600 gods and demigods Position of King was enhanced and supported by religion Kingship believed to be created by gods and the king’s power was divinely ordained  Belief that gods lived on the distant mountaintops  Each god had control of certain things and each city was ruled by a different god  Kings and priests acted as interpreters as they told the people what the god wanted them to do (ie. by examining the liver or lungs of a slain sheep) Prominent Mesopotamian gods Enlil (supreme god & god of air) Ishtar (goddess of fertility & life) An (god of heaven) Enki (god of water & underworld) Shamash (god of sun and giver of law)
  • 9. Ziggurat s   Ziggurat of Ur -2000BCE     Large temples dedicated to the god of the city Made of layer upon layer of mud bricks in the shape of a pyramid in many tiers (due to constant flooding and from belief that gods resided on mountaintops) Temple on top served as the god’s home and was beautifully decorated Inside was a room for offerings of food and goods Temples evolved to ziggurats- a stack of 1-7 platforms decreasing in size from bottom to top Famous ziggurat was Tower of Babel (over 100m above ground and 91m base)
  • 10.      Political structure an early form of democracy Frequent wars led to the emergence of warriors as leaders Eventually rise of monarchial system co-operation was the basis of government Followed leadership of god of the city which was interpreted by a council of leading citizens > or > priests > or leader of the city (ie. king)
  • 11. Sumerians           social, economic and intellectual basis Irrigated fields and produced 3 main crops (barley, dates and sesame seeds) built canals, dikes, dams and drainage systems develop cuneiform writing invented the wheel Abundance of food led to steady increase of population (farm, towns, cities) first city of the world Developed a trade system with bartering: mainly barley but also wool and cloth for stone, metals, timber, copper, pearls and ivory Individuals could only rent land from priests (who controlled land on behalf of gods); most of profits of trade went to temple However, the Sumerians were not successful in uniting lower
  • 12. Akkadians      Leader: Sargon the Great Sargon unified lower Mesopotamia (after conquering Sumerians in 2331 BCE) Established capital at Akkad Spread Mesopotamian culture However, short-lived dynasty as Akkadians were conquered by the invading barbarians by 2200 BCE
  • 13. Babylonians KING HAMMURABI’S BABLYON       • Babylonians reunited Mesopotamia in 1830 BCE  • central location dominated trade and secured control • YET AGAIN, Mesopotamia was not unified for long…  (6th Amorite king) who conquered Akkad and Assyria (north and south) He build new walls to protect the city and new canals and dikes to improve crops Economy based on agriculture and wool / cloth individuals could own land around cities Artisans and merchants could keep most profits and even formed guilds / associations Grain used as the medium of exchange > emergence of measurement of currency: shekel = 180 grains of barley; mina = 60 shekels Mina was eventually represented by metals which was one of first uses of money (but it was still based on grain) Hammurabi’s Legacy: law code
  • 14. Code of Hammurabi  To enforce his rule, Hammurabi collected all the laws of Babylon in a code that would apply everywhere in the land  Most extensive law code from the ancient world (c. 1800 BCE)  Code of 282 laws inscribed on a stone pillar placed in the public hall for all to see  Hammurabi Stone depicts Hammurabi as receiving his authority from god Shamash  Set of divinely inspired laws; as well as societal laws  Punishments were designed to fit the crimes as people must be responsible for own actions  Hammurabi Code was an origin to the concept of “eye for an eye…” ie. If a son struck his father, the son’s hand would be cut off  Consequences for crimes depended on rank in society (ie. only fines for nobility)
  • 15.        10 th century BCE, Assyria emerged as dominant force in the north City of Assur - became important trading and political centre After Hammurabi’s death, Babylon fell apart and kings of Assur controlled more of surrounding area and came to dominate Made conquered lands pay taxes (food, animals, metals or timber) Rule by fear as kings were first to have a permanent army made up of professional soldiers (estimated 200 000 men) Made superior weapons of bronze and iron iron changed lifestyles in Mesopotamia in weapons and in daily life ie. replaced wooden wheels and applied to horse drawn chariots • Assyrian reunited Mesopotamia and established the first true empire • However, states began to revolt and ONCE AGAIN, Assyrian Empire collapsed by late 7th century BCE • By 539 BCE, Mesopotamia part of the vast Persian Empire (led by Cyrus the Great) • Persian Empire dominated for 800 years until Alexander the Great
  • 17. Development of Writing  Click here to see the development of writing from pictograms to cuneiform  Pictograms: picture to show meaning Ideograms: signs to represent words / ideas Phonetics: signs to represent sounds   *Phonetics are the basis of most writing systems
  • 18. Writing  Greatest contribution of Mesopotamia to western civilization was the invention of writing  allowed the transmission of knowledge, the codification of laws, records to facilitate trade / farming  Sumerians wrote on wet clay tablets with the point of a reed > then dried in the sun to make a tablet  Scribes were only ones who could read and write and served as priests, record keepers and accountants  As society evolved, the first form of writing was developed called CUNEIFORM (meaning “wedge shaped”), dating to 3500 BCE  Cuneiform spread to Persia and Egypt and became the vehicle for the growth and spread of civilization and the exchange of ideas among cultures
  • 19. Gilgamesh  Gilgamesh is an ancient story or epic written in Mesopotamia more than 4000 thousand years ago  Gilgamesh is the first known work of great literature and epic poem  Epic mentions a great flood  Gilgamesh parallels the Nippur Tablet , a six-columned tablet telling the story of the creation of humans and animals, the cities and their rulers, and the great flood  ANALYSIS Gilgamesh and the Nippur tablet both parallel the story of Noah and the Ark (great flood) in the Old Testament of the Jewish and Christian holy books  Modern science argues an increase in the sea levels about 6,000 years ago (end of ice age)  the melting ice drained to the oceans causing the sea level to rise more than ten feet in one century
  • 20. Royal Tombs of Ur  From 1922 to 1934, excavation of the ancient Sumerian city of Ur  City famed in Bible as the home of patriarch Abraham  discoveries such as extravagant jewelry of gold, cups of gold and silver, bowls of alabaster, and extraordinary objects of art and culture  opened the world's eyes to the full glory of ancient Sumerian culture Great Death Pit  mass grave containing the bodies of 6 guards and 68 servants  grave was a great funeral procession  drank poison, choosing to accompany the kings and queens in the afterlife
  • 21. Interesting Facts!    Mesopotamia, specifically Babylon used a mathematical system based on sixty as all their numbers were expressed as parts of or multiples of sixty Some parts of the ‘base-sixty’ system still remain today: 360 degrees in a circle, 60 seconds in a minute and 60 minutes in 1 hour Devised a calendar base on cycles of the moon (number of days between the appearance of two new moons was set as a month; 12 cycles made up a year
  • 22. Who was the best? Sumer        Closely tied to environment Irrigation techniques for farming wheel Trade- bartering Writing- cuneiform Religion tied to government as priests and kings made decision for gods ziggurats Babylon Production of food through farming  Private ownership of land vs ownership by the gods  Developed mathematics and calendar system and system of units for currency  Hammurabi’s law code  Assyria Kings conquered lands to create empire of Assyria  Cooler climate could produce crops with little irrigation  Deposits of ore allowed for development and use  of iron  Assyrian army became most effective military force
  • 23. Legacies of Mesopotamia Revolutionary innovations emerged in Mesopotamia such as:  codified laws  ziggurats  Cuneiform  Irrigation  Metal working, tools  Trade  transportation  wheel  Writing  mathematics  prosperous living based on large scale agriculture

Editor's Notes

  1. Categorized as the earliest of all civilizations as people formed permanent settlements Mesopotamia is a Greek word that means “between the rivers” Specifically, the area between the Tigris River and Euphrates River (present day Iraq) Mesopotamia is not within the "Fertile crescent“, it is in the more desert area that the "Fertile crescent" arcs around
  2. Little rainfall for crops Hot and dry climate in the summers Winters brought fierce windstorms leaving muddy river valleys Springs brought catastrophic flooding of the rivers Arid soil containing little minerals No stone or timber resources
  3. Shows diversity of religion from different regions Yet all of Mesopotamia shared the same religion and the same prominent gods
  4. Important for gods to be honoured by religious ceremonies Ceremonies performed by priests in sacred temples Temples created from mud brick and placed on platforms due to constant flooding Temples evolved to ziggurats- a stack of 1-7 platforms decreasing in size from bottom to top Famous ziggurat was Tower of Babel (over 100m above ground and 91m base)
  5. Established the social, economic and intellectual basis of Mesopotamia First to develop writing in the form of cuneiform Sumerians are credited to have invented the wheel Became the first city of the world However, the Sumerians were not successful in uniting lower Mesopotamia
  6. Leader: Sargon the Great Sargon’s greatest achievement was the unification of lower Mesopotamia (after conquering Sumerians in 2331 BCE) Established capital at Akkad Spread Mesopotamian culture throughout Fertile Crescent Yet dynasty established by Sargon was short-lived… Akkadians were conquered by the invading barbarians by 2200 BCE
  7. 10th century BCE, Assyria emerged as dominant force Assyrian reunited Mesopotamia and established the first true empire Assyrian army was most feared due to their brutal, bloodthirsty & terrorizing tactics and use of iron weapons, battering rams, chariots Assyrian Empire stretched from Persian Gulf north and West to Syria, Palestine and Egypt However, states began to revolt and ONCE AGAIN, Assyrian Empire collapsed by late 7th century BCE By 539 BCE, Mesopotamia part of the vast Persian Empire (led by Cyrus the Great) Persian Empire dominated for 800 years until Alexander the Great
  8. From 1922 to 1934, an archaeologist named C. Leonard Woolley excavated the site of the ancient Sumerian city of Ur City famed in Bible as the home of patriarch Abraham many great discoveries such as extravagant jewelry of gold, cups of gold and silver, bowls of alabaster, and extraordinary objects of art and culture opened the world's eyes to the full glory of ancient Sumerian culture Great Death Pit Found at Ur was a mass grave containing the bodies of 6 guards and 68 court ladies (servants of kings and queens) servants walked down into the grave in a great funeral procession they drank a  poisoned  drink and fell asleep never to wake again, choosing to accompany the kings and queens in the afterlife
  9. codified laws the concept of kinship and the city-state the building of places of worship (ziggurats) the birthplace of writing (cuneiform) Invention of the wheel Oldest written records of a story of creation date back to Mesopotamia First civilization to make a prosperous living based on large scale agriculture