WHAP Review 1 Foundations Period 8000 BCE 600
WHAP Review #1 Foundations Period: 8000 BCE- 600 CE
Tests Foundations Part 1 =50 multiple choice-bring a pencil TERMS Part 2 =2 Essays. Outlines due BEFORE test. You don’t know which two. I don’t know which two!
Nomads: Follow the Food Foragers: Hunt & Gather u Tied to nature u Few possessions u Egalitarian nature u Pastoralists: Domestication of Animals u Mtns. /low rainfall areas u Male-dominated u Stratified as size of herds grew u Leads to… u
The Neolithic Revolution: 8000 -3000 BCE u u u Agriculturalists: Plant Domestication Community Development Permanent settlements Idea of land ownership: World View Shift Sustained culture Sense of identity
Consequences of a Food Surplus u u u u u Specialization of labor Improved technology: metal working, irrigation Stratification of society Possessions Armies Religion Writing Government Population density increases Voila…Civilization
Environmental Impact Use of water resources u Clearing of land u Use of building materials u Roads u Use of fuel materials u Animals, disease u Mining u
River Valley Civs u Mesopotamia – Tigris, Euphrates = Fertile Crescent – Sumer, Babylon, Persia – Unpredictable flooding
Sumer: The first u Successful agriculture, river management u Writing, cuneiforms u Use of wheel u 12 month calendar, base 60, geometry u Polytheistic u Ziggurats u Ur, Erech, Kish 3000 BCE u Overthrown by Akkadians 1700 BCE
Walk Like an Egyptian Rich soil, gentle flooding • 3 Kingdoms • water management, pyramids, astronomy, hieroglyphs, calendar, gold, spices • Polytheistic • Women rulers (Nefertiti), 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
Indus Valley
Indus Valley: 2500 -1500 BCE u Outside contact more limited u Kyber Pass connection to outside u Harrappa, Mohenjo-Daro 100, 000+ each u Master-planned, water system, strong central gov’t, polytheistic, written language u Pottery, cotton, cloth u Cities abandoned, reason unknown u Aryans arrive 1500 BCE
Aryans From Caucasus Mtns. Black/Caspian Sea u Nomads who settled u Vedas, Upanashads basis for Hinduism u Caste system u warriors, priests, peasants u Brahmins (priests), warriors(kshatriya), landowners-merchants (Vaishya), peasants(Shudras), untouchables (out castes) u
China: Shang on the Huang-He
Shang: 1600 -1100 BCE u Stable agri-surplus, trade-centered u N. China, walled cities, strong army, chariots u “The Middle Kingdom” World View u Trade with Mesopotamia u Bronze, pottery, silk, decimal system, calendar u Patriarchal, ancestors as advocates w/the gods
It’s Zhou Time u Replaced Shang around 1100 BCE u Ruled 900 years, kept customs, traditions u Mandate of Heaven u Feudal system, nobles gained, bureaucracies, war amongst feudal kingdoms, collapse 256 BCE
The Classics: India-China u 4 key empires 300 BCE-500 CE u India – Maurya – Gupta u China – Q’in – Han
Mauryan Empire 321 -180 BCE
Mauryan Empire u Founded by Chandragupta Maurya – Unified smaller Aryan kingdoms u Greatest extent under Ashoka u Big time traders: silk, cotton, elephants (much more) to the west u Strong military, Ashoka converts to Buddhism: non-violence, moderation u Rock & Pillar edicts, Buddhism spread
Gupta Dynasty 320 -467 CE
Rise of Gupta Ashoka dies 232 BCE, Mauryan’s rapidly decline; econ problems, attacks from NE u 375 -415 CE, revival under Chandra Gupta u Smaller, more decentralized: Golden Age, peace, Arts & Sciences; pi, zero, 0 -9, skilled iron workers u Hinduism resurgent u Women lost rights; own property, study religion, child marriages common (6 -7 years-old) u Collapsed 550 CE (White Huns) u
Q’in Empire
Q’in Ups in China 222 -209 BCE u u Same same: strong agriecon, strong army, iron, expansion…only lasted 13/14 years. Significance? GREAT WALL…so what? – – – Strong centralized, brutal gov’t Shi Huangdi emperor Unified kingdom, standardized weights, measures, laws, written lang. , zero dissent policy, patriarchal society – Legalism – Peasant rebellion brings down 209 BCE
A big hand for the Han!
Han Dynasty 200 BCE-200 CE u Resisted the Huns u Expanded into Central Asia u Silk Road to the Mediterranean u Buddhism spread, culture spread u Civil Service system, bureaucracies, resulting in stable gov’t. u paper money, sundials, calendars, metallurgy
Classical Civs in the Med
Greece and Rome: Roots of Western Civilization u Simply: they put it all together u Representative gov’t u Architecture u Literature u Science u Philosophy
It’s Greek to me! Impact of geography u Trade, not agri. u Est. colonies, strong military u Communications u Transportation u Governance u
The Polis u City-states u Common identity, culture in each u Athens – Political, commercial, cultural center, Delian League u Sparta – Agricultural, militaristic, equality w/o individuality
Hierarchy Citizens-adult males, business-commerce u Free people w/ no political rights u Non-citizens (included slaves 1/3 of the Athenian pop!) u All citizens expected to participate in public life u Monarchy to aristocracy to democracy u Solon/Draco: aristocrats who worked to ensure fair, =, open participation u
Religion u Polytheistic u Had human failings: got drunk, cheated on spouses, jealous, angry, took sides, etc. u Greek mythology remains a large part of Western heritage and language
War with Persia u Persia invades Greece twice. Despite great odds, Greece survives. Key battles: Marathon 490 BCE (land), Salamis 480 BCE (sea) u Greece controls Aegean u Period of peace and prosperity
Golden Age of Pericles u Athenian culture excels u Democracy for all adult males (citizens) u Delian League-city-state alliance u Socrates, Plato, Aristotle – Truth through rational thought and observation u Math, Science, Architecture, Literature
Super-power, super mistake u Athens dominated the Delian League u Peloponnesian War with Sparta (431 BCE) u Weakened, Macedonian conquest u Philip encouraged Greek culture u Followed by son, Alexander, unified Greece, invaded Persia
Alexander the Great?
Live fast, die young… u Alexander conquered Persia u Pushed to Egypt u Stopped at India u Empire divided into three: – Antigonid (Greece/Macedonia) – Ptolemaic (Egypt), – Seleucid (Bactria/Anatolia)
Hellenistic Era u Greek Culture and ideas flourished and spread(Hellenistic culture) u Alexandria (Egypt) became wealthy, center for learning u After death (323 BCE), empire crumbled u Macedonian focus on the east and Egypt left the door open for…
The Romans: 509 BCE-476 CE
Rome u Good Geographic position – Protected by mtns in north – Peninsula – Cross-roads in the Mediterranean u Polytheistic, borrowed many Greek gods, mythology still evident in West
Social-Political Structure u u u u 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
Military Domination u All Directions, all the time u Punic Wars 264 -146 BCE u Gained control of W. Med u Defeated Macedonians u Gaul u Spain u Road net, navy, aqueducts u Cultural diffusion
Republic, no-Imperialism, yes u Increased slavery, displaced plebians, inflation= social unrest u Senate weakened, Triumvirate, Caesar, Pompey, Crassus, Civil War u Caesar assassinated 44 BCE u 2 nd Triumvirate, civil war u Imperial Rome u Pax Romana
Pax Romana
Peace and Prosperity u Rome, capital of western world u Military expansion u Rule of law, common coinage. Civil service, secure travel for merchants u 200 years of stability u Uniform laws, but traditional cultures in territories survived ie Egyptians, Hebrews u Growth of arts and sciences
A New Religion u Christianity competes with paganism u Christians persecuted u Conversion of Constantine ended persecution 312 CE u Edict of Milan(Constantine)Christianity official religion of Rome
COMPARE u Golden Ages of Rome, Greece, Gupta, Others u Expansion of Territory, flourishing of art and science u Wealth flows in due to military expansion, confidence
“What goes up…” u Empires fall u Late Classical Period 200 -600 CE u Steppe People on the move, dominoes fall u Han, Gupta, Roman Empires fall
Collapse of the Han u Wang Mang 9 -23 CE, “Socialist Emperor” u Economic – Military drained budget – Confiscate land, raise taxes – Actions discouraged manufacture and trade
Collapse of the Han u 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
Collapse of the Gupta u Huns 24/7 u Gupta able to hold off for a while, at great cost u Hun kingdoms emerged in western & northern India u Culture survived, Hinduism, caste system, Gupta Empire did not
“Western Rome, you are the weakest link, good-bye” u 284 CE, Diocletian splits W-E Empire
Why? u Attempt to re-gain control of – Military under imperial control – Co-emperors – Economy u Gov’t budget u Price caps to control inflation u Strengthen currency
Collapse u No singular reason u Rome sacked 410 CE, 476 CE u Internal decay – Weak or bad leaders Bread and circuses – Expense of empire – Epidemics u External pressures – Huns, Visigoths – Sheer size
CONTRAST: Fall of Han, Gupta, Rome u Two major causes threaten all empires u Internal: economic depression, natural catastrophes, social unrest u External: Invading Armies u Internal: Han u External: Gupta u Combo Meal: Rome
Cultural Diffusion via the Silk Road
Ideas, Culture, Invention Trade routes brought various peoples in contact u Pastoralists provided protection, services, supplies u Disease and armies also traveled the routes, plague, small pox, Mongols u Religion-Buddhism to China, SE Asia u Christianity through Med, Europe, Britain u Peoples: Anglo-Saxons to Britain, Huns to India, Germanic Tribes to Italy u
Religion: to 600 CE
Belief Systems through 600 CE u Polytheism u Confucianism u Daoism u Legalism u Hinduism u Buddhism u Judaism u Christianity
Commonalities u Schisms-Divisions resulting in subgroups, sects u Consider social, political, cultural, military impacts as well as theological and philosophical u Where did it start? Where did he spread? How?
Polytheism u Majority of ancient civs u Through 600 CE all Med and Mesop Civs were poly. Exceptions were Hebrews and Christians u In the East, all were poly; Aryans, Hindus, traditional Chinese, Daoists, some Buddhists, Americas, Africa
The Deity Details Multiple gods, may be good or bad u Deities impact daily life u Human attributes (Grk-Rom) u Egypt: Benevolent and kind u Sumer, Aztec: Feared, to be appeased u
The Big Deal? major impact on civ development u Art & architecture u Ritual based u Rise of priestly class u Rigid social structures u Gods for culture as whole, city-state as well: rise and fall seen as battle of gods as well as city-states u
Confucianism u Specifically Chinese (Kong Fu Tse) 400 BCE onward u Political-social philosophy, not religion u Moral, ethical, also practical u How to restore political-social order? u 5 key relationships: political, parental, spousal, sibling, friends
Confucianism u Right relationships = right society u Put aside personal ambition for good of state u Ren-humanity, benevolence, kindness u Li-propriety, courtesy, respect, deference Xiao-filial piety, family obligation, extended u Lead by good example u Women, 2 nd status, honored by kids u
The Big Deal? u As a ethical, social, political belief system it was compatible with other religions, could practice Buddhism and Confucianism simultaneously u Flexible u Embraced by leaders as well, ordered society, tight families u Exclusively Chinese, only in context of Chinese culture
Daoism-Taoism u China 500 BCE onward u “The Way” (of nature/cosmos) u Lao-tzu, philosopher u Eternal principles, passive, yielding – Like water, yet strong, shaping – Opening of a pot, nothing, yet not a pot without it u Wu wei- non-doing, harmony with nature
The Big Deal? u Self-sufficient communities u Counter to Confucian activism u Emphasis on harmony w/ nature leads gains: astronomy, botany, chemistry u Co-existed w/Confucianism, Buddhism, Legalism u Added to complexity of Chinese culture
Contrast: Confucianism-Daoism Shared belief in spirits of the dead u Confucianism u – creating orderly society – active relationships, active gov’t – To guide relationships u Daoism – harmony with nature, internal peace – Simple, passive life – Little gov’t interference – To guide individual in meditation
Legalism u The Q’in Dynasty u Peace & order through centralized, tightly controlled state u Mistrust of human nature; reliance on tough laws u Focus on things the practical and sustainers of society u 2 most worthy jobs: farmer, soldier
The Big Deal? u Accomplished swift reunification of China u Completion of projects like the Great Wall u Caused widespread resentment among common people, led to wider acceptance of Confucianism-Daoism
Contrast: Confucianism-Legalism u Social belief systems, not religions u Intended to create orderly society u Confucianism-fundamental goodness – responsibilities u Legalism-fundamental – punishments evil
Hinduism Aryans, and empires of Indian subcontinent u Brahma-supreme force u – Gods are manifestations of Brahma u Vishnu-preserver u Shiva-destroyer u Reincarnation – Dharma: rules and obligations – Karma: fate based on how dharma was met – Moshka: highest state of being, release of soul
The Big Deal? u Religion as well as social system u Caste system, accept lot in life, next one will be better (if dharma met) u Close relationship w/Indian culture, caste system have limited its spread u Treatment of animals u Hinduism spawns Buddhism
Buddhism u India, China, SE Asia u Hindu prince, Siddartha Gautama u Nepal 563 -483 BCE u Search for meaning of human suffering u Buddha = enlightened one u No supreme being
Buddhism: 4 Noble Truths u Four noble truths – All Life is suffering – Suffering caused by desire – One can be freed of desire – Freed by following Eightfold path
Buddhism: Eightfold Path u Eightfold Path – – – – Right Right views aspirations speech conduct livelihood endeavor mindfulness meditation u Following the path – Leads to nirvana – State of perfect peace & harmony – May take several lifetimes u 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”
The Big Deal? Did not recognize castes u Appealed to lower classes (duh!) u Not attached to social structure, spread rapidly to other cultures u Ashoka adopted, thrived u Eventually reabsorbed into Hinduism u Thrived in China, Japan, SE Asia u Force of cultural diffusion via trade, missionaries u
Judaism The Hebrews u Chosen by God, special status u Personal relationship with God u Afterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy, personal salvation u To honor, serve God, promote prophets, maintain cultural identity u A religion & culture u The First Monotheistic Belief System: u – Christianity – Islam
Compare: Confucianism, Hinduism, Judaism u Seem very different – Confucianism, not a religion – Hinduism, polytheistic – Judaism, monotheistic u All tied to the culture where they came from, not evangelical, converting others
Christianity u Splinter group of Jews, quickly spread throughout Roman Empire u Jesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish prophecy u Devotion to God, love of fellow man u Jesus sent to redeem man from sin u Salvation by faith in divinity, death, and resurrection of Jesus. u Crucified by Jewish leaders and Roman gov’t 30 CE
The Big Deal Emphasis on compassion, grace through faith, salvation, eternal life after death appealed to lower classes, women u By 300 CE, most influential in Med. Region u Spread north and west throughout Europe u Combo of religion & empire = huge impact on political, social development of Europe u
Foundations: 3 Themes u Civilizations u Sources of Change u Man vs. Nature – Patterns, developments – Rise-fall of empires: why? consequences? – Trade – Conquest – Invention, innovation, adaptation; iron, wheel – Interaction? Role of geography? Attempts to measure/control? – Change from survival (physical needs) to internal peace (spiritual needs)
- Slides: 82