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AP World History Period 1 Flashcards

From Hunting and Gathering to Civilizations, 2.5 million-1000 B.C.E.: Origins

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10659414579Hunting and GatheringMeans of obtaining subsistence by humans before the mastery of sedentary agriculture; normally typical of tribal social organization0
10659414580CivilizationSocieties with reliance on sedentary agriculture, ability to produce food surpluses, and existence of nonfarming elites, along with merchant and manufacturing groups1
10659414581NeolithicThe New Stone Age between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; period in which adaptation of sedentary agriculture occurred; domestication of plants and animals accomplished2
10659414582NomadsCattle- and sheep-herding societies normally found on the fringes of civilized societies; commonly referred to as "barbarian" by civilized societies3
10659414583CultureCombination of ideas, objects, and patterns of behavior that result from human social interaction4
10659414584Agrarian revolutionOccurred between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; transition from hunting and gathering to sedentary agriculture5
10659414585PastoralismA nomadic agricultural lifestyle based on herding domesticated animals; tended to produce independent people capable of challenging sedentary agricultural societies6
10659414586Catal HuyukEarly urban culture based on sedentary agriculture; located in modern southern Turkey; larger in population than Jericho, had greater degree of social stratification7
10659414587Bronze AgeFrom 4000 to 3000 B.C.E.; increased use of plow, metalworking; development of wheeled vehicles, writing8
10659414588MesopotamiaLiterally "between the rivers"; the civilization that arose in the alluvial plain of the Tigris-Euphrates river valleys9
10659414589Potter's wheelA technological advance in pottery making; invented circa 6000 B.C.E.; encouraged faster and higher-quality ceramic pottery products10
10659414590SumeriansPeople who migrated into Mesopotamia circa 4000 B.C.E.; created the first civilization within the region; organized area into city-states11
10659414591CuneiformA form of writing developed by the Sumerians using a wedge-shaped stylus and clay tablets12
10659414592City-stateA form of political organization typical of Mesopotamian civilization; consisted of agricultural hinterlands ruled by an urban-based king13
10659414593ZigguratsMassive towers usually associated with Mesopotamian temple connections14
10659414594Babylonian EmpireUnified all of Mesopotamia circa 1800 B.C.E.; collapsed due to foreign invasion circa 1600 B.C.E.15
10659414595HammurabiThe most important Babylonian ruler; responsible for codification of the law16
10659414596PharaohThe term used to denote the kings of ancient Egypt; the term, "great house" refers to the palace of the pharaohs17
10659414597PyramidsMonumental architecture typical of Old Kingdom Egypt; used as burial sites for pharaohs18
10659414598HieroglyphsForm of writing developed in ancient Egypt; more pictorial than Mesopotamian cuneiform19
10659414599KushAfrican state that developed along the upper reaches of the Nile circa 1000 B.C.E.; conquered Egypt and ruled it for several centuries20
10659414600MonotheismThe exclusive worship of one god; introduced by Jews into Middle Eastern civilization21
10659414601PhoeniciansSeafaring civilization located on the shores of the eastern Mediterranean; established colonies throughout the Mediterranean22
10659414602Harappa and Mohenjo DaroMajor urban complexes of Harappan civilization; laid out on planned grid pattern23
10659414603AryansIndo-European nomadic, warlike, pastorialists who replaced Harappan civilization24
10659414604Huanghe (Yellow) River BasinSite of the development of sedentary agriculture in China25
10659414605Shang1st Chinese dynasty26
10659414606OraclesShamans or priests in Chinese society who foretold the future through interpreting animal bones cracked by heat; inscriptions on bones led to Chinese writing27
10659414607Ideographic writingPictograph characters grouped together to create new concepts; typical of Chinese writing28
10659414608Big GeographyA term that draws attention to the global nature of world history.29
10659414609PaleolithicThe period that ended about 3,000 years after the end of the last Ice Age, it lasted until about 10,000 years ago. (Old Stone Age) The period of the Stone Age associated with the evolution of humans. It predates the Neolithic period.30
10659414610Path of migration for humans during Paleolithic eraFrom Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas31
10659414611EglitarianBelieving in the equality of all peoples32
10659414612Humans developed a wider range of ____ specially adapted to different environments from tropics to tundratools33
10659414613Neolithic RevolutionGlobal conversion to agriculture over hunter-gatherer lifestyles34
10659414614PatriarchyFather based35
10659414615Permanent agricultural villages emerged first in the lands of the eastern Mediterranean, possibly as a response to what?climatic change36
10659414616Pastoralists were often the developers and disseminators of of ____ and ___ that transformed warfare in agrarian civilizationsnew weapons modes of transportation37
10659414617name one mode of new transportation by the pastoralistsChariots Horseback riding38
10659414618Elites, both political and religious, promoted ____ and ____arts artisanship39
10659414619____ arose independently arose independently in all early civilization and subsequently were diffusedsystems of record keeping40
10659414620_____ developed in this period continued to have strong influences in later periodsNew religious beliefs41

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