Ap World History, Unit 1 Ch 2
79559184 | Agricultural village | A relatively small, egalitarian village, where most of the population was involved in agriculture. Starting over 10,000 years ago, people began to cluster in agricultural villages as they stayed in one place to tend their crops. | 0 | |
79559185 | Fertile Crescent/Mesopotamia | a geographical area of fertile land in the Middle East stretching in a broad semicircle from the Nile to the Tigris and Euphrates | 1 | |
79559186 | Sumer | An ancient region of southern Mesopotamia which rose around 3300 B.C. The first empire that ruled in Mesopotamia and is credited with inventing writing. | 2 | |
79559187 | Sargon of Akkad | an ancient Mesopotamian ruler who reigned approximately 2334-2279 BC, and was one of the earliest of the world's great empire builders, conquering all of southern Mesopotamia as well as parts of Syria, Anatolia, and Elam (western Iran). He established the region's first Semitic dynasty and was considered the founder of the Mesopotamian military tradition. | 3 | |
79559188 | Gilgamesh | a legendary Sumerian king who was the hero of an epic collection of mythic stories. | 4 | |
79559189 | Ziggurat | a rectangular tiered temple or terraced mound erected by the ancient Assyrians and Babylonians. | 5 | |
79559190 | Pictograms | the earliest forms of writing in which pictures represent words or ideas. | 6 | |
79559191 | Cuneiform | Sumerian writing made by pressing a wedge-shaped tool into clay tablets | 7 | |
79559192 | Ideograms | The system of writing used in China and other East Asian countries in which each symbol represents an idea or concept rather than a specific sound, as is the case with letters in English. | 8 | |
79559193 | Code of Hammurabi | the set of laws drawn up by Babylonian king Hammurabi dating to the 18th century BC, the earliest legal code known in its entirety. | 9 |