AP World History - Stearns
Chapter 1 – From Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations
- Introduction
- Human origin – 2.5 million years ago
- 1/4000 of earth’s existence – 24 hour day – last 5 minutes
- Human negatives and positives
- Aggressiveness, long baby time, back problems, death fears
- Grip, high/regular sex drive, omnivores, facial expressions, speech
- Paleolithic (Old Stone) Age –
- 5 million to 12000 BCE
- Simple tools – increase in size, brain capacity – Homo erectus
- Human origin – 2.5 million years ago
- Late Paleolithic Developments
- Homo sapiens sapiens – 120,000 years ago – killed off others?
- Population growth required change – 1 square mile to hunt/gather for 2 people
- Long breast feeding – limit fertility
- Relative gender equality – women harder, but both contributed
- Rituals for death, explain environment, rules for social behavior
- Greatest achievement – spread over earth
- Fire/animal skin
- 14,000 Great ice age ended
- Tools – sharpen animal bones, rafts
- Domesticated animals
- Conflicts w/ others – bone breaks/skull fractures
- Population growth required change – 1 square mile to hunt/gather for 2 people
- Knowledge based on cave paintings, tool remains, burial sites
- Homo sapiens sapiens – 120,000 years ago – killed off others?
- Neolithic (New Stone) Age Revolution
- Agriculture changed everything – could support more people
- Settle one spot – focus on economic, political, religious goals
- 14,000-10,000 BCE – 6 million to 100 million people
- Causes of Agriculture
- Population increase – better climate
- Big game animals decreasing – hunting yield declined
- Gradual change – harvesting wild grains to planting seeds
- New animals domesticated – pigs, sheep, goats, cattle
- Meat, skins, dairy
- Advantage to Europe?
- Why Middle East?
- Water source, fertile area, not forested, lacked animals
- “Revolution” gradual – many combined changes w/ hunting gathering – 1000 years
- Effects
- Longer work week – labor intensive
- Build houses, villages
- Varied clothing
- Resistance – too complicated, boring, difficult
- Disease – those in villages developed immunity – nomads died off/joined
- Some isolated societies still avoid
- Harsh climate, no exchange of knowledge
- Tough, nomadic invaders
- Nomads – not that influential accept for interaction
- Changes
- Specialization
- Technology – control of nature – storage facilities, pottery
- Metal tools – Bronze Age 3000 – Iron Age 1500 BCE
- Agriculture changed everything – could support more people
- Civilization
- Hunter/gatherer – no bigger than 60 – food runs out
- Other options – slash and burn
- Tribal bands – strong kinship – relatively small
- Benefits of settling
- Houses, wells, improvements used by future, irrigation
- Irrigation/defense required work together – organization from above
- Catal Huyuk – Turkey – 7000 BCE civilization studied
- Rooftop activity – broken bones
- Religious responsibilities/fertility gods – images
- Trade w/others for peace
- Definition – societies economic surplus > division of labor/social hierarchy
- Formal political organizations – no relation to family unit
- City benefits – wealth, exchange of ideas, artistic/intellectual expression, manufacturing/trade specialization
- Writing
- First - Cuneiform – wedge shaped Middle East
- Tax efficiently
- Contracts/treaties
- Build on past wisdom
- People look at world as something to be understood rationally
- Not all peoples literate, each civilization only a minority
- Greek term - Barbarians – civilization vs. nomads – wanderers
- Negatives of civilization
- Class/caste distinctions - slavery
- Separation between rulers/ruled
- Warlike
- Gender inequality – patriarchal – men get manufacturing, political, religious leaders
- Benefits of nomadic living
- More regulations – word of mouth
- Respect of elders/children
- Herding economies
- Technological improvements – stirrup, weaponry
- Impact on Environment
- Deforestation
- Erosion, flooding
- Hunter/gatherer – no bigger than 60 – food runs out
- In Depth: The Idea of Civilization in World History Perspective
- Differences between civilized and barbaric/savages long held
- Chinese – cultural, not biological or racial – could adapt
- American Indians – feared Chichimecs – sons of the dog
- Related to fear of invasion/outsiders common
- Civilis – of the citizens – Latin
- Rome – urban dwellers vs. forest/desert dwellers
- Greece – bar, bar – barbarians
- Historians initially – cultural differences, then 19th century racial differences
- Some races more inventive, moral, courageous, artistic
- Savage to civilized – white,yellow, red, brown, black
- Social Darwinism – historiography
- Justified European expansion – White Man’s Burden
- Ethnocentrism
- Some races more inventive, moral, courageous, artistic
- Other approach – civilization just one form of social organization
- All societies produce cultures, though might lack food surplus/specialization
- All peoples capable – but lack resources, historical circumstances, desire
- Differences between civilized and barbaric/savages long held
- Tigris-Euphrates Civilization
- Precedents
- Writing
- Law codes
- City planning/architecture
- Trade institutions & money
- Mesopotamia – land between two rivers
- One of 3 civilizations from scratch – Central America, China, Mesopotamia
- Farming required irrigation
- Sumerians 3500 BCE
- Cuneiform – scribes
- Sumerian art – frescoes for temples
- Science – astronomy – calendar/forecasts – aided agriculture
- Charts of constellations
- Ziggurats – first monumental architecture
- Role of geography
- Swift and unpredictable floods – religious
- Polytheism – punishment of humans through floods – Noah
- Gloomy – punishment in afterlife – hell
- Easy to invade – constant war
- City-states – king w/ divine authority
- Regulate religion
- Court system for justice
- Land worked by slaves – warfare created labor surplus
- Inventions – wheeled carts, fertilizer, silver money
- Babylonians
- Hammurabi – first codified law
- Procedure for courts
- Property rights
- Harsh punishments
- Hammurabi – first codified law
- Indo-European invasions from North
- Adopted culture
- Egyptian Civilization
- Benefited from trade/technology of Mesopotamia
- Geographic factors
- Difficult to invade
- Regular flooding cycle
- Economy – government directed vs. Mesopotamia – freedom
- Pharoahs – godlike – tombs – pyramids
- Interactions with Kush to the South
- Egyptian art – lively, cheerful, colorful – positive afterlife – surrounded by beauty
- Architecture influenced later Mediterranean
- Indian and Chinese River Valley Civilizations
- Indus River – Harappa/Mohenjo Daro
- Unique alphabet/art
- Harappan alphabet not deciphered
- Invasion plus invasion by Indo-Europeans – difficult to understand culture
- Unique alphabet/art
- Huanghe (Yellow River)
- Isolated, little overland trading
- History part fact/fiction
- State organized irrigation
- Elaborate intellectual life
- Writing – knotted ropes, scratches of lines, ideographic symbols
- Delicate art, musical interest
- Limited materials – basic housing
- Indus River – Harappa/Mohenjo Daro
- Heritage of the River Valley Civilizations
- Accomplishments
- Monuments
- Wheel
- Taming of horse
- Square roots
- Monarchies/bureaucracies
- Calendars/time
- Major alphabets
- How much are these civilizations “origin” of today
- Except for China, all have a break from past
- Roman empire – god-like king
- Slavery
- Scientific achievements – Greeks studied Egyptians
- East vs. West
- Mesopotamians – gap between humankind and nature
- China – basic harmony all live together
- Temple building, art, architecture – Mesopotamia to Middle East/Greece
- Mesopotamia – regional cultures created that could survive invasion
- Phoenicians – 22 letter alphabet
- Colonized – simplified number system
- Jews – morally/ethically based monotheistic religion
- Semitic people – small, relatively weak – only autonomous when region was in chaos
- Believed god- Jehovah – guided destinies of people
- Orderly, just – not whimsical
- Created moral code
- Religion basis for Christianity/Islam
- God’s compact with Jews
- Little conversion
- Minority position in Middle East
- Phoenicians – 22 letter alphabet
- The First Civilizations
- Clear division between river valley civilizations and classical civilizations
- Invasion/natural calamities – India
- Invasion/political decline – Egypt
- Mesopotamia – break but bridges – smaller cultures
- Values and institutions spread
- Theme emerges – “Steadily proliferating contacts against a background of often fierce local identity”
- Integrating force
- Local autonomy lessens – priests/kings increase power
- Four centers of civilization started
- Close neighbors – Egypt/Mesopotamia – different politics, art, beliefs on death
- Diversity and civilization worked together
- Clear division between river valley civilizations and classical civilizations
- Accomplishments
- Precedents
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