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Ancient Egypt

Egyptian art test

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Test Name: Egyptian Art 1. b. gold 2. c. Napoleon 3. a. dynasties 4. b. athletic and youthful 5. d. Amun; Ra; Ptah 6. b. ka 7. a. necropolis 8. a. Imhotep 9. c. Giza 10. d. Khafre 11. c. pectoral serdab 12. b. Thutmose III 13. b. house 14. b. papyrus 15. b. Hatshepsut 16. b. Valley of the Kings 17. a. The Palette of Narmer 18. b. very little 19. d. all of the above 20. a. hieroglyphics 21. c. palette 22. d. funerary temple 23. a. limestone 24. b. frontally 25. d. a coral necklace 26. b. bodily organs 27. b. his relaxed and animated pose 28. a. a squared grid 29. b. skill in their jobs 30. c. stelae 31. b. the hypostyle hall 32. a. pylon 33. c. male king 34. a. sunken 35. c. core-formed 36. a. Carter 37. a. south/b. north 38. a. Djoser 39. a. Khufu 40. a. ankh 41. 42. 43.

Egypt Old Kingdom

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Egypt Old kingdom Narmer Palettes Pharonic Portraiture Cannon of proportions Artisitic conventions Social hierarchy Scribes Elite tombs Mastama Stepped pyramid Great pyramid Middle kingdom Social change New kingdom Late bronze age International Amarna letters Ashlar masonry Building methods Pose Scale Masehead Watercourse Parallel wavy lines Capital
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AP* EDITION|THE EARTH AND ITS PEOPLE: A GLOBAL HISTORY Chapter 1 Review

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AP* EDITION|THE EARTH AND ITS PEOPLE: A GLOBAL HISTORY CHAPTER 1 Larger Concept Section Review Vocabulary Terms Details BEFORE CIVILIZATION Food Gathering and Stone Tools -Around 10,000 years ago, during the Neolithic Age, humans began to cultivate plants and to domesticate animals in various parts of the world. Climate change is probably the major reason for the switch from food gathering to food production. Civilization-ambiguous term often used to denote more complex societies but sometimes used by anthropologists to describe any group of people sharing a set of cultural traits Culture- socially transmitted patterns of action and expression History- study of past events and changes in the development, transmission, and transformation of cultural practices

The earth and its peoples chapter 4 study guide and answers

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1. What were the fundamental environmental factor(s) in Iran? Pg 94 – scarcity of water, deserts, Persian Gulf & Caspian Sea, mountains 2. The Medes were the first Iranian people to do what? Pg 96 – have a complex level of political organization 3. The king responsible for unifying Iran was who? Pg 96 - Cyrus 4. The three social and occupational classes in ancient Iran were? Pg 96 – warriors, priests, & peasants 5. Cyrus and his father ruled their empire by following a practical approach of what? Pg 96 – respecting local priests and native traditions 6. The Persian provinces were administered by who? Pg 97 – satraps (provincial governors) 7. Though Greek sources depict Persian women as political pawns; recent findings suggest that Persian women of the elite class did what?

Ancient Egyptians

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Egyptian Notes  AP World History     “The Gift of the Nile:” This phrase first coined by the Greek historian Herodotus is  quite fitting as no other society on the earth in human history has been as dependent  on one geographical feature as the Egyptians were the Nile.  In fact history has  shown us (see link) that Egyptian history is dependent on the flooding cycle of the  Nile.  Seasons of high flooding in which the Nile overflows her banks and leaves a  hyper‐fertile layer of silt over the otherwise barren landscape provides Egypt with  her periods of high development and sees her flourish as a civilization.  Those  periods where the Nile either doesn’t flood or engages in flooding that is excessive 

AP Art History: Ancient Egyptian art notes/study guide

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Ch. 1-4 AP World History Notes

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Darlene Kim Mr. Jones World History AP Part 1 ? The Emergence of Human Communities to 500 B.C.E. Chapter 1 ? From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River- Valley Civilizations 8000-1500 B.C.E. The world?s first urban civilization had begun with people living in Sumer, about five thousand years ago in Mesopotamia. Early societies that exhibited civilization traits were living nearby floodplains of great rivers. (i.e. Tigris and Euphrates in Iraq)

The Earth and Its Peoples - Chapter 1b

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SEQ NLI \r 0 \h ?? seq NL1 \r 0 \h Chapter 2 (second part of chapter 1 in textbook) - The First River-Valley Civilizations, 3500?1500 b.c.e. I?? seq NLA \r 0 \h . Mesopotamia A?? seq NL1 \r 0 \h . Settled Agriculture in an Unstable Landscape 1?? seq NL_a \r 0 \h . Mesopotamia is the alluvial plain area alongside and between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. The area is a difficult environment for agriculture because there is little rainfall, the rivers flood at the wrong time for grain agriculture, and the rivers change course unpredictably.
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