AP World History [WHAP] Summer Assignment 2018 Mr. Bering

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "AP World History [WHAP] Summer Assignment 2018 Mr. Bering"

Transcription

1 AP World History [WHAP] Summer Assignment 2018 Mr. Bering CONGRATULATIONS. You have decided to take on one of the greatest challenges of your academic career up to this point. AP World History is a college level course covering "everything that has ever happened ever." Your summer work is complete each of the following 4 tasks: TASK 1 Study and memorize 46 key vocabulary words important to AP World History. [Time needed --- Whatever it takes you to memorize 46 words/definitions] TASK 2 Study and memorize key geographic locations important to AP World History. [Time needed --- Whatever it takes you to memorize 46 words/definitions] TASK 3 Read Introduction to World History taking the notes and answering the questions that are assigned. [Time needed 7 pages of reading + notes/answering questions ~ approximately 2 hours] TASK 4 Watch 5 Crash Course World History videos answering the questions that are assigned. [Time needed approximately 12 minutes per video + answering questions ~ approximately 1 hour 30 minutes total] Tasks 1 & 2 will be assessed [a quiz] on your 1 st day of class the week of August 20, Tasks 3 and 4 will be collected and graded on the FIRST class period [your 1 st day of AP World History]. The objectives of the summer work is as follows To gain an understanding of key vocabulary and locations important to understanding world history. To understand key factors to the rise of early civilizations. LASTLY Students who have not completed summer work in the past have generally struggled for three reasons: 1. Lack of knowledge of basic vocabulary and locations. 2. Not earning points that are not very difficult to earn! 3. Not setting up a pattern of reading material and applying what they have read in class. TASK 1: There will be a vocabulary quiz your 1 st day of class the week of August 20, Define, study, and memorize all of the following words and definitions, as they will all be essential terms in our studies. AP World History General Vocabulary Please keep this vocabulary list in your folder/binder for WHAP. word definition 1 Absolutism Rule by one person. Synonymous with totalitarian. 2 Agrarian Society that is focused around farming activities. 3 Agriculture Anything related to farming. 4 Aristocracy Rule by those that our rich, educated, and privileged. 5 Bias To look at a subject in favor of something that benefits that individual. Often seen as being prejudiced. Synonymous with point of view. 6 Bureaucracy A large group of people who work for the government, but are not elected. 7 City-State A group of cities or villages that join together for trade and protection. Seen in Ancient Greece. 8 Civilization A society that has: advanced cities, advanced technology, specialized workers, complex institutions, and record keeping. 9 Constitution A system of beliefs and laws by which a country, state, or organization is governed. 10 Commerce Anything involving trade. 11 Demographics Any statistics or information related to population. 12 Dynasty A family of leaders who rule an area or country for a long period of time. 13 Economic Anything related to money, goods, and services.

2 14 Empire A large group of states or countries under the leadership of a single leader [an emperor or empress]. 15 Epidemic A widespread occurrence of an infectious disease in an area. 16 Forager One who wanders or searches for food. 17 Globalization The process where views, products, ideas, and culture is spread over the entire world. 18 Ideology A system of ideas that forms the basis of economic or political theory and policy. 19 Indentured Servant A person who worked under contract for a period of time, usually seven years, especially during the 17th to 19 th centuries. Usually was used to pay for travel expenses from Europe to America. 20 Interregional Anything connecting two or more regions. 21 Institution An organization founded for a religious, educational, social, or similar purpose. 22 Kingdom A large group of state or countries under the leadership of a single leader [a king or queen]. 23 Merchant A person or group that buys and sells or owns a business to make a profit. 24 Monotheism The belief in one god. 25 Nation A large group of people united by common descent, history, culture, or language, inhabiting a particular country or territory. 26 Neolithic The last period of the Stone Age when agricultural methods were developed for the first time. 27 Nobility The group of people who are members of the highest social class in some countries, especially in Europe. 28 Nomad A person or member of a society that moves from place to place. 29 Pandemic An outbreak or a disease that affects a large number of people. 30 Papacy The office of the Pope [the head of the Catholic church]. 31 Patriarchy A society that is ruled by men or fathers. 32 Political Anything that is related to the government, the leaders, and the laws. 33 Polytheism The belief in many gods. 34 Primary Source A document from someone who actually was at an event. 35 Principle A basic idea that serves as the foundation for a system of beliefs or behaviors for a group. 36 Republic A state in which supreme power is held by the people [democracy] and their elected representatives, and which has an elected a president rather than a monarch. 37 Revolution A sudden, radical, or extreme change in something. 38 Rural A country setting or anything relating to an area that is not in cities. 39 Scribe A member of ancient times who was a copier, clerk, or secretary. 40 Secondary A document from someone who is reporting about an event they actually did not Source attend or about a person they did not actually interact with. 41 Serf A person who works in agriculture and is under the power of the owner of that land. 42 Social The interactions of individuals and the groups they live within. 43 Sovereignty The idea that a state should be able to govern itself. 44 State A nation or territory organized as a political community under one government. 45 Tariffs a tax to be paid on a particular type of imports or exports. 46 Urban A city setting or anything relating to a city. ***NOTE This quiz is as easy as it gets in AP World History ----memorize these terms. You will use them often.

3 TASK 2: World Map There will be a map quiz your 1 st day of class the week of August 20, Memorize the following locations on a world map. NOTE: There are many online resources for blank maps feel free to use these to practice as long as you are doing the labeling!!!!! Continents 1. North America 2. South America 3. Australia 4. Europe 5. Antarctica 6. Asia 7. Africa Regions 1. North Africa 2. West Africa 3. East Africa 4. Central Africa 5. Southern Africa 6. The Middle East 7. North America 8. Latin America 9. The Caribbean 10. Europe 11. East Asia 12. Southeast Asia 13. South Asia 14. Central Asia 15. Oceania Oceans and Seas 1. North Atlantic Ocean 2. South Atlantic Ocean 3. North Pacific Ocean 4. South Pacific Ocean 5. Indian Ocean 6. Arctic Ocean 7. North Sea 8. Baltic Sea 9. English Channel 10. Mediterranean Sea 11. Black Sea 12. Red Sea 13. South China Sea 14. East China Sea 15. Yellow Sea 16. Sea of Japan Rivers 1. Nile River 2. Indus River 3. Ganges River 4. Yangtze River 5. Tigres River 6. Euphrates River Countries 16. Germany 17. China 18. Greece 19. Italy 20. Russia 21. Saudi Arabia 22. Brazil 23. Iraq 24. Iran 25. Poland 26. Cuba 27. France 28. Japan 29. India 30. Vietnam 31. Pakistan 32. North and South Korea 33. Egypt 34. South Africa 35. Ethiopia 36. England 37. United States 38. Canada 39. Mexico 40. Haiti ***NOTE This quiz is as easy as it gets in AP World History ----memorize these locations. You will use them often. TASK 3 UNIT BCE 600BCE Read the reading "Introduction to AP World History" which follows on pages 4-10 and complete the following: Create notes of the "SPICE" information asked for in the reading! Create these notes in your own words! This is actually VERY IMPORTANT! Develop this skill now! There is a guide on how to do these notes in the reading. Answer the Short Answer Questions at the end of the reading on a separate piece of paper. Make sure your responses include the following. The question. Complete answers using sentences. Please put answers in your own words! This is actually VERY IMPORTANT! Develop this skill now! ***NOTE - The material in this reading makes up 5% of the course. Make sure to read and understand this material before the first day of class. Annotate the reading with any questions you may have.

4 Utilize this margin to write any questions you have or any key vocabulary you see. Note - some of the history vocabulary in this reading can be found on the "General Vocabulary" list on the summer work. Introduction to AP World History [WHAP] Advanced Placement World History [WHAP] is divided into six periods. It is important that ou familiarize yourself with these periods; the ability to compare and contrast societies, events, and trends with and between periods will be a necessary skill in this course and on the AP Examination in May. The six AP World History periods are: Period 1: 8000 BCE-600 BCE - Technological and Environmental Transformations. Chapters 1-3 of our textbook and 5% of the course. Period 2: 600 BCE-600 CE - Organization and Reorganization of Human Societies. Chapters 4-8 of our textbook and 15% of the course. Period 3: 600 CE Regional and Transregional Interactions. Chapters 9-10 of our textbook and 20% of the course. Period 4: Global Interactions. Chapters of our textbook and 20% of the course. Period 5: Industrialization and Global Integration. Chapters of our textbook and 20% of the course. Period 6: 1900-Present - Accelerating Global Change and Realignments. Chapters Epilog of our textbook and 20% of the course. Note that dates in AP World History use BCE [Before the Common Era] and CE [Common Era]. These designations correspond to BC and AD, respectively. Think of this system mathematically with BCE equivalent to negative numbers and CE the positive number. 4000BCE 3000BCE 2000BCE 1000BCE 1CE 1000CE 2000CE Civilization Versus Society Historians commonly define a civilization as a cultural group that displays five characteristics: Advanced cities Advanced technology Skilled workers Complex institutions [examples: government, religion] A system of writing or record keeping Not all peoples on earth live in cultural groups that meet these five criteria. Yet, inhabitants of societies [cultural groups that do not satisfy all five characteristics of a civilization] also have made significant contributions to the course of world history. Two examples include: the highland people of Papua New Guinea, many of whom lack a written language, even today, yet who count among the earliest farmers in the world. the Hmong, who only recently developed a written language, yet have made significant cultural contributions in South East Asia and the United States. Independent Invention Versus Diffusion Another question in AP World History is whether cultural diffusion or independent invention is the more significant method of exchange. For example, the spread of agricultural throughout the globe. In this case, it is the job of you, the historian, to investigate where agriculture rose independently, as opposed to it being diffused, or spread, through the migration of agricultural peoples. Also, contact of migratory peoples with one another was responsible for the exchange of ideas and technological inventions in addition to the knowledge of agriculture. Patterns of independent invention compared to those of cultural diffusion will remain a thread throughout the AP World History course. UNIT ONE 8000 BCE-600 BCE Development of Agriculture and Technology One of the most significant developments in world history was the independent emergence of agriculture, a process that had already taken place in some locations throughout the Eastern Hemisphere by 8000 BCE. The so-called Agricultural Revolution, or Neolithic Revolution, was in reality more of a slow process resulting from the warming of global temperatures. The accompanying historical period, known as the Neolithic Age [or New Stone Age], was named for its characteristic tools made from stone. The Transition from Foraging to Agriculture At the close of the Paleolithic Age [or Stone Age], the transition from foraging [hunting and gathering] arose as nomadic groups returned to favorite grazing areas year after year. Perhaps some nomadic peoples made an effort to cultivate those crops that they found most appealing; later they may have transplanted 4

5 seeds from these same favored crops to other areas through which they traveled. Because hunting required greater physical strength, the early cultivation of plants was probably a task left to women, granting them increase importance among agricultural peoples. Women farmers studied the growth patterns of plants as well as the effect of climate and soil on them. Agricultural development included the domestication of animals as well as the cultivation of crops. Independent Origins of Agriculture: A Timeline The Neolithic Revolution, or Agricultural Revolution, is what the initial rise of agriculture throughout the world is usually referred to as. Key developments in the history of agriculture show the following events in the process: Agriculture began sometime after 9000 BCE with cultivation of grain crops such as wheat and barley in Southwest Asia. Animals such as pigs, cattle, sheep, and goats also were domesticated. By 7000 BCE Sudanese Africa and West Africa cultivated root crops such as sorghum and yams. Inhabitants of the Yangtze River valley cultivated rice about 6500 BCE. About 5500 BCE, people of the Huang He or Yellow River valley in East Asia began the cultivation of soybeans and millet. They also domesticated chickens and pigs and, later, water buffalo. Around 4000 BCE, the peoples of central Mexico cultivated maize, or corn, later adding beans, squash, tomatoes, and peppers. In Southeast Asia, perhaps around 3500 BCE, inhabitants grew root crops such as yams and taro as well as a variety of citrus and other fruits. The principal crop of the Andean region of South America was potatoes, first cultivated around 3000 BCE. Maize and beans were added later. The only domesticate animals in the Americas were the llama, alpaca, and guinea pig. The Spread of Agriculture After agriculture was established independently in various locations across the globe, the knowledge of crop cultivation spread rapidly. In fact, it was the nature of early agricultural methods that aided the extension of agricultural knowledge. An often-used agricultural method called slash-and-burn cultivation involved slashing the bark on trees and later burning the dead ones. The resulting ashes enriched the soil for a number of years. When the soil eventually lost its fertility, however, farmers were forced to move to new territory. By 6000 BCE, agriculture had spread to the eastern Mediterranean basin and the Balkans, reaching northern Europe about 4000 BCE. These frequent migrations exposed early farmers to new peoples, diffusing both agricultural knowledge and cultural values. Characteristics of Early Agricultural Societies Although agriculture required more work than foraging, it had the advantage of producing a more constant and substantial food supply. Consequently, the spread of agriculture not only increased cultural contacts but also produced significant population growth. As populations multiplied, Neolithic peoples began to settle in villages. Members of agricultural communities had to cooperate, especially in constructing and maintaining irrigation systems. As villages grew and agriculture continued to supply an abundance of food, not all villagers were needed as farmers. Some inhabitants began to develop other talents and skills such as the manufacture of pottery, metal tools, textiles, wood products, and jewelry. The early noteworthy agricultural settlements were: Jericho [established around 8000 BCE] in present-day Israel. Here farmers produced wheat and barley, while also trading with neighboring peoples in obsidian and salt. Characteristic of Jericho was a thich wall designed to protect the wealthy settlement against raiders. Catal Huyuk [established around 7000 BCE] in Anatolia [present day Turkey]. Residents of this village left artifacts representing a variety of craft products indicating an extensive specialization of labor. They also traded obsidian with neighboring peoples. Pastoralism As agricultural communities arouse, pastoralism developed in the grasslands of Africa and Eurasia. Pastoralists, or herders, contributed meat and other animal products to the overall food supply, further enlarging Neolithic human populations. At times their overgrazing of livestock led to soil erosion. Both agricultural and pastoral peoples exchanged food products and technology. Early Metallurgy In addition to the development and spread of agriculture, the Neolithic Age witnessed the origins of metallurgy. The first metal that humans learned to use was copper, with which they cast items such as jewelry, weapons, and tools. Later, Neolithic humans learned the use of other metals such as gold and bronze [an alloy of copper and tin], giving rise to the term Bronze Age for the later Neolithic period. Still later, the knowledge of ironworking was developed independently in Central Asia and sub-saharan Africa. 5

6 Culture of Neolithic Societies As human populations concentrated in permanent or sedentary settlements, the specialization of labor as well as trade activity resulted in differing degrees of accumulation of wealth. As time progressed, differences in family wealth manifested themselves in the emergence of social classes. The inhabitants of early agricultural societies observed their environment in order to further their knowledge of the factors necessary to produce a bountiful harvest. Their knowledge of the seasons in relation to the positions of heavenly bodies led eventually to the development of calendars. Interest in the natural world led Neolithic humans to celebrate fertility and the cycles of life. Many agricultural and pastoral societies practice animism, or the belief that divine spirits inhabited natural objects such as rocks and trees. In addition, archaeologists have unearthed numerous figures representing pregnant goddesses in the ruins of Neolithic villages. Beginnings of Cities As the population growth resulted in larger settlements, the agricultural world experienced the rise of cities. Urban areas offered further specialization of labor and more sophisticated technology. New roles emerged as cities required administrators, collectors of taxes and tribute, and religious leaders. Cities also acquired influence over larger territories than villages did. Structure of Early Civilizations As agricultural villages evolved into cities, some urban areas began to display the characteristics of civilizations described earlier. The earliest civilizations in the Eastern Hemisphere arose in Mesopotamia, the Nile, the Indus, and Yellow River valleys; civilizations arose later among the Olmecs in Mesoamerica [Middle America] and the Chavin in the Andes Mountains of South America. TASK - For each of the following societies, organize information[take notes] for each in the following way: Create these notes Social It is your choice how to take these notes for the civilizations Political [chart, regular "notes"], but be aware that say "SPICE Interaction that you will be using these in class, so THIS" next to the Cultural be complete!! heading. Economic Use the following questions to help [you will not use all the questions, but answer as many as you can!]: 1. Social AP World History Theme: Development & Transformation of Social Structures 2. Political Guiding Questions: o How does the group relate to one another? o How do people communicate? o What do people do together? o How is the group organized? o What are the family and gender relations? o Are there social classes? o How do they live? o Are there inequalities within the society? AP World History Theme: State Building, Expansion & Conflict Guiding Questions: o Who is in charge and who gives that person or group power? o What is power based on? o Is there a contract? o What is the government structure? o Are there any significant wars, treaties, courts or laws? 3. Interaction (humans & environment) AP World History Theme: Interaction Between Humans and the Environment Guiding Questions o In what geographic region is the society/civilization located? o What makes up the geographic landscape of this region? 6

7 4. Culture 5. Economic o How are people/events affected by the geography? o How do the people interact with the environment? o How does the environment define the society/civilization? AP World History Theme: Development and Interaction of Cultures Guiding Questions: o What is the meaning of life for people in the society/civilization? o How do they live their daily lives? o What are the basic religious beliefs? o Are their leaders or documents that define religion? o What groups are given the chance to learn and how do they learn? o Do they have forms of philosophy, math and/or science? o How do they express themselves? o Are there any significant achievements in the arts or technology? AP World History Theme: Creation, Expansion & Interaction of Economic Systems Guiding Questions: o Is there a currency present in this society? o How do the people earn their money (or food)? o What commodities are valued and traded? o Is the economy based on agriculture or commerce (small trades & professions)? o Is the economy based on industry (manufacturing & technology)? Mesopotamia SPICE THIS The world's earliest civilization arose in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in an area the Greeks called Mesopotamia ["Land Between the Rivers"]. The cultural achievements of Mesopotamia represented independent innovation, achievements that it passed on to other river valley civilizations in Egypt and, especially, the Indus Valley. Around 4000 BCE, the inhabitants of Mesopotamia used bronze and copper. By this time they had already invented the wheel and developed irrigation canals to farm the arid lands of their environment. Around 3500 BCE, a group of invaders called the Sumerians settled the southernmost portion of Mesopotamia. The Sumerians developed the first example of writing. Called cuneiform, it involved pictures pressed into clay using a wedge-shaped stylus. The pictographs initially stood for objects, but later were refined to represent sounds. The Sumerians also developed a number system based on 60 and studied the movement of heavenly bodies. In architecture, the Sumerians expressed the glories of their civilization and of the many gods of nature that they worshipped by building towers called ziggurats. They are also credited with relating the first epic in world history, The Epic of Gilgamesh, which includes a great flood similar to that of the biblical account in Genesis. The Tigris and Euphrates rivers were noted for their unpredictable and often violent flooding. Irrigation systems to control flooding and channel water for agricultural use required the cooperation of Mesopotamia's settlements. This need promoted the beginnings of government. Early Mesopotamian government was in the form of city-states, with a city government also controlling surrounding territories. A social structure headed by rulers and elite classes controlled the land, which was farmed by slaves. Slaves could sometimes purchase their freedom. Sumerian families were patriarchal, with men dominating family and public life. Men had the authority to sell their wives and children into slavery to pay their debts. By the sixteenth century BCE, Mesopotamian women had begun to wear the veil in public. In spite of these restrictions, Mesopotamian women could sometimes gain influence in the courts, serve as priestesses, or act as scribes for the government. some worked in small businesses. A lack of natural protective barriers made Mesopotamia vulnerable to invasion by outsiders; most cities in the region constructed defensive walls. Frequent conflicts among local Sumerian kings over water and property rights weakened the city-states. The Sumerian culture later fell to conquest by the Akkadians and the Babylonians, both of whom spread Sumerian culture. The Babylonian king Hammurabi devised a code of laws that regulated daily life and also provided harsh "an eye for an eye" punishments for criminal offenses. The Code of Hammurabi drew distinctions between social classes and genders, administering less severe punishments to elite classes over commoners and men over women for the same offense. After 900 BCE, Assyrians and Persians dominated Mesopotamia. Egypt SPICE THIS About 3000 BCE, a second civilization grew up along another river valley, this time the valley of the Nile River in present-day Egypt. In contrast to the unpredictable waters of the Tigris-Euphrates, those of the 7

8 Nile overflowed once annually, discharging an amount of water that usually varied little from one year to the next. As in Mesopotamia, irrigation projects to channel floodwaters led to the organization of the community and ultimately to the development of political structures. Although several major cities emerged along the Nile, most Egyptian communities were agricultural villages engaged in local trade along the Nile. The king of Egypt, or pharaoh, wielded considerable power. About 2700 BCE, the pharaohs began the construction of huge pyramids that served as tombs for themselves and their families. These tombs were decorated with colorful paintings. Like the Sumerians, the Egyptians were polytheists, or worshippers of many gods. Their belief in an afterlife led to the practice of mummification to preserve the bodies of pharaohs and, later, those of members of lower classes. Egyptian society was composed of a number of defined social classes. Within this social structure, however, commoners could enter government service and rise in social status. Egyptian families were patriarchal, with men dominating households and community life. Among the royalty, however, women sometimes acted as regents for young rulers or as priestesses. Other educated women worked as scribes for the Egyptian government. The Egyptians did not acquire the use of bronze tools and weapons until long after they had reached Mesopotamia. From the Nubian kingdom of Kush, a site of the independent innovation of ironworking, the Egyptians acquired iron implements. The Egyptians engaged in some trade with the people of Mesopotamia and later with the kingdom of Kush to the south. Some historians believe that Egyptian picture writing, or hieroglyphics, was developed from Sumerian cuneiform as a result of trade contacts with Mesopotamia. Cultural diffusion from Egypt produced a Nubian civilization that incorporated Egyptian pyramids, writing, and religion into its own culture. In addition, the Nubian kingdom of Kush invaded Egypt in the eighth century BCE and ruled the Egyptian people for about a century. Throughout most of its early history, however, surrounding deserts protected Egypt from contact with invading peoples, permitting its civilization to develop its own unique characteristics. Indus Valley Civilization + Backgounds of Classical IndiaSPICE THIS By 2500 BCE. another advanced civilization had emerged along the Indus River in present-day Pakistan. Like the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the Indus River was noted for its unpredictable and often violent pattern of flooding. Among the urban centers that arose along the Indus were Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. Streets in both cities were laid out along a precise grid, and houses boasted running water and sewage systems. Much of what historians know about the Indus valley civilization must come from archeological discoveries, because Harappan writing has yet to be deciphered. Archeological finding of Harappan artifacts in Mesopotamia indicate active trade between the peoples of the Indus valley and Sumer by way of the Persian Gulf. Around 1500 BCE, the Harappan civilization was overtaken by a group of Indo- European peoples called Aryans. The Harappan civilization which the Aryans conquered had already declined markedly, perhaps a result of rivers changing their course or a natural disaster such as an earthquake. The blend of the traditional culture of the Indus valley people and that of the Aryans had a profound effect on the future course of Indian history. The roots of classical India began during the invasions of the Aryans around 1500 BCE. From their original home in Central Asia, the Aryans brought a tradition of hunting and cattle herding: after their arrival in South Asia, however, they adapted the agricultural methods of the native peoples. Aryan iron tools facilitated their success in agriculture. Although the people of the Harappan civilization of the Indus valley possessed a written language, the Aryans did not. Much of our knowledge of the Aryans comes from their oral epics, called the Vedas. The Vedas were later written down in the Sanskrit language which remains a prominent language in India today. The influence of the Vedas is evident in the term applied to the early classical period of Indian culture, the Vedic Age [1500 to 500 BCE]. The first Aryan epic, the Rig-Veda, is a collection of hymns in honor of the Aryan gods. Aryan society was based on a village organization composed of families with patriarchal control. Their society was further organized along a class system or hierarchy. When the invaded the Indus valley, the Aryans, who were fair-complexioned compared to the native people they conquered, perceived the people of the Indus valley as inferior. Therefore, they modified the class system with which they were already familiar in their society to define the new relationship between conqueror and conquered. Society was divided into four distinct classes, or varna, based on skin color: 8

9 Kshatriyas, or warriors and rulers Brahmins, or priests Vaisyas, or merchants and farmers Sudras, or common workers The first three classes were composed of Aryans, the fourth of Dravidians, or the native people of India whom the Aryans encountered at the time of their invasion. From BCE, the first two classes reversed in order of importance. At the very bottom of the social structure or hierarchy was a classless group of untouchables. Members of this groups were involved in occupations perceived as distasteful, such as handling waste products, carrying out the dead, or butchering animals. As the classes became hereditary they became castes, or rigid social classes that seldom permitted social mobility. Within each caste were numerous subcastes, or jati, that further defined Indian society. The Aryans also introduced to Indian culture their own array of gods and goddesses. Part of their belief system was the veneration or worship of some animals, particularly cattle. The Shang SPICE THIS The most isolated of the four river valley civilizations was that of the Huang He or Yellow River valley in present-day China. Although the people of the Yellow River valley dwelled in a region isolated by deserts, mountains [the Himalayas] and seas, they did engage in some trade with Southwest Asia and South Asia. The earliest Chinese dynasty that left written records was the Shang dynasty [ BCE]. A key element of the Shang dynasty was the knowledge of bronze metallurgy. This knowledge, which came from China from Southwest Asia by means of Indo-European migrations, strengthened the Shang war machine. Around 1000 BCE, the Shang also became familiar with ironworking. Shang rule was further empowered by the need for central rule to oversee irrigation and flood-control projects along the Yellow River. During the Shang dynasty, a number of walled cities arose. These urban areas served as cultural, military, and economic centers. Elaborate palaces and tombs were built for Shang rulers. Examples of early Chinese writing are apparent from a custom of "divination" using oracle bones. When a person sought the advice of the gods on an issue, he or she would visit an oracle, who would scratch that person's question on an animal bone or shell, then heat it. When the bone cracked from the heat, the oracle read the cracks to determine the message from the gods. Shang society was stratified with classes of ruling cities, artisans, peasants, and slaves. Families were patriarchal, and the veneration or worship of ancestors was common. The matrilineal or female ruled society that characterized China before the Shang gradually eroded until women held positions subordinate to those of men. The Shang dynasty eventually fell to the Zhou about 1122 BCE. The Zhou claimed that they overthrew the Shang by the will of the gods, which they termed the "mandate of heaven". Under the rule of the Zhou, the tradition of central authority that first took root under the Shang continued. Mesoamerica and Andean South America SPICE THIS Civilizations in the Americas rose later than the river valley civilizations. The civilizations of Mesoamerica and the early societies of the Andes Mountains of South America did not develop in the valleys of major rivers, but rather in a region of smaller rivers and streams near ocean coastlines. Furthermore, the people of the Americas did not know the use of the wheel, nor did they possess large animals to serve as beast of burden or work animals; the llama of the Andes Mountains was the largest work animal in the Americas from the time of the earliest civilizations until the arrival of the Europeans in the fifteenth century. Human muscle accomplished physical labor in the Americas. Early Mesoamerican people such as the Olmecs, and later the Maya, constructed lavish pyramids and temples. Like the inhabitants of the river valley civilizations, the people of the Americas were polytheistic, worshiping many gods of nature. Society was stratified, with distinctions among the elite classes of rulers and priests and those of commoners and slaves. Early Mesoamerican societies provided numerous examples of cultural diffusion. In addition to the transmission of the cultivation of maize, terraced pyramids were commonplace. Regional inhabitants fashioned calendars, the most elaborate being that of the Mayan civilization. The Mayans also had a ball game played on a court. In South America, geography and the lack of large pack animals largely prevented communication between the Andean societies and those of Mesoamerica. The cultivation of maize did spread to the Andes, however, while copper metallurgy traveled northward to Mesoamerica. About 900 BCE, the Chavin civilization arose in the Andean highlands of present-day Peru. Characterized by a religion that worshipped gods representing crocodiles, snakes, and jaguars, the Chavin built complex temples to honor 9

10 their gods. Their civilization was located along trade routes that connected western coastal regions to the Amazon rainforest. For a few centuries, the Chavin religious unity and trade connections provided a degree of cultural identity to Andean peoples. The rugged terrain of the Andes, however, prevented a central government from unifying the Andean states. The Hebrews Along the eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea lived the Hebrews, another people who profoundly influenced the course of world history. The concept of monotheism, or the worship of one god, is credited to the Hebrews, or Jews. The Hebrews traced their origins back to Abraham, who is said to have migrated from Mesopotamia to the land of Canaan on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean about 2000 BCE. In the account recorded in the Bible, the descendants of Abraham migrated to Egypt. They later left Egypt, embarking on a journey called the Exodus under a leader named Moses. In the biblical account, the Exodus was marked by the giving of the Ten Commandments, or moral law of the Hebrews. Returning to the land of Canaan, or Palestine, the established a theocracy, or a government ruled directly by God. The heart of Judaism [or the Jewish faith] was a covenant, or agreement, with God and Abraham in which the Jews would be the people of God. The history of this covenant relationship became the basis of the Torah, or the Hebrew holy book. After years of observing the governments of neighboring kingdoms, the Hebrews established the kingdom of Israel about 1000 BCE with its capital at Jerusalem. The kingdom eventually divided into two kingdoms. The northern kingdom fell to the Assyrians in 722 BCE. Its inhabitants were scattered throughout the far reaches of the Assyrian empire, constituting the first Jewish diaspora, or scattering. The southern kingdom, called Judah, endured until 586 BCE. Conquered by the Babylonians, the people of Judah were carried off into captivity into Babylon. Rapid Review The Neolithic Age saw independent origins of agriculture worldwide. As the knowledge of agriculture spread, cultural diffusion marked the ancient world. When crop cultivation produced increasingly larger yields, some farmers specialized in other tasks or crafts. As population concentrations grew increasingly dense, settlements grew into villages and, later, cities. Cities developed a more complex social structure to administer wealth, provide order, and study the meaning of life itself. Beginning with Sumer in Mesopotamia about 3500 BCE, civilization grew along the river valleys of the Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, Indus, and Yellow. These civilizations were characterized by community cooperation necessary to manage irrigation and flood control systems. Later their cooperative efforts were further organized to for the beginnings of political institutions. The knowledge of metallurgy led to the refinement of tools, weapons, and objects of art. Writing systems were developed, and social stratification became apparent. In the Americas, civilizations and societies made notable strides in mathematics, astronomy, and architecture. COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS AFTER YOUR "SPICE" NOTES! SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS - Answer each of the following questions in 3-4 sentences MAXIMUM. 1. Why did hunter-gatherers and foragers decline in this time period? o Here is how to properly answer a short answer ~~ Example: Huntergatherers and foragers declined from 8000 BCE to 600 BCE because As the world expanded, how did cultures begin to exchange people and ideas? 3. What was the Neolithic Revolution and where and when did it occur? 4. What were the common characteristics of the early societies before 600 BCE? [On this question, you can certainly take more than 3-4 sentences! If it helps to do it in outline or bullet points, do it. In other words, look for as many similarities as possible!] 5. How did early cultures interact? 6. What changes occurred in belief systems [religions] from BCE? 10

11 TASK 4 - AN EVENING WITH JOHN GREEN. You are to view the following 5 videos from Crash Course World History and answer the questions on a separate piece of paper. Videos can be viewed at the following site: WATCH THESE VIDEOS AND COMPLETE THE Your answers must include the following: QUESTIONS AFTER YOU HAVE READ THE The question. INTRODUCTION TO AP WORLD HISTORY Complete answers using sentences. READING [TASK 3] --- THESE VIDEOS WILL Please put answers in your own words! MAKE A LOT MORE SENSE THAT WAY! 1. How do we have evidence of Hunter-Gatherers [H-G] and lives? 2. What advantages did H-G have over early agriculturalists? 3. Where did agriculture emerge? What food crops are associated with which areas? 4. What are the advantages and disadvantages of agriculture? 5. What impact does agriculture have on the environment? 6. What advantages did Eurasia have with its set of zoological set of animals compared to the Americas? 7. If H-G had a better and healthier lifestyle, why did people become agriculturalists? 8. What do historians say are the drawbacks to complex civilizations and agriculture? 1. How is the concept of civilization useful? When is it not useful? 2. How does John Green define what constitutes a civilization? How does this compare to the definition given in the Unit 1 reading? 3. Where did the earliest civilizations emerge? Why there? 4. Why was the Indus Valley a prime location? How did the environment affect the people who lived there? 5. What evidence exists of long-distance trade and with whom? 6. What appears to be unique about the Indus Valley as compared to other civilizations? 1. John Green begins by discussing one of the most obvious consequences of agriculture what is it and what are the most immediate consequences for those societies? 2. How does Mesopotamia compare with the Indus River Valley? Identify both similarities and differences. Think of why a specific similarity and specific difference might exist. [this is analysis one of the skills you will need to develop in this class] 3. Cuneiform: What three points does John Green make about the beginning of writing? 4. What was Hammurabi s most significant contribution? 5. What are the challenges of empires/what is the usual result? Put it in math terms. 1. What point is John Green making about the different lenses we use when we study history? 2. How did the Nile River shape the worldview of the Egyptians? How did this compare to the worldview of the Mesopotamia? 3. How was Egyptian civilization different from most other River Valley civilizations? Why do think this was? 4. What does the construction of the pyramids represent? [not what was the purpose of the pyramids?] 5. What was the motivation for building the pyramids? [not what was the purpose of the pyramids?] 6. What protected Egypt from outside peoples? 1. What do textbooks normally do to the River Valley civilizations? 2. What do Egypt, Mesopotamia, Anatolia, etc. have in common? a. TRADE: What did underwater archaeologists find on the shipwreck? b. WAR: What was one of the main drivers of economic growth? c. FAMILY: How did these civilizations share family relationships? 3. What are we really talking about when we use the word civilization? 4. What happened around 1200BCE to Mycenaeans, Minoans, Hittites, and [partially] Egypt? 11 a. What caused this? 5. How does interdependence in the Bronze Age help lead to its downfall?

12 12

AP WORLD HISTORY SUMMER ASSIGNMENT

AP WORLD HISTORY SUMMER ASSIGNMENT 2015 AP WORLD HISTORY SUMMER ASSIGNMENT DURING THE NEXT SCHOOL YEAR, WE WILL COVER EVERYTHING THAT S EVER HAPPENED EVER. TO GET US A BIT OF HEAD START, YOUR TASK THIS SUMMER IS TO COVER THE FIRST PERIOD

More information

Name AP World Summer Institute Assignment, 2015 Ms. Scalera. 1.) Define: bipedalism, primary source and Paleolithic Age.

Name AP World Summer Institute Assignment, 2015 Ms. Scalera. 1.) Define: bipedalism, primary source and Paleolithic Age. Name AP World Summer Institute Assignment, 2015 Ms. Scalera This assignment requires the use of the text AP World History: An Essential Course book, 2 nd Edition by Ethel Wood. Directions: you will need

More information

SSWH1: The student will analyze the origins, structures, and interactions of complex societies in the ancient Eastern Mediterranean from 3500 BC to

SSWH1: The student will analyze the origins, structures, and interactions of complex societies in the ancient Eastern Mediterranean from 3500 BC to SSWH1: The student will analyze the origins, structures, and interactions of complex societies in the ancient Eastern Mediterranean from 3500 BC to 500 BC. SSWH1: The student will analyze the origins,

More information

Chapter 1 Reading Guide/Study Guide Section One Early Humans (pages 19 25

Chapter 1 Reading Guide/Study Guide Section One Early Humans (pages 19 25 Due Date: I. PREHISTORY 1. Define prehistory: A. Archaeology and Anthropology 1. Define archaeology: Chapter 1 Reading Guide/Study Guide Section One Early Humans (pages 19 25 Name: 2. Define artifacts:

More information

Chapter 2 NOTES. RPC: What role did the Nile River play in the development of Egyptian civilization?

Chapter 2 NOTES. RPC: What role did the Nile River play in the development of Egyptian civilization? Chapter 2 NOTES Lesson 1 Classifying: Use the following graphic organizer to identify people's social roles in Egyptian society. Upper: pharoah, nobles, priests. Middle: merchants,artisans,scribes,tax

More information

Unit 1 Packet. c BCE to c. 600 BCE NAME : 1

Unit 1 Packet. c BCE to c. 600 BCE NAME : 1 Unit 1 Packet c. 8000 BCE to c. 600 BCE NAME : 1 Note: Keep this packet until the end of the year so you can study it! Timeline Dates (all dates are BCE) Event Location(s) 10,000 8,000 Agricultural Revolution

More information

CHAPTER ONE From Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations

CHAPTER ONE From Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations CHAPTER ONE From Human Prehistory to the Early Civilizations World Civilizations, The Global Experience AP* Edition, 5th Edition Stearns/Adas/Schwartz/Gilbert *AP and Advanced Placement are registered

More information

The First Civilizations Unit 1. Ancient and Classical Civilizations AP World History

The First Civilizations Unit 1. Ancient and Classical Civilizations AP World History The First Civilizations Unit 1. Ancient and Classical Civilizations AP World History Essential Question How did the first civilizations form and what were their achievements? Specific Objectives " Identify

More information

Unit 1-Part 1 From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River- Valley Civilizations B.C.

Unit 1-Part 1 From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River- Valley Civilizations B.C. Unit 1-Part 1 From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River- Valley Civilizations 8000-1500 B.C. ! Civilization- 1. Cities of administrative centers 2. A political system based on defined territory

More information

Ancient Civilizations Project

Ancient Civilizations Project Ancient Civilizations Project Step One: Choose and research an early civilization with your group members. Step Two: Create a Power Point document to use during your presentation. Bibliography to be included

More information

Paleolithic Era to Mesopotamian City-States

Paleolithic Era to Mesopotamian City-States Paleolithic Era to Mesopotamian City-States Before History Prehistory = the period before written records. Archaeological information Archaeology = the study of structures of past societies by analyzing

More information

Unit 3: Mesopotamia Test Respond to each question with the best answer based on what we ve learned in class.

Unit 3: Mesopotamia Test Respond to each question with the best answer based on what we ve learned in class. Unit 3: Mesopotamia Test Respond to each question with the best answer based on what we ve learned in class. 1. Why did ancient civilizations develop in Mesopotamia along the rivers of Tigris and Euphrates?

More information

SOL Narrative Review. with questions

SOL Narrative Review. with questions SOL Narrative Review with questions Day 1 Early Humans Homo sapiens (humans) emerged in east Africa between 100,000 and 400,000 years ago. They then migrated from Africa to Eurasia, Australia and the Americas

More information

CIVILIZATION IN AFRICA NUBIAN Necklace B.C.

CIVILIZATION IN AFRICA NUBIAN Necklace B.C. CIVILIZATION IN AFRICA NUBIAN Necklace 1700 1550 B.C. overview - How and why did Civilization emerge? Archaeological record demonstrates that early humans practiced nomadism for many thousands of years

More information

The Fertile Crescent is a region of the Middle East that stretches in a large, crescent-shaped curve from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea.

The Fertile Crescent is a region of the Middle East that stretches in a large, crescent-shaped curve from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea. The Fertile Crescent is a region of the Middle East that stretches in a large, crescent-shaped curve from the Persian Gulf to the Mediterranean Sea. The Fertile Crescent includes Mesopotamia, a wide, flat

More information

Unit Objectives. Describe the impact of farming on the development of early civilizations. Analyze the development of Egypt s empire

Unit Objectives. Describe the impact of farming on the development of early civilizations. Analyze the development of Egypt s empire Unit Objectives Describe the impact of farming on the development of early civilizations Analyze the development of Egypt s empire Describe the important events in the history of Israel Chapter 1 Test

More information

Mesopotamian History. Chapter 2 Art History. Roxanna Ford 2014

Mesopotamian History. Chapter 2 Art History. Roxanna Ford 2014 Mesopotamian History Chapter 2 Art History Roxanna Ford 2014 Settled Agriculture in an Unstable Landscape Is the location of Mesopotamia significant to history? YES! Mesopotamia is located on the alluvial

More information

Unit 2 Fertile Crescent Mesopotamia Unit Test Review

Unit 2 Fertile Crescent Mesopotamia Unit Test Review Unit 2 Fertile Crescent Mesopotamia Unit Test Review Mesopotamia - Fertile Crescent Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Early

More information

ADVANCED CITIES: The people who established the world's first civilization around 4000 B.C. in southern Mesopotamia were known as the Sumerians.

ADVANCED CITIES: The people who established the world's first civilization around 4000 B.C. in southern Mesopotamia were known as the Sumerians. ADVANCED CITIES: Caption: This artifact is huge and can only be viewed if a picture of it is placed on a piece of paper like the one to the left. It is a picture of the first major city in Mesopotamia:

More information

Unit Ancient River Civilizations. Case studies

Unit Ancient River Civilizations. Case studies Unit 1.3-1.4 Ancient River Civilizations Case studies Do Now: Think About It Hazlo ahora: piensa en eso... Why would most of the earliest civilizations develop near rivers??? Por qué la mayoría de las

More information

Chapter 3 Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent BC

Chapter 3 Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent BC Chapter 3 Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent 7000-500 BC Lesson 1: Geography of the Fertile Crescent Rivers People settled near rivers because crops would grow here. Floods kept the soil fertile. The

More information

WHI.02: Early Humans

WHI.02: Early Humans WHI.02: Early Humans WHI.2 The student will demonstrate knowledge of early development of humankind from the Paleolithic Era to the agricultural revolution by a) explaining the impact of geographic environment

More information

THE CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION

THE CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION MESOPOTAMIA THE CRADLE OF CIVILIZATION GEOGRAPHY OF THE FERTILE CRESCENT I. Rivers support early civilizations A. Early people settled where crops would grow. B. Many civilizations began near rivers. 1.

More information

Geography of the Middle East, an ancient and modern crossroads

Geography of the Middle East, an ancient and modern crossroads Geography of the Middle East, an ancient and modern crossroads By WGBH Educational Foundation, adapted by Newsela staff on 01.09.18 Word Count 1,035 Level 1040L Image 1: The Nile River runs through the

More information

CIVILIZATION (part 1) 1. What is Civilization? 2. How the city of UR exemplifies early civilization?

CIVILIZATION (part 1) 1. What is Civilization? 2. How the city of UR exemplifies early civilization? CIVILIZATION (part 1) 1. What is Civilization? 2. How the city of UR exemplifies early civilization? Geography Historians believed that one of the first civilizations arose in Sumer, a region that is now

More information

Between what two rivers is Mesopotamia located? What river is associated with Egypt? Why do you think early man settled around rivers?

Between what two rivers is Mesopotamia located? What river is associated with Egypt? Why do you think early man settled around rivers? Between what two rivers is Mesopotamia located? What river is associated with Egypt? Why do you think early man settled around rivers? World History 1 Mr. Driskell Farmers need their villages near water

More information

UNIT ONE Reading Passages Ancient Mesopotamia 1B Ancient Sumer 1C

UNIT ONE Reading Passages Ancient Mesopotamia 1B Ancient Sumer 1C UNIT ONE Reading Passages Ancient Mesopotamia 1B Ancient Sumer 1C N MESOPOTAMIA Mesopotamia Mesopotamia is a Greek word that means between two rivers. The two rivers referred to are the Tigris and Euphrates

More information

Ancient River Valley Civilizations

Ancient River Valley Civilizations Ancient River Valley Civilizations Mesopotamia People settled near the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers around 3,500 BC Modern Day Farming in Mesopotamia Flood plains were very fertile and used for growing

More information

Mesopotamia ancient civilization river Afterlife Ur ancient city in Mesopotamia India Hittites-empire used iron weapons

Mesopotamia ancient civilization river Afterlife Ur ancient city in Mesopotamia India Hittites-empire used iron weapons What do you suppose life was like five thousand years ago in the first river valley civilizations for everyday people? Below is a list of terms associated with that time period. We are going to examine

More information

Notes: Unit 2 Chapter 5: The Rise of River Valley Civilizations

Notes: Unit 2 Chapter 5: The Rise of River Valley Civilizations Name Notes: Unit 2 Chapter 5: The Rise of River Valley Civilizations Important Ideas A. The earliest humans survived by their food. They used tools of wood, bone, and. They also learned to make. B. About,

More information

Fertile Crescent & Mesopotamia. Miss Genovese

Fertile Crescent & Mesopotamia. Miss Genovese Fertile Crescent & Mesopotamia Miss Genovese Geography Mesopotamia is the region between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers (AKA The Land Between Two Rivers) Land was mostly flat with small plants Tigris

More information

Mesopotamia: Land Between the Rivers. Mesopotamia

Mesopotamia: Land Between the Rivers. Mesopotamia Mesopotamia: Land Between the Rivers Mesopotamia The many people of Mesopotamia 1. Sumerians (ancient Sumer s city-states) (3000 B.C. - 1800 B.C.) 2. Babylonians (Babylonian Empire) (1800 B.C. - 1200 B.C.

More information

5/21/14 CHAPTER 1: FROM HUMAN PREHISTORY TO THE EARLY CIVILIZATIONS PALEOLITHIC ERA OLD STONE AGE 2.5 MILLION -12,000 YEARS AGO

5/21/14 CHAPTER 1: FROM HUMAN PREHISTORY TO THE EARLY CIVILIZATIONS PALEOLITHIC ERA OLD STONE AGE 2.5 MILLION -12,000 YEARS AGO CHAPTER 1: FROM HUMAN PREHISTORY TO THE EARLY CIVILIZATIONS AP World History PALEOLITHIC ERA OLD STONE AGE 2.5 MILLION -12,000 YEARS AGO The human species has existed for about 2.5 million years. Hunting

More information

Name Date Period. Social Studies Midterm Review Packet. Exam Date: Room#

Name Date Period. Social Studies Midterm Review Packet. Exam Date: Room# Name Date Period Social Studies Midterm Review Packet Exam Date: Room# Part 1: Five Themes of Geography Directions: Write the theme of geography on the line next to the correct definition or example. relative

More information

GEOGRAPHY OF THE FERTILE CRESENT

GEOGRAPHY OF THE FERTILE CRESENT GEOGRAPHY OF THE FERTILE CRESENT The Land Between the Rivers: The first civilization in the fertile crescent was Mesopotamia. It was located between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. In Sumer, as in Egypt,

More information

Note Taking Study Guide UNDERSTANDING OUR PAST

Note Taking Study Guide UNDERSTANDING OUR PAST SECTION Note Taking Study Guide UNDERSTANDING OUR PAST Focus Question: What have scholars learned about the ancestors of humans, and how have they done so? A. As you read Studying the Historical Past and

More information

The study of past societies through an analysis of what people have left behind.

The study of past societies through an analysis of what people have left behind. The study of past societies through an analysis of what people have left behind. Artifacts are those things that people left behind, they can include: Tools and Weapons Pottery Jewelry Art and Sculpture

More information

River Valley Practice Test Block:

River Valley Practice Test Block: River Valley Practice Test Name: Block: 1. Subsistence farming can best be defined as A) harvesting a surplus of crops to be sold for profit B) producing just enough food for a family s survival C) domesticating

More information

" "' Beginnings to 600 BCE. ! z. c,,

 ' Beginnings to 600 BCE. ! z. c,, Beginnings to 6 BCE Preparing for the AP World History exam does not mean you have to know all history "from the dawn of time" until the present. Instead, the exam focuses on important developments over

More information

SECTION 1 KEY TERMS LOOK AT THE LIST OF TERMS AND HIGHLIGHT OR STAR THE ONES

SECTION 1 KEY TERMS LOOK AT THE LIST OF TERMS AND HIGHLIGHT OR STAR THE ONES NAME DATE PERIOD WORLD HISTORY I WINTER 2015 WHI MIDTERM EXAM STUDY GUIDE SECTION 1 KEY TERMS LOOK AT THE LIST OF TERMS AND HIGHLIGHT OR STAR THE ONES YOU DO NOT UNDERSTAND OR KNOW. AS YOU ANSWER THE QUESTIONS

More information

Mesopotamia Mesopotamia = the land between two rivers Geography

Mesopotamia Mesopotamia = the land between two rivers Geography Mesopotamia Mesopotamia = the land between two rivers Geography * About 9,000 years ago, wandering tribes settled in the river valley between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. * This area, also known as

More information

The earliest written language. BCE The years before the year 0. The worship and belief in many gods. The land between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers

The earliest written language. BCE The years before the year 0. The worship and belief in many gods. The land between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers Rise of Civilizations & Mesopotamia Study Guide Test: Monday, November 19 Format: Matching, Multiple Choice, Free Response Notes: Rise of Civilization, Uruk Civilization Organizer, Ancient Mesopotamian

More information

Chapter 2 Section 1 Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia

Chapter 2 Section 1 Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia Chapter 2 Section 1 Mesopotamia Between Rivers Iraq today Mesopotamia 1 Mesopotamia w Tigris & Euphrates River Valley w Fertile Crescent w 25 miles to 250 miles apart w Flood rich soil for agriculture

More information

City-States in Mesopotamia

City-States in Mesopotamia Name CHAPTER 2 Section 1 (pages 29 34) City-States in Mesopotamia BEFORE YOU READ In the last chapter, you read about the earliest humans and the first civilization. In this section, you will learn more

More information

Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent

Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent 1 The Rise of Sumer The Big Idea: The Sumerians developed the first civilization in Mesopotamia. The Sumerians developed the first advanced society. 2 The Appearance

More information

CHAPTER 1: FROM HUMAN PREHISTORY TO THE EARLY CIVILIZATIONS

CHAPTER 1: FROM HUMAN PREHISTORY TO THE EARLY CIVILIZATIONS CHAPTER 1: FROM HUMAN PREHISTORY TO THE EARLY CIVILIZATIONS PALEOLITHIC ERA OLD STONE AGE 2.5 MILLION - 12,000 BCE The human species has existed for about 2.5 million years. Hunting and Gathering: over

More information

China in the Beginning

China in the Beginning China in the Beginning The fertile river valleys of China allowed villages and towns to flourish along their banks. The most important rivers were the Yellow and Yangzi Rivers which supported agricultural

More information

Prehistory Overview & Study Guide

Prehistory Overview & Study Guide Name Prehistory Overview & Study Guide Big Picture: Peopling the Earth: The first big event in this course is the spread of humans across the earth. This is the story of how communities of hunters, foragers,

More information

Geography of the Fertile Crescent

Geography of the Fertile Crescent Geography of the Fertile Crescent The Big Idea The valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers were the site of the world s first civilizations. Main Ideas The rivers of Southwest Asia supported the growth

More information

Chapter 5 Early Society in Mainland East Asia. pages

Chapter 5 Early Society in Mainland East Asia. pages Chapter 5 Early Society in Mainland East Asia pages 90-108 What is a civilization and what are defining characteristics of a civilization? How did the civilization of your chapter develop and grow more

More information

The World before the Opening of the Atlantic BEGINNINGS 1500

The World before the Opening of the Atlantic BEGINNINGS 1500 The World before the Opening of the Atlantic BEGINNINGS 1500 What you will Learn Buffalo graze on the plains in South Dakota. Millions of these animals used to roam lands from Canada to Texas. In this

More information

How did the Neolithic Revolution transform human societies?

How did the Neolithic Revolution transform human societies? How did the Neolithic Revolution transform human societies? The history of the universe is greater than the history of humanity. This Cosmic History or Big History dates back to the Big Bang (around13.7

More information

Lesson 2: China s Past. Ancient China

Lesson 2: China s Past. Ancient China Lesson 2: China s Past Ancient China Vocabulary ancestor - a relative who lived longer ago than a grandparent civil service - the practice of using skills and talents to work in the government middleman

More information

SSWH8 The student will demonstrate an understanding of the development of societies in Central and South America.

SSWH8 The student will demonstrate an understanding of the development of societies in Central and South America. SSWH8 The student will demonstrate an understanding of the development of societies in Central and South America. a. Explain the rise and fall of the Olmec, Mayan, Aztec, and Inca empires. Olmecs were

More information

Chapter 1: Prehistoric Era. AP World History Chapter 1

Chapter 1: Prehistoric Era. AP World History Chapter 1 Chapter 1: Prehistoric Era AP World History Chapter 1 Paleolithic Era -- 2.5 million - 12,000 BCE Human species: existed for 2.5 million years. Hominids: members of the family of humans (includes Homo

More information

MAYANS. The Mayans lived on the Yucatan Peninsula (in brown, right). This civilization flourished between 300 and 900 CE.

MAYANS. The Mayans lived on the Yucatan Peninsula (in brown, right). This civilization flourished between 300 and 900 CE. MAYANS The Mayans lived on the Yucatan Peninsula (in brown, right). This civilization flourished between 300 and 900 CE. The Mayans had one of the most advanced civilizations in the Americas. They built

More information

Name Period Date. Big Idea: City-states in Mesopotamia developed into one of the world s first civilizations by using resources in new ways.

Name Period Date. Big Idea: City-states in Mesopotamia developed into one of the world s first civilizations by using resources in new ways. Name Period Date Chapter 3: The Tigris and Euphrates Lesson 1: Civilization in Sumer Big Idea: City-states in Mesopotamia developed into one of the world s first civilizations by using resources in new

More information

earliest recorded history to today. writing art artifacts Centuries-old written records reveal a long-lasting civilization in

earliest recorded history to today. writing art artifacts Centuries-old written records reveal a long-lasting civilization in Score Chapter 4: Ancient China Lesson 2: China s Past Textbook pages 106 to 112 Name: Ms. Samuels - answers Class/Period: Date: Essential Questions Notes: The culture has been continuous, or unbroken,

More information

The Civilizations of America

The Civilizations of America The Civilizations of America advanced societies were developing in isolation in the Americas While classical civilizations were developing in the Mediterranean & Asia Text Title During the Neolithic Revolution,

More information

Robert W. Strayer Ways of the World: A Brief Global History Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources

Robert W. Strayer Ways of the World: A Brief Global History Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources Name Per. Robert W. Strayer Ways of the World: A Brief Global History Ways of the World: A Brief Global History with Sources Chapter 1 Study Guide 1. What was the first hominid species to use fire in a

More information

YEAR AT A GLANCE- MAJOR TOPICS

YEAR AT A GLANCE- MAJOR TOPICS YEAR AT A GLANCE- MAJOR TOPICS First Nine Weeks Second Nine Weeks Third Nine Weeks Fourth Nine Weeks STUDYING GEOGRAPHY Chapter 2 Lesson 1 Maps and Globes The Six Essential Elements of Geography Geographic

More information

Mesopotamia Study Guide Review STUDY GUIDES ARE DUE ON THE DAY OF THE TEST!

Mesopotamia Study Guide Review STUDY GUIDES ARE DUE ON THE DAY OF THE TEST! Mesopotamia Study Guide Review STUDY GUIDES ARE DUE ON THE DAY OF THE TEST! 1. How did the Mesopotamians use AND control the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers? Flood Control Built levees and storage basin to

More information

Agriculture marked a dramatic change in how people lived together. They began dwelling in larger, more organized communities, such as farming

Agriculture marked a dramatic change in how people lived together. They began dwelling in larger, more organized communities, such as farming Agriculture marked a dramatic change in how people lived together. They began dwelling in larger, more organized communities, such as farming villages and towns. From some of these settlements, cities

More information

Chapter 5. Early Society in East Asia. Copyright 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display.

Chapter 5. Early Society in East Asia. Copyright 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies Inc. Permission Required for Reproduction or Display. Chapter 5 Early Society in East Asia 1 The Yellow River Huang He 3000 Miles: Tibet to the Yellow Sea Deposits fertile, light colored soil Periodic flooding: China s sorrow 2 Prehistoric Society: Yangshao

More information

City-States in Mesopotamia

City-States in Mesopotamia CHAPTER 2 Section 1 (pages 29 34) City-States in Mesopotamia BEFORE YOU READ In the last chapter, you read about the earliest humans and the first civilization. In this section, you will learn more about

More information

Human Origins Unit Test

Human Origins Unit Test Human Origins Unit Test The following test is over information we have studied from the Human Origins Unit. It assesses student knowledge on the Paleolithic and Neolithic time periods, as well as how we

More information

Before Contact with Europeans

Before Contact with Europeans Before Contact with Europeans Introduction Migration to the Americas Early migrations from northern Asia to Alaska occurred 35,000 to 15,000 years ago Some contact with Polynesians possible Geography Great

More information

Name Class Date. Down 1. The Maya built these buildings to. 2. The Aztec leader killed by the. 4. He and his troops conquered the

Name Class Date. Down 1. The Maya built these buildings to. 2. The Aztec leader killed by the. 4. He and his troops conquered the Name Class Date The Early Americas BIG IDEAS 1. The Maya developed a civilization that thrived in Mesoamerica from about 250 until the 900s. 2. The strong Aztec Empire, founded in central Mexico in 1325,

More information

What was Africa like before global integration?

What was Africa like before global integration? What was Africa like before global integration? will be establishing sea-based empires in the Americas and trading-post empires in Africa and Asia The land empires (,,,, and ) expand dramatically Gunpowder,

More information

How was life along the Yellow River both similar and different from life along the Nile River?

How was life along the Yellow River both similar and different from life along the Nile River? As in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and along the Indus River, Chinese civilization began within a major river valley. Modern China itself is a huge geographical expanse. Around 4000 BC, this huge area contained

More information

Located in what is now partly Syria and Iraq

Located in what is now partly Syria and Iraq The Fertile Crescent A plain with rich topsoil carried down the Tigris and Euphrates River valleys with the spring floods. Bordered by the Zagros Mountains to the East, and the Syrian and Arabian Deserts

More information

RULING A LARGE EMPIRE

RULING A LARGE EMPIRE RULING A LARGE EMPIRE The First Empire Builder: In 2,300B.C., Sargon, the ruler or Akkad, invaded and conquered the city-state of Sumer. He thus created the very first empire in known history when he spread

More information

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3

Slide 1. Slide 2. Slide 3 Slide 1 Student Handouts, Inc. www.studenthandouts.com Slide 2 Paleo-Indians Paleo from palaios ( ancient in Greek) Indians from Columbus mistake Beringia Ice sheet across the Bering Strait that connected

More information

Mesopotamia. The Worlds First Civilization

Mesopotamia. The Worlds First Civilization Mesopotamia The Worlds First Civilization What is a civilization? Civilizations (SIHvuhluhZAY shuhns) are complex societies. They have cities, organized governments, art, religion, class divisions, and

More information

Did you know? Africa is one of the earth s seven continents. It is the second largest continent. Africa is a land of great beauty and resources.

Did you know? Africa is one of the earth s seven continents. It is the second largest continent. Africa is a land of great beauty and resources. Did you know? Africa is one of the earth s seven continents. It is the second largest continent. Africa is a land of great beauty and resources. The earliest evidence of human beings comes from Africa.

More information

Fertile Crescent Empires

Fertile Crescent Empires Preview Main Idea / Reading Focus The Hittites Maps: Conquering the Fertile Crescent The Assyrians and the Chaldeans Faces of History: Nebuchadnezzar II The Phoenicians Map: Phoenician Trade Quick Facts:

More information

Beginning of Man Stone Age Vocabulary

Beginning of Man Stone Age Vocabulary Beginning of Man Stone Age Vocabulary Paleolithic Era DEF: Old Stone Age CONNECT: Stone Age time tools were poorly made of stone Neolithic Era DEF: New Stone Age CONNECT: time tools were carefully made

More information

Human Origins in Africa

Human Origins in Africa Name CHAPTER 1 Section 1 (pages 5 13) Human Origins in Africa BEFORE YOU READ In this section, you will read about the earliest humans. AS YOU READ Use the time line below to take notes on the earliest

More information

CHINESE EMPIRE. AP World History Notes Chapter 4

CHINESE EMPIRE. AP World History Notes Chapter 4 CHINESE EMPIRE AP World History Notes Chapter 4 From 1100 BCE until the 200s CE --> 3 great dynasties ruled China = Zhou (JOH) = Qin (CHIN) = Han (HAHN) The Enduring Zhou Ruled China for more than 800

More information

China Before it was China. September 10, 2013

China Before it was China. September 10, 2013 China Before it was China September 10, 2013 Review How do we define Asia? How has geography influenced Asian history? Which religion spread across most of Asia? How much linguistic diversity is there

More information

Bell Ringer: August (), 2017

Bell Ringer: August (), 2017 Announcements: 1: Vocabulary List due at the end of the six weeks 2: Google survey due Friday, 8/31 You need: 1: Spiral/blank sheet of paper 2: Join the Neolithic Revolution! Cartoon 3: Copy of the Paleolithic/Neolithic,

More information

Chapter 1: From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River-Valley Civilizations, BCE

Chapter 1: From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River-Valley Civilizations, BCE Guided Reading 1: Technological and Environmental Transformations, To 600 BCE Name: Period: Chapter 1: From the Origins of Agriculture to the First River-Valley Civilizations, 8000-1500 BCE The principle

More information

Ancient Mesopotamia G.R.A. P.E.S. By: Austin Lee, Amber Nguyen, and Mia Ayala

Ancient Mesopotamia G.R.A. P.E.S. By: Austin Lee, Amber Nguyen, and Mia Ayala Ancient Mesopotamia G.R.A. P.E.S By: Austin Lee, Amber Nguyen, and Mia Ayala Geography by: Mia Ayala Here are some facts about Ancient Mesopotamia's geography. Mesopotamia is known as the "fertile crescent"

More information

SOL Review - Geography

SOL Review - Geography SOL Review - Geography I. Review Reading and Interpreting Maps, Diagrams & Pictures on the SOL A. Examine any chart, graph, map or other illustrations that accompanies the question. Examine the illustration

More information

Mesopotamia - The Land Between Two Rivers

Mesopotamia - The Land Between Two Rivers Mesopotamia - The Land Between Two Rivers Mesopotamia was a place where many ancient cities were established. The word Mesopotamia means located between two rivers. The two rivers were the Tigris River

More information

Mr. Lessard NAME

Mr. Lessard NAME NAME AP World History Summer Assignment 2018-2019 COMPLETE AND TURN IN ON FIRST DAY OF CLASS Future AP World Students, In preparation for AP World History, you are required to complete a THREE-part assignment

More information

Student Handout #4: Era 3 Societies around the World. The Olmec:

Student Handout #4: Era 3 Societies around the World. The Olmec: Student Handout #4: Era 3 Societies around the World As you read about four different societies below, think about your claims related to empires from Student Handout #3. What are important features for

More information

WHI.02: Early Humans

WHI.02: Early Humans WHI.02: Early Humans In this space, you will create a visual representation of what you have learned in the notes that follow on pages 9-15. You will be graded on your use of space, color and perceived

More information

The First People 5 million-5,000 years ago. Picture source: humanorigins.si.edu

The First People 5 million-5,000 years ago. Picture source: humanorigins.si.edu The First People 5 million-5,000 years ago Picture source: humanorigins.si.edu Terms to Know Prehistory Hominid Ancestor Tool Paleolithic Era Society Hunter-gatherers GROUP 1 STARTS HERE What you will

More information

Early Humans Interactive Notebook

Early Humans Interactive Notebook Early Humans Interactive Notebook Contents Included in this resource 1. A Note for the Teacher 2. How to use this resource 3. Photos of every page in use. You are welcome to use them as inspiration for

More information

Unit 3. Early Humans and the Agricultural Revolution 8000 B.C. to 2000 B.C.

Unit 3. Early Humans and the Agricultural Revolution 8000 B.C. to 2000 B.C. Unit 3 Early Humans and the Agricultural Revolution 8000 B.C. to 2000 B.C. The Beginning of Humans http://www.becominghuman.org/node/interactivedocumentary The Stone Age Old Stone Age Paleolithic Age 2,500,000

More information

World History: Patterns of Interaction

World History: Patterns of Interaction The Peopling of the World Prehistory 2500 B.C. Humans migrate throughout much of the world and begin to develop tools, art, agriculture and cities. The Peopling of the World Prehistory 2500 B.C. SECTION

More information

Ch 1 and 2 Review. Ancient River Valley Civilizations

Ch 1 and 2 Review. Ancient River Valley Civilizations Ch 1 and 2 Review Ancient River Valley Civilizations PREHISTORY PERIOD IN WHICH OUR ANCESTORS EXISTED ON EARTH BUT HAD NOT YET INVENTED WRITING OUR KNOWLEDGE OF THEM COMES FROM SCATTERED AND SCARCE PHYSICAL

More information

The Cradle of Civilization- Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent

The Cradle of Civilization- Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent The Cradle of Civilization- Mesopotamia and the Fertile Crescent Marshall High School Mr. Cline Western Civilization I: Ancient Foundations Unit Two AB The code consisted of over 200 acts and their required

More information

WARM-UP: HUNTER- GATHERERS. What is a hunter-gatherer? Who hunts? Who gathers? What is hunted? What is gathered? How will you get these things?

WARM-UP: HUNTER- GATHERERS. What is a hunter-gatherer? Who hunts? Who gathers? What is hunted? What is gathered? How will you get these things? WARM-UP: HUNTER- GATHERERS What is a hunter-gatherer? Who hunts? Who gathers? What is hunted? What is gathered? How will you get these things? PALEOLITHIC & NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION Societies Begin HOMOSAPIENS

More information

Table of Contents. World History Detective. Table of Contents

Table of Contents. World History Detective. Table of Contents Table of Contents Table of Contents Teacher Overview... iv About the Author... vi 1. The Fertile Crescent and the Sumerians...1 2. Babylonian Empire...5 3. Hittites and Phoenicians...9 4. Religious History

More information

Name Period. Maya, Aztec & Inca Civilizations Latin America Notes. The Maya

Name Period. Maya, Aztec & Inca Civilizations Latin America Notes. The Maya Name Period Maya, Aztec & Inca Civilizations Latin America Notes Class Objective: The Maya From. is known as the of Mayan civilization. Mayan Geography Central America: Rugged terrain, hilly Tropical Climate

More information

Mesopotamia, Sumer and Babylon Webquest

Mesopotamia, Sumer and Babylon Webquest Name Date Block Mesopotamia, Sumer and Babylon Webquest Directions: Answer the questions using www.mesopotamia.co.uk AND YOUR OWN background knowledge! Click on Mesopotamia, then Geography from the left

More information

early human history and Central & South America Jeopardy

early human history and Central & South America Jeopardy early human history and Central & South America Jeopardy What You Need To Know Every team will be chosen by Joe with the intention of mixing girls and boys and grade levels. Teams can choose a name if

More information

Indo-European Migrations: 4m-2m BCE The Middle East: The Crossroads of Three Continents

Indo-European Migrations: 4m-2m BCE The Middle East: The Crossroads of Three Continents Indo-European Migrations: 4m-2m BCE The Middle East: The Crossroads of Three Continents The Ancient Fertile Crescent Area The Middle East: The Cradle of Civilization Sumerians Sumerian Religion - Polytheistic

More information