1. Mesopotamia in the Tigris and Euphrates River Valleys- a region of SW Asia between the lower and middle reaches of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers: site of several ancient civilizations…
Mesopotamian civilization developed along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Iraq is the modern day country that exists is this geographical location.…
2. What might be the meaning of the animals represented on the Lyre sound box (fig. 2.14a)?…
Since the beginning of human imagination, we have fabricated the idea of power through imaginative creatures for protection. The origin of this idea dates back before the death of Christ with "bas" relief animals attached to gate walls. During the Assyrian Era, Lamassu guarded the gates of Sargon II in Bet-Nahrain.…
The three cultures that merged in Mesopotamia were Sumerian, Akkadian, and Babylonian. Sumerian was about 2350 B.C. Akkadian rose about 2000 B.C. Babylonian came along about 1600 B.C. History began at Sumer (Mattews, Noble, & Platt, 2014).…
Within the Assyrian and the Phoenician Empires there was truly a contrast in their institutions, goals and values. While the Phoenicians conducted a society based on trade and religion, the Assyrians mainly focused on expansion and control. Moreover, both empires had their strengths and weakness within their respected societies.…
Mesopotamia and ancient Egypt both shared many distinct qualities amongst their civilizations. For example, their polytheistic beliefs as well as a similar social structure. These two civilizations differed in numerous modes, including political authority and geography.…
While visiting the Los Angeles County Museum of Art I was struck by a piece by the title of Fragment of a Painted Assyrian Relief. This piece, made by the Akkadian culture during the Mesopotamia Era, is approximately 10 3/8 x 5. 1 ¾ inch in size. This fine, yet very ancient, work is crafted out of limestone. Fine, durable, brown stone and red pigment, it is especially found in Northern Iraq. Having a short written record, this relief sculpture once formed part of a much larger composition, and it depicts the head of an Assyrian sovereign, probably Sargon. In fact, the stone head of Sargon contains certain cultural elements that represent royalty and authority like the patterned beard and braided long hair. Although this sculpture is only mere fragment of the actual sculpture, the head of the Akkadian ruler presents the viewer with great meaning in elements, content, and cultural significance.…
Mesopotamia, also known as the land between two rivers, became the grounds of many ancient civilizations that we know about today. Perhaps one of the most famous is Sumer. Sumer was a civilization that thrived off of the two river, the Tigris and the Euphrates. Using irrigation systems, the Sumerians used the floods of the rivers produced to grow crops and support the growing population. This civilization grew into an early form of a modern city, with things like business, jobs, currency, and social classes. How were the Sumerians able to keep track of money and payments and when floods happened without a writing system? Eventually, the Sumerians were able to create to world's earliest writing system to keep record of all this. Later, that system evolved and became what we…
Early settlers saw potential among the Mesopotamia and began to build along the rivers surrounding the area. Mesopotamia in fact means “land between rivers” it is the area in the middle of the Tigris and Euphrates river system. The people of this region survived using the natural resources that were given to them in the form of vegetation and animal life. The people soon found a way of irrigation to grow their own crops and use the crops as a way to feed their animals. With irrigation, the food supply[->0] in Mesopotamia was quite plentiful. The area expanded as more people began to move into the area, what was once known as a desolate desert area, is now known as Iraq (Iraq,…
Egypt and Mesopotamia have both similarities and differences; one aspect that was very different between Egypt and Mesopotamia was the government. In Egypt, they had just one leader, the pharaoh. Egypt would have needed this strong central government for projects such as organizing and overseeing of the pyramid buildings. The early Mesopotamians used a city-state type government. Each area was controlled by its own political and economic center. Each area was a separate political unit. The social structure of Mesopotamia and Egypt were different. In Mesopotamia there was no gender equality. However, in ancient Egypt females had more opportunities to rise in life. In Mesopotamia, although they had different classes of slaves, they were still treated like property. In both societies the very few elite held enormous wealth, while the common people normally just got by day-by-day.…
Mesopotamian kings were rulers who ruled Mesopotamia for a period of time. Mesopotamia was divided into city-states, so each city-state had a different ruler and government. Often, the kings and governments did not rule for very long because kings often times conquered neighboring city-states. The most well-known kings are Gilgamesh, the fifth king of Uruk, Sargon the great, who founded the world’s first empire, Hammurabi, the sixth king of Babylon, who established a written code of laws called the Hammurabi Code, and Shamshi-Adad, who established the first Assyrian Empire.…
1. What aspects of life in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt made them the first Western civilizations? To what extent does civilization depend on urban life? What are the general characteristics of urban life that can be identified regardless of historical period?…
The fall of the territorial states, with a shockingly similar cause to the cause of the fall of their predecessors being climate change, gave rise to a new type of political ruling, empires which are groups of different ethnic groups or states under the control of a single ruling power. The two prime examples of these new empires and ways in which political ruling changed are the Assyrian and the Persian Empires, both viewed as political models as well as models of the effective use of ideology. The Zhou Dynasty, although not politically centered enough to be considered an empire, also mastered the efficient and effective working of ideologies and successful political rule. These three empires, or dynasty in the case of the Zhou, perhaps the…
In the Bronze Age the Assyrians are an established military and commercial power. However, they are not spared in the fall of states around 1200 B.C. Those who survive, retain approximately 5000 square miles of land, and develop an aggressive imperialist outlook. Because of this, the Assyrians conquer many states and become the first empire to rule the two great river valley’s, the Nile and the Tigris-Euphrates.…