City-States in Lower Mesopotamia
Factors that contributed to the emergence of city-states in Lower Mesopotamia and the influence the landscape played in the formation of the civilization which emerged.<br><br>For this essay I considered the question of what factors contributed to the emergence of city-states in Lower Mesopotamia and the influence the landscape played in the formation of the civilization which emerged. Through my research on this topic I found that there is much evidence to support the claim that landscape was a very large influence on the emergence of civilization and that most of the contributing factors were, in some way, linked to geography.<br><br>In order to fully understand the topic, I first explored what the definition of civilization is. The first criterion for civilization, that I could think of, is domestication and an agricultural economy capable of producing a stored surplus. From this, I felt the need to examine the origins of Mesopotamian agriculture. <br><br>With the glacial retreat after the last ice-age (roughly 10000 BC) the Mesopotamian climate improved and many modern plants and animals began to become concentrated in specific areas. Around 9000 BC the vast majority of Mesopotamian peoples were hunter-gatherers. With the concentrations of plants and animals being in specific areas these hunter-gatherers soon began to domesticate those plants and animals and a sedentary village farming pattern arose. This became the predominant way of life around 6000 BC. This change from food collecting to food producing was one of the major transformations in human history. Early peoples no longer had to live the nomadic life of hunter-gatherers but could settle down in permanent housing and produce their own food. It also began an economic change that altered social and political institutions, religion, etc.<br><br>Domestication is the process of altering plants and animals so that they are no longer bound to the natural habitats of their wild ancestors. In essence they
Bibliography: /b><br>1. A History Of the Ancient World Fourth Edition, Chester G. Starr, Oxford University Press, 1991.<br>2. Readings In Ancient History Fourth Edition, Nels M. Bailkey, D.C. Heath and Company, 1992.<br>3. <a href="http://saturn.sron.ruu.nl/~jheise/akkadian/mesopotamia.html">http://saturn.sron.ruu.nl/~jheise/akkadian/mesopotamia.html</a>.