Turning back the clocks four hundred years ago and zoom into Europe‚ there can be found many different small‚ crowded and somewhat unorganized states and civilizations running about. Some are kingdoms‚ some are dukedoms‚ some are neither. A few of these states include Saxony‚ Franconia‚ Burgundy‚ Bavaria‚ and Austria. These‚ though‚ were all vassals of Germanic lands and formed something even greater‚ and that was the Holy Roman Empire. Though most historians don’t consider it to be very holy‚ roman
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WORLD HISTORY I EXAM REVIEW CHAPTER 1: THE EARLIEST HUMAN SOCIETIES PALEOLITHIC ERA: ~8000 BC Old Stone Age; earliest people Hunting and gathering food‚ vitamins‚ and minerals Buffalo‚ deer‚ herd animals that could be tracked Stayed next to rivers so they could follow the animas as they migrated (nomadic) Small societies Around 50-150 Support of environment Large enough for biological diversity Communication by sound (ghost communication) Slow development of technology Houses: caves
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University of Phoenix Material Ancient World Worksheet Complete the matrix section and the question section on the worksheet for each week. For each culture‚ identify the starting and ending dates of the culture‚ the structure of government‚ the role of the city government‚ and type of law created by the culture. Describe how the culture viewed the relationship between gods and people and how it defined citizenship. List the major events the culture experienced. The purpose of the matrix
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Venus of Willendorf from Willendorf‚ Austria 28‚000 – 25‚000 BCE Limestone Naturhistorisches Museum‚ Vienna Paleolithic - representation of a woman - female anatomy is exaggerated - serves as a fertility image - no facial features‚ just hair/hat - freestanding sculpture Statuettes of 2 worshipers from the Square Temple at Eshnunna (Tell Asmar)‚ Iraq 2700 BCE (early dynastic/Sumerian) Soft gypsum and inlaid with shell + black limestone Iraq Museum‚ Baghdad - represent mortals praying
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widespread support. A number of laws in the Code of Hammurabi facilitated marriage. Paragraph 138 of the code‚ for example‚ advocated women to find a second husband if the first one died or if he was captured. If the husband returned‚ however‚ the woman must return to him. When the man’s wife died‚ he usually remarried immediately‚ which indicates the value of staying married. In a way‚ all the laws regarding marriage in the Code of Hammurabi led to men having many children with multiple wives‚
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Assignment #1 “Biography of Rogier van der Weyden” Prepared by: GE161 Art History Jan 30th 2013 Rogier van der Weyden an early Netherlandish painter was originally given the name Rogier da la Pasture (Roger of the Pasture) and was born 1399 in Tournai which would now be called Belgium. He was the son of knife maker Henry de la Pasture and Agnes de Watrelos. Records of his life were destroyed during World War 2 so we cannot be sure as to his early years before he became a recognized
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Bosch’s Last Judgement triptych painting. I chose this painting because it’s has an dark interesting theme and its reference to the bible. This painting was done by Dutch artist Hieronymus Bosch on 1482. Bosch was born in 1450 in s-Hergenbotch‚ Burgundian Netherlands. It’s unknown when he started painting and how learned to paint. There is very little information on his life because he didn’t left any diaries or letters and not much is learned from his records in the city he grew up in‚ leaving many
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Van Eyck’s Portrait of Giovani Arnolfini and His Wife‚ Givanna Cenami and Masaccio’s Trinity with the Virgin‚ Saint John the Evangelist‚ and Donors are two paintings that clearly reflect the respective artistic traditions of the Northern and Italian Renaissance. Each painting is reflective of the buying public‚ the northern resistance to let go of Gothic design‚ the dichatomony of a more Humanistic tradition and a more religious culture‚ the area’s climate‚ the restructuring of the church with Martin
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* Mt. Rushmore (made of granite) * Plymouth Rock (the actual rock‚ not the place) (made of dacite) * the Rosetta Stone (made of dacite) * the Easter Island Statues (made of several igneous rocks‚ including basalt) * the Code of Hammurabi (made of diorite) * the Roman Pantheon (made of granite) * rock samples brought back from the moon during the Apollo 15 mission (made of anorthosite‚ an igneous rock that has a texture and composition similar to granite) Submit your completed
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gathering. 4. What is the name of the area where Sumerians settled? Fertile crescent 5. Name the title of the first great literary work that came out of Mesopotamia. The Epic of Gilgamesh 6. Who did Hammurabi say dictated the laws found on the stele and known as the Law Code of Hammurabi? The Babylonians 7. What do we call the stone slab‚ shaped at the top like an oval‚ upon which ancient people carved artwork or writing? Celtic Art 8. How many periods do scholars divide the history of
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