Mesopotamia

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Mesopotamia. The Earliest Civilization?. Mesopotamia. “Land between the rivers”. Nature’s tenuous bounty. The Tigris (right) and the Euphrates. The Babylonian empire under Nebuchadnezzar II. circa 600 BCE. The Persian empire. 6th century BCE. Sumerian home. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Mesopotamia

The Earliest Civilization?

Adler, chapter 2

Mesopotamia

Adler, chapter 2

“Land between the rivers”

Adler, chapter 2

Nature’s tenuous bounty

• The Tigris (right) and the Euphrates

Adler, chapter 2

The Babylonian empire under Nebuchadnezzar II

circa 600 BCE

Adler, chapter 2

The Persian empire

6th century BCE

Adler, chapter 2

• The typical residence of a well-to-do businessman– windowless– a central open-air

courtyard

Sumerian home

Adler, chapter 2

Monumental architecture

• The ziggurat of Ur

Adler, chapter 2

Ur, city of the moon goddess

Adler, chapter 2

Even the Assyrians….

Adler, chapter 2

And the Neo-Babylonians• Nebuchchadnezzar’s famous

Hanging Gardens of Babylon– one of the seven wonders of

the world– supposedly built for his Persian

wife

Adler, chapter 2

Finally, the Achmenids

• Right: the ruins at Persepolis

Adler, chapter 2

Religious life• Question: what sort of

attitudes might we associate with the figures below?

• Right: worshipping the mood goddess

Adler, chapter 2

Warfare

• Below: the Standard of Ur• Right: Assyrian “frightfulness”

Adler, chapter 2

Warfare (cont.)

• Right: Jewish war captives

• Below: favorite “sport”

Adler, chapter 2

Inventions

• Writing– from the earliest (below) to

the very complex (far right)

Adler, chapter 2

Inventions (cont.)

• The plow– surely one of history’s most important inventions

Adler, chapter 2

Inventions (cont.)

• New world peoples did not make this discovery

Adler, chapter 2

Governing a troubled land

• Below: king Gudea of Lagesh• Right: temple tribute

Adler, chapter 2

Hammurabi

• The “Lawgiver”• From Adler:

– “How does the Hammurabi Code show that property rights were superior to human rights?”

Adler, chapter 2

Everyday life