Ancient Mesopotamia

*Complex Society

Agricultural economy producing a surplus

Urban centers (City or town)

Specialization of labor

Social divisions

Technological advances

Bronze, 4000 BCE

Wheel, 3500 BCE

Writing, 3200 BCE

*Mesopotamia

"Land between the rivers"

*Tigris and *Euphrates Rivers

"A blessing and a curse"

Irrigated agriculture

Agricultural surplus

Prone to flooding and invasion

Early Dynastic Period (2900-2334 BCE)

*Sumer (Southern Mesopotamia)

35 *city-states

*Uruk, Ur, Umma, Lagash, Kish and Nippur

Government

King Gudea (ca. 2150–2125 B.C.) of Lagash

Common culture

*Polytheistic religion

Enlil

Storm God

Chief god

Patron god of Nippur

Ishtar

Goddess of fertility, love and war

Patron goddess of Uruk

Architecture

Ziggurat

Urban design

Writing

*Pictographs, 3300 BCE

Accounting, tax records

*Cuneiform, 2500-700 BCE

Laws, literature, history, etc.

Example of "SAR"

*Akkadian Kingdom (2334-2279 BCE)

Akkad

Semites

Sargon (r. 2334-2279 BCE)

Political unity

Babylonian Kingdom (1894-1595 BCE)

*Babylon

*Hammurabi (r. 1792-1750 BCE)

*Primary source

Lecture Study Questions

1. What is complex society? Why was the complex society of Mesopotamia more complex than the earlier Neolithic town of Catalhoyuk?

2. Why was the geography of Mesopotamia a blessing and curse? Why did agriculture in Mesopotamian rely on irrigation? Why were Mesopotamian cities prone to flooding and invasions?

3. What cultural elements did the early Sumerian city-states of southern Mesopotamia share?

4. How did the writing system of Mesopotamia develop from a pictographic one around 3300 BCE to a cuneiform one in the period from 2500-700 BCE? Why did cuneiform allow more sophisticated forms of writing such as literature?

Reading Study Questions

Hansen, et al., 24-34

1. What is the difference between primary and secondary sources? Why is Voyages in World History a secondary source? How do historians use primary sources to learn about the past?

2. What are the characteristics of complex society? What new developments in government, society, and technology occurred in the city-states of Mesopotamia that made them a complex society? Critical Thinking: Should the Neolithic town of Catalhoyuk (Hansen, pp. 21-22 and "Women and Men at Çatalhöyük") be considered a complex society too?

Supplementary Reading on D2L>Content:

04) Primary Source: "The Judgments of Hammurabi"

1. Why is "The Judgments of Hammurabi" a primary source?

2. What can we learn from Hammurabi's judgments about Mesopotamian society (roles of men, women, children, peasants, etc.)?

3. What can we learn  from Hammurabi's judgments about Mesopotamian ideals of justice?