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27 January 2009. Wanderers and Settlers. Defining “Western Civilization”.
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27 January 2009 Wanderers and Settlers
Defining “Western Civilization” • Western – Or the “West,” may have multiple meanings. The term is often associated with particular geographical, historical, religious, economic, political, cultural, etc. contexts (i.e. Europe/U.S.A., Rome/Greece, Christian, capitalist, monarchies/democracies, classical music/blue jeans/McDonald’s). • Civilization – has a political, economic, social, religious/intellectual, cultural system (but is often associated with “loaded” terms like progress, advanced state, development, superior sense of self and collective identity) • History – an account of past events, often written (can be oral/memory), that does more than just relay “facts” (names/dates/places) by attempting to given cause/effect relationships (the how and why)
Western Civilization • Economic system • Social system • Political system • Religious/Intellectual system • Cultural system • How do these things define civilization?
Ethnography - The branch of anthropology that deals with the scientific description of specific human cultures. • Early hominids had: 1) bipedalism 2) very large brain 3) human larynx • Did climate changes spur human “evolution?” • Homo habilis – 2 to 3 million years ago • Homo erectus – 1.8 million years ago African Genesis as Ethnographical History
Between 160,000 and 200,000 years ago About 40,000 years ago, the first “modern” human began to appear A new species, began displacing old human populations and spread from Africa to the Americas, Australia and the Arctic As challenges emerged they went through minor evolutionary changes in order to adapt Homo Sapiens
The appearance of the first “man-made” stone tools around 2 million years ago to the introduction of metal tools around 5,000 years ago is called the Paleolithic Age (Old Stone Age) Periodic cold climate changes, known as ice ages, occurred frequently considering the expanse of time. The last Ice Age ended about 10,000 years ago The Stone and Ice Ages
How might an Ice Age speed up social evolutions? Climate change forced humans into small, highly mobile bands creating the “hunter/gatherer” society as did the genderization of roles create better efficiency Because of the nomadic lifestyle, hunter/gatherers did not spend lots of energy on housing During the Ice Age
Prehistoric human societies existed at the mercy of environment and the constant search for food • Development of hunter/gatherer societies • Groups maintained their own territory; didn’t roam randomly • Develop early trade patterns • Tools for luxury goods like shells for jewelry • Technological development • Better weapons • Fire • Early Religious systems • Ritual disfigurement of the deceased • Burial rituals—do they believe in an afterlife? Hierarchy? “Pre-history” to 4,000 B.C.E.
Early communities organized around kinship and “marriage” Staying put led to greater “advances” in “arts,” “sciences,” and “religious developments” Culture and Community
24,000-22,000 B.C.E. Venus of Willendorf
Neolithic means “New Stone Age” • Discovery of agriculture and the domestication of animals • Called the Neolithic Revolution (10,000 – c. 4,000 B.C.E.) • From nomadic existences to settled life • Strong relationship between cultivating crops and population increase • First animal to be domesticated: sheep, 8500 B.C.E. • Led to gender-based division of labor and emergence of social hierarchy • Invention of irrigation (~6,500 B.C.E.) facilitated the establishment of settled agricultural communities in the Fertile Crescent The Neolithic Revolution
The Earliest Monarchies • Absolutism • Essential duties: • symbolic father • Dynasty building • peace-keeper • Legal systems • warrior Neolithic Political Organization
Polytheistic Religion • Gods and goddesses representing earthly and celestial elements • Priest figures celebrated gods with ceremony • Communal feasts to celebrate gods • Early calendars built around polytheistic religion Neolithic Political Organization
Famine/insufficient nutrition • Plague • Division of labor • Gender • Social class • War Social consequences of Civilization
Neolithic means “New Stone Age” • Discovery of agriculture and the domestication of animals • Called the Neolithic Revolution (10,000 – c. 4,000 B.C.E.) • From nomadic existences to settled life • Strong relationship between cultivating crops and population increase • First animal to be domesticated: sheep, 8500 B.C.E. • Led to gender-based division of labor and emergence of social hierarchy • Invention of irrigation (~6,500 B.C.E.) facilitated the establishment of settled agricultural communities in the Fertile Crescent The Neolithic Revolution
Most historians trace the origins of “western civilization” to the land area between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers • Mesopotamia=land between the rivers. • Geography allowed for the cultivation of surplus foods and so the Sumerians and Babylonians built large cities near the two rivers Mesopotamia ~4,000 – 1,000 B.C.E.
Mesopotamia, 4000-1000 B.C.E. • Includes Sumer, Akkadian Empire, Assyria, and Babylonia • Egypt, Canaanites, Hebrews, 3050-1000 B.C.E. • Hittites, Minoans, Mycenaeans, 2200-1000 B.C.E. • Greek Dark Age, 1000-750 B.C.E. The first Ancient civilizations
The “West’s” first large-scale societal structure and system Developed the wheel, writing, complex math, complex metal working (bronze), and the first empire (Akkad) What “cultural” developments arose from Mesopotamia? What of ourselves can we recognize in this society? Why is Mesopotamia important?
Writing (and so history) began in Sumer • Cuneiform (wedge-shaped) written language • Pictographic • Increasingly intricate and abstract • Expertise required • Leads to advances in math, science, engineering, metallurgy, etc. The Key to Western History
Mesopotamia made up of small city-states Agricultural expansion led to political centralization Power in Mesopotamia held by king and religious elites ~2,350 B.C.E., Sargon, ruler of Akkad, was the first to unite the small city-states into one kingdom – Sumer (southern) The Akkad kings toppled by the Babylonians ~ 2,000 B.C.E. Cities, Kings and Trade
4 Main social distinctions in Mesopotamia • Nobles • Free Clients of the nobility • Commoners • Slaves (society was not, however, organized on the foundations of slavery) • Society was generally organized around religion • pleasing of gods and goddesses • The temple (ziggurat) was the meeting place and temple Sumerian Society
Mesopotamian religion was • polytheistic • gods and goddesses representing almost everything in the cosmos • Gods and goddesses were human, with supernatural powers, particularly in regards to the natural world • Such religious ideas spawned efforts to create myths about the origins of the world • The Epic of Gilgamesh is a Sumerian creation story Thought and Religion
Environment determined much of development possibilities Power and authority centralized and out of this comes elite class and social hierarchies Emergence of large-scale empires In this period Civilization then defined by urban settlements, religious cultural foundations, writing, diversified agricultural economy, organized political structures Such organization (political, social, and economic) appears in a form that seems to typify much of western civilization through the pre-modern era (until 1789 A.D. or C.E.) In Summary
The most important geographical feature of Egypt is the Nile River • regular flooding of the Nile provided irrigation and fertilization for Egyptian agriculture, • many natural resources to exploit, making Egyptians more self-sufficient (perhaps isolated, to some extent) than the Mesopotamians • Egyptian society unified by the Nile • religion, ideology, daily ritual, based on the idea that the Nile was a “gift” from the gods The Gift of the Nile
Early Political unity of Egyptian communities into a larger “Egypt” is called the Old Kingdom (~3,000-2,000 B.C.E.) Further centralization of Egyptian authority in the form of pharaohship during the Middle Kingdom period (~2,000-1,500 B.C.E.) Egypt would later be characterized by imperial expansion during the period of the New Kingdom (~1,600-1,200 B.C.E.) Divine Kingship
Egyptians developed complex ideas about the afterlife • rooted in the natural world with emphasis on cycles (i.e. regular flooding of the Nile). • Evidence for this: great tombs and pyramids • The pharaoh was the “king” of Egypt • a “god” on earth (the son of the sun-god Re), • the chief priest • the embodiment of “Egypt” (as state, geographical entity, etc.) • the focal point of religion and politics • All of Egypt belonged to the king and everyone served him • Power reflected in the structure of the tombs and pyramids • A royal administration kept track of Egypt’s natural resources and controlled Egypt’s economy Divine Kingship
Maat – authorized order of the universe (truth, balance, order, law, morality, justice) • The Egyptians have advanced writing system—hieroglyphics • used it to communicate in various forms (not just a religious function, or learned only by elite scribes) • the basis of advances in chemistry, medicine, mathematics, engineering and architecture • A heterogeneous population, the Egyptians were divided into 3 broad groups: • King and high-level officials at the top • Low-level officials, priests, professionals, artisans, and wealthy farmers in the middle • Peasants, who made up the bulk of the population, at the bottom (slavery existed, but was not foundational for the Egyptian economy) Egyptian Society and Culture
Invasion from Africa and the Near East shattered Egyptian power • Libyans in the north and the Nubians to the south • The spread of Egyptian culture came not from its own imperial ambitions • rather from the borrowing/embracing of Egyptian ideas by invaders • Egypt never recovered, never really re-unified under the kind of power displayed during the Old and New Kingdoms • The decline led to the success of other societies • Phoenicians, Syrians and Hebrews and the prosperity of smaller, independent city-states that fragmented out of the Egyptian Empire’s dissolution Egyptian Decline