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AP World History Unit I: Foundations8000 BCE 600 CE
Paleolithic Neolithic 1st
Villages 1st
Civs - RVC Classical Civs/Rise of World Religions
8 Elements of a
Civilization
•Writing System
•Organized Belief System
•Cities
•Public Works
•Specialized Jobs
•Government
•Social Classes
•Art/Architecture
Political Systems
•Democracy
•Republic
•Monarchy
•Dictatorship
•Aristocracy
•Oligarchy
•Theocracy
Global History Review8000 BCE 600 CE
Paleolithic Neolithic 1st
Villages 1st
Civs - RVC Classical Civs/Rise of World Religions
8 Elements of a
Civilization
•Writing System
•Organized Belief
System
•Cities
•Public Works
•Specialized Jobs
•Government
•Social Classes
•Art/Architecture
Political
Systems
•Democracy
•Republic
•Monarchy
•Dictatorship
•Aristocracy
•Oligarchy
•Theocracy
•“Old Stone
Age”
•Nomadic,
small clans
•Hunters/
Gatherers
•Men/Women –
social equality
•Agricultural
Revolution
•Farming,
domesticated
animals
•Not everyone
settled – Pastoral
Nomads
•Greater social
inequality,
specialized jobs,
food surplus
•Jericho
•Catal Huyuk
•Jomon
•Mesopotamia (Tigris, Euphrates),
Fertile Crescent, Hammurabi,
Sumerians, Babylonians,
Assyrians, Hittites, Hebrews
•Egypt (Nile), Theocracy,
Hieroglyphics, Polytheistic
•Indus (Indus, Ganges), Mohenjo-
Daro, Harappa, Aryans, Vedic
Age, Origins of Hinduism, Caste
System
•China (Huang He) Shang, Zhou,
Dynasty, Oracle bones, “Middle
Kingdom,” Mandate of Heaven,
Dynastic Cycle
•Persia: Zoroastrianism, tolerance, Cyrus the
Great
•Greece – City states, direct democracy,
philosophy (SPA), Pericles, Hellenism, Alex the
Great
•India – Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Caste
System, Mauryan, Gupta Empires
•China –Q’in, Han Dynasties, Confucianism,
Legalism, Daoism, spread of Buddhism, filial
piety, Shi Huangdi, Han Wudi, civil service
exam
•Rome – Republic, Julius Caesar, Caesar
Augustus, Pax Romana, Law of 12 Tables, Fall
of Rome
India: Indus River Valley --------Aryan (Vedic Age)------------Maurya-------------Gupta
3600-1900 BCE -----------------1500 BCE--------------326 -184 BCE--------320-535 CE
China: Shang Dynasty --------Zhou Dynasty--------Qin Dynasty-------------Han Dynasty
1500-1027BCE ---------1027-771BCE---------221-207BCE------------206BCE-220CE
Mediterranean: Minoan --------Mycenaean--------------Greek-----------------Roman
1600 BCE -------1400 BCE--------------800BCE-----------500BCE-476CE
Mesoamerican: Olmec ---------------------Mayan---------------------Aztec
1200BCE -------------300BCE-900CE---------1200-1500CE
PERIOD 2: 600BCE-600CE
Society Types
Foraging Pastoral
Social Nomadic
Egalitarian nature
Leaders based on age, strength,
courage, intelligence
Nomadic – temporary homes
Sparse Population
Men are herders/males dominated
Political Organized in small clans- 20-30
Led by strongest male
Organized hunts
Organized into large Bands
Split into blood/clans- rivalries developed
Had military/warriors
Religious Belief in afterlife. Buried dead with
tools and weapons
Worship gods of storm, war
Intellectual Limited language
Sculptures, pictograms, cave
paintings
Respect for family, courage
Domestication of animals – subject matter for
art, hides for clothing and shelter
Technological Daggers, spears, hammers, bow and
arrow, fire, digging sticks
Fire is sacred, chariots were developed
Economic Hunters and gatherers
Few possessions
Little surplus of goods except cattle – split as
size of clans grew
Limited personal belongings
2,500,000 BCE – 10,000 BCE2,500,000 BCE – 10,000 BCE
1. Hunting and gathering: Small bands of 20-30
people. Gender equality because both contributed
to survival
2. Mostly Nomadic but some Permanent
settlements were established in areas with
abundant food resources (grains, fish).
3. Neanderthal Man: First fully modern human
beings-physically and mentally. Belief in afterlife,
buried dead
4. Cro-Magnon man: Interested in fashion and art.
Humans during this period found shelter in caves.Humans during this period found shelter in caves.
Cave paintings were left behind.Cave paintings were left behind.
8000-3000 BCE
1. Food surplus lead to population boom
2. Permanent settlements and
communities develop. Idea of private
property
3. Development on farming technology, art,
architecture, language, job specialization,
irrigation, etc.
4. Development of cities: Catal Huyuk, Jericho.
Advanced
Cities
Advanced
Cities
Specialized
Workers/
Social Classes
Specialized
Workers/
Social Classes Complex
Institutions:
Government
Public Works
Economic Systems
Organized religion
Complex
Institutions:
Government
Public Works
Economic Systems
Organized religion
Record-
Keeping
Record-
Keeping
Advanced
Technology
Advanced
Technology
Art and
Architecture
Art and
Architecture
Mesopotamia: “The Cradle of Civilization”
“Fertile Crescent” and lackof natural barriers allowed
many groups to control this valuable area.
Geography of Mesopotamia
Sumerian City-States
3000 B.C.E.
Successful agriculture, irrigation
systems
Writing, cuneiforms
Use of wheel
12 month calendar
Polytheistic
Polytheistic: The Gods were
Anthropomorphic.
City-State: Urban areas that controlled surrounding regions and loosely
connected with other city-states: Ur, Uruk, Eridu, Lagash, Babylon, Kish
Developed organized projects: irrigation systems, palaces, ziggurats,
defensive walls, temples
Hammurabi, the Judge
• “King of the four quarters of the world”
• Centralized bureaucratic government
• System of taxation
• First written code of laws
• “King of the four quarters of the world”
• Centralized bureaucratic government
• System of taxation
• First written code of laws
The Babylonian Empires
Babylonian Achievements
12 Month
Calendar
Mathematics
Babylonian
Numbers
The Hittites
•Learned to
extract iron from
ore and were the
first to make
tools and
weapons of iron.
The Assyrians
•Centralized
bureaucratic
government.
•Built military
roads to move
troops quickly.
•Founded first
libraries.The Phoenicians
•Best known
for
manufacturing
and trade
•“Carriers of
Civilization”
•Created first
alphabet
The Hebrews
•Belief in Judaism, first
monotheistic faith
• Ten commandments
Phoenicians
Traders, Invaders, and Empire Builders?Traders, Invaders, and Empire Builders?
Assyrians
TradersTradersInvadersInvaders
Hebrews
Empire BuildersEmpire Builders
The HittitesThe Sumerians The Babylonians
TradersTraders Empire BuildersEmpire Builders InvadersInvaders
Geography of
Egypt
Walk Like an Egyptian
•Rich soil, gentle annual flooding
• Led by Pharaoh – leader with total
power
•water management, pyramids,
astronomy, hieroglyphs,
mummification, calendar, gold
•Polytheistic
•Women rulers, buy, sell property,
inherit, will property, dissolve
marriages, still subservient to men
• Hierarchy: pharaoh, priest, nobles,
merchants, artisans, peasants, slaves
•Conquered by (1100 BCE)
Geography of China
China: Shang on the Huang
Shang: 1700-1100 BCE
• Aristocrats and bureaucrats directed the work and life of the Shang.
• Warfare a constant feature.
• Most commoners worked as semi free serfs in agriculture. Others
were artisans, craftsmen.
• Stable agri-surplus, trade-centered
• N. China, walled cities, strong army,
chariots
• “The Middle Kingdom” World View
• Bronze, pottery, silk, decimal
system, calendar
• Patriarchal, polytheistic, ancestor
veneration, oracle bones
It’s Zhou Time!
Replaced Shang around 1100 BCE
Ruled 900 years, kept customs,
traditions
Mandate of Heaven
Feudal system, nobles gained,
bureaucracies, war amongst feudal
kingdoms, collapse 256 BCE
Established early forms of feudalism in which the King gave large
tracts of land to loyal leaders who became lords. These lords provided
the king with military forces in exchange for the land.
Geography of India
Indus Valley: 3300 – 1700 B.C.E.
Outside contact more limited -
moutains
Kyber Pass connection to
outside
Twin Cities of Harrappa,
Mohenjo-Daro
Master-planned, water system,
strong central gov’t,
polytheistic, written language
Pottery, cotton, cloth
Cities abandoned, reason
unknown
Aryans arrive 1500 BCE
The Harappan Civilization
From Caucasus Mtns.
Black/Caspian Sea
Nomads who settled
Vedas, Upanashads basis for
Hinduism
Caste system
warriors, priests, peasants
later re-ordered: Brahmins
(priests), warriors, landowners-
merchants, peasants,
untouchables (out castes)
Aryans: The Vedic Age: 1500-500 B.C.E..
ShudrasShudras
VaishyasVaishyas
KshatriyasKshatriyas
Pariahs [Harijan] 
Untouchables
BrahminsBrahmins
Olmecs 1500 BCE (Mexico), Mayans
2000 BCE (Mexico/Guatemala), and
Chavin Cult 900 BCE (Andes) developed
similarly to River Valley Civilizations:
urbanization, polytheistic, irrigation,
writing, calendar, monumental
buildings, social structure, city-states.
The point: Similar pattern of
development in different part of earth,
no contact
The difference: No major river. Had to
adapt to rainforest and mountains.
Civilization in the Americas
Sedentary/Nationalistic Religions Missionary Religions
•Born into religion
•Society structured around
religious ideas
•Complex religion and history
•No real centralized hierarchy
•Very little conversion
•Stationary – grounded to the land
•Develops out of Sedentary faith
•Religion adapts to different cultural
practices
•Simplistic rules
•Tends to have more centralized
structure and hierarchy
•Spreads through trade routes and
conquests – leads to cultural diffusion
Religions and Belief Systems
Judaism
Hinduism
Christianity Islam
Buddhism
Animism Confucianism
Southwest Asian Religions
Judaism
Christianity
ISLAM
ProtestantEastern Orthodox
Sunni
Shiite
Russian Orthodox
Anglican
Calvinist
Lutheran
Roman Catholic
Coptic
Sufi
3000 BCE
33 CE
622 CE
South Asian Religions
Hinduism
Buddhism
Jainism
Zen
Mahayana
TherevedaSikhism
5000 BCE
500 BCE800 BCE
Tibetan
(Tantric)
1469 CE
Diffusion of Belief Systems
Religions and Belief Systems
Animism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
Africa,
Latin America
No Founder
No holy book – mostly oral traditions
All things in nature have a soul (Trees, stones,
rivers, etc.)
Use of Shaman or Diviners who conducted
ceremonies and rituals and used fetishes
Ancestor Veneration – Your ancestor’s spirits
watch over you and can protect you.
Found among many
pastoral nomadic tribal
villages.
Tribal masks inspired
Cubist art movement
Hinduism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
India
3000 B.C.E.
Spread
throughout
India
Stationary
Religion
Brahman-supreme force: Gods are
manifestations of Brahman (Vishnu-
preserver, Shiva-destroyer)
Reincarnation. Dharma: rules and
obligations. Karma: fate based on how
dharma was met.
Moshka: highest state of being, release of
soul
Vedas and Upanishads
Caste System: Rigid
social structure, born
into caste, must
perform certain job, or
Jati.
Ganges is sacred river,
performance of rituals
Spawned Buddhism
Caste System
ShudrasShudras
VaishyasVaishyas
KshatriyasKshatriyas
Pariahs [Harijan]  Untouchables
BrahminsBrahmins
Buddhism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
India, Nepal
563 B.C.E.
Spread
throughout
India, China,
Japan, S.E.
Asia
Missionary
Religion
Founded by Siddhartha Guatama
No Supreme Being– Buddha “Enlightened one”
Four Noble Truths – Life is suffering caused by
desire, follow Eight Fold Path
Nirvana, state of perfect peace and harmony
path may take several lifetimes: Reincarnation,
Dharma, Karma
Theraveda: meditation, harmony, Buddha not a
god (Lesser Vehicle)
Mahayana: more complex, greater ritual, reliance
on priests. Buddha a diety
No Caste system,
appealed to lower classes.
Not attached to social
structure, spread rapidly
to other cultures.
Ashoka adopted
Buddhism.
Force of cultural diffusion
via trade, Silk Road,
missionary Religion
Legalism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
China
500
B.C.E.
Founded by Han Feizi
The Q’in Dynasty- Shi Huangdi
Peace & order through centralized, tightly
controlled state
Mistrust of human nature; reliance on tough laws
Punish those who break laws, reward those who
follow
2 most worthy jobs: farmer, soldier
Accomplished swift
reunification of China.
Completion of projects
like the Great Wall.
Caused widespread
resentment among
common people, led to
wider acceptance of
Confucianism-Daoism.
Confucianism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
China
500
B.C.E.
Spread to
Japan,
S.E. Asia
Founded by Confucius (Kong Fu Tse)
Political-social philosophy, not religion
Moral, ethical, also practical – The Analects
Five Right relationships = right society: Parent
to Child (Filial Piety), Ruler to Subject, Older to
Younger, Husband to Wife, Friend to Friend.
Education is valuable and everyone should be
able to get one. Become a gentleman.
Put aside personal ambition for good of state
As a ethical, social,
political belief system it
was compatible with
other religions, could
practice Buddhism and
Confucianism
Embraced by Han,
Tang, Song, Ming
Dynasties. Civil
Service Exam
Daoism-Taoism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
China
500
B.C.E.
Founded by Lao-tzu, philosopher
Dao = “The Way” (of nature/cosmos)
Wu wei- non-doing, harmony with nature
Eternal principles, passive, yielding.
Like water, yet strong, shaping.
Yin-Yang – symbol of balance in nature
Self-sufficient communities
Counter to Confucian activism
Emphasis on harmony w/
nature leads gains:
astronomy, botany, chemistry
Co-existed w/Confucianism,
Buddhism, Legalism
Added to complexity of
Chinese culture
Judaism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
Middle
East,
Caanan
Jerusalem
3000
B.C.E.
Founded by Abraham, Moses
Hebrews were chosen by God, special status
Personal relationship with God – a covenant
Afterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy,
personal salvation.
To honor, serve God, promote prophets –
Wailing Wall
A religion & culture – Torah, Talmud
10 Commandments, waiting for messiah
The First
Monotheistic Belief
System
Led to Christianity
and Islam
Forced migration –
Exodus, Diaspora,
Holocaust
Like Hinduism –
Stationary faith
Christianity
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
Middle
East,
Jerusalem
30 C.E.
Spread
north and
west
throughout
Europe,
Americas
Founded by Jesus of Nazareth - Bible
Splinter group of Jews, quickly spread
throughout Roman Empire despite persecution
Jesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish prophecy
Devotion to God, love of fellow man -
monotheistic
Jesus sent to redeem man from sin
Salvation by faith in divinity, death, and
resurrection of Jesus.
Crucified by Roman gov’t 30 CE
Emphasis on
salvation, eternal life
after death appealed
to lower classes,
women
Combo of religion &
empire = huge impact
on political, social
development of
Europe Missionary
Religion
Islam
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
Middle East,
Mecca,
Medina,
Jerusalem
622 C.E.
Spread North
Africa,
S.E.Asia, U.S.
Founded by Muhammad- Prophet – Koran
Five Pillars of Faith:
Allah is one true God, Prophet is Muhammad
Pray Five times a day facing Mecca
Almsgiving – give to the poor
Ramadan – Fasting
Hajj – Pilgrimage to Mecca
Can not eat pork, gamble, drink alcohol, smoke
Jihad – Struggle in God’s service
Led to Islamic
Empires Umayyad
Caliphate, Abbasids,
Ottoman, Mughal
Shiite-Sunni Split
Crusades – Holy
wars
Missionary religion
Shintoism
Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance
Japan
500BCE
No
founder
God in all of us and in all of nature. Our body is the
visible temple for the soul.
Anaterasu is the Sun Goddess and main god or kami.
Emperor is descendant and was seen as divine
“Tori” is the symbol of prosperity in Shintoism and the
sacred gates that are found in front of all Shinto temples
in Japan. People write wishes on the Tori gates wishing
for good health, wealth and prosperity.
There are no written doctrines
There are gods in every object in nature (Kami)
Animist - Ancestor veneration
Justified power of
Emperor
During Meiji Restoration,
Shintoism was used to
unite Japanese
During WWII, Kamikaze
pilots sacrificed
themselves for their
Emperor

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Period 1 Review: Foundations

  • 1. AP World History Unit I: Foundations8000 BCE 600 CE Paleolithic Neolithic 1st Villages 1st Civs - RVC Classical Civs/Rise of World Religions 8 Elements of a Civilization •Writing System •Organized Belief System •Cities •Public Works •Specialized Jobs •Government •Social Classes •Art/Architecture Political Systems •Democracy •Republic •Monarchy •Dictatorship •Aristocracy •Oligarchy •Theocracy
  • 2. Global History Review8000 BCE 600 CE Paleolithic Neolithic 1st Villages 1st Civs - RVC Classical Civs/Rise of World Religions 8 Elements of a Civilization •Writing System •Organized Belief System •Cities •Public Works •Specialized Jobs •Government •Social Classes •Art/Architecture Political Systems •Democracy •Republic •Monarchy •Dictatorship •Aristocracy •Oligarchy •Theocracy •“Old Stone Age” •Nomadic, small clans •Hunters/ Gatherers •Men/Women – social equality •Agricultural Revolution •Farming, domesticated animals •Not everyone settled – Pastoral Nomads •Greater social inequality, specialized jobs, food surplus •Jericho •Catal Huyuk •Jomon •Mesopotamia (Tigris, Euphrates), Fertile Crescent, Hammurabi, Sumerians, Babylonians, Assyrians, Hittites, Hebrews •Egypt (Nile), Theocracy, Hieroglyphics, Polytheistic •Indus (Indus, Ganges), Mohenjo- Daro, Harappa, Aryans, Vedic Age, Origins of Hinduism, Caste System •China (Huang He) Shang, Zhou, Dynasty, Oracle bones, “Middle Kingdom,” Mandate of Heaven, Dynastic Cycle •Persia: Zoroastrianism, tolerance, Cyrus the Great •Greece – City states, direct democracy, philosophy (SPA), Pericles, Hellenism, Alex the Great •India – Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, Caste System, Mauryan, Gupta Empires •China –Q’in, Han Dynasties, Confucianism, Legalism, Daoism, spread of Buddhism, filial piety, Shi Huangdi, Han Wudi, civil service exam •Rome – Republic, Julius Caesar, Caesar Augustus, Pax Romana, Law of 12 Tables, Fall of Rome India: Indus River Valley --------Aryan (Vedic Age)------------Maurya-------------Gupta 3600-1900 BCE -----------------1500 BCE--------------326 -184 BCE--------320-535 CE China: Shang Dynasty --------Zhou Dynasty--------Qin Dynasty-------------Han Dynasty 1500-1027BCE ---------1027-771BCE---------221-207BCE------------206BCE-220CE Mediterranean: Minoan --------Mycenaean--------------Greek-----------------Roman 1600 BCE -------1400 BCE--------------800BCE-----------500BCE-476CE Mesoamerican: Olmec ---------------------Mayan---------------------Aztec 1200BCE -------------300BCE-900CE---------1200-1500CE PERIOD 2: 600BCE-600CE
  • 3.
  • 4. Society Types Foraging Pastoral Social Nomadic Egalitarian nature Leaders based on age, strength, courage, intelligence Nomadic – temporary homes Sparse Population Men are herders/males dominated Political Organized in small clans- 20-30 Led by strongest male Organized hunts Organized into large Bands Split into blood/clans- rivalries developed Had military/warriors Religious Belief in afterlife. Buried dead with tools and weapons Worship gods of storm, war Intellectual Limited language Sculptures, pictograms, cave paintings Respect for family, courage Domestication of animals – subject matter for art, hides for clothing and shelter Technological Daggers, spears, hammers, bow and arrow, fire, digging sticks Fire is sacred, chariots were developed Economic Hunters and gatherers Few possessions Little surplus of goods except cattle – split as size of clans grew Limited personal belongings
  • 5. 2,500,000 BCE – 10,000 BCE2,500,000 BCE – 10,000 BCE 1. Hunting and gathering: Small bands of 20-30 people. Gender equality because both contributed to survival 2. Mostly Nomadic but some Permanent settlements were established in areas with abundant food resources (grains, fish). 3. Neanderthal Man: First fully modern human beings-physically and mentally. Belief in afterlife, buried dead 4. Cro-Magnon man: Interested in fashion and art. Humans during this period found shelter in caves.Humans during this period found shelter in caves. Cave paintings were left behind.Cave paintings were left behind.
  • 6. 8000-3000 BCE 1. Food surplus lead to population boom 2. Permanent settlements and communities develop. Idea of private property 3. Development on farming technology, art, architecture, language, job specialization, irrigation, etc. 4. Development of cities: Catal Huyuk, Jericho.
  • 7. Advanced Cities Advanced Cities Specialized Workers/ Social Classes Specialized Workers/ Social Classes Complex Institutions: Government Public Works Economic Systems Organized religion Complex Institutions: Government Public Works Economic Systems Organized religion Record- Keeping Record- Keeping Advanced Technology Advanced Technology Art and Architecture Art and Architecture
  • 8. Mesopotamia: “The Cradle of Civilization” “Fertile Crescent” and lackof natural barriers allowed many groups to control this valuable area.
  • 10. Sumerian City-States 3000 B.C.E. Successful agriculture, irrigation systems Writing, cuneiforms Use of wheel 12 month calendar Polytheistic Polytheistic: The Gods were Anthropomorphic. City-State: Urban areas that controlled surrounding regions and loosely connected with other city-states: Ur, Uruk, Eridu, Lagash, Babylon, Kish Developed organized projects: irrigation systems, palaces, ziggurats, defensive walls, temples
  • 11. Hammurabi, the Judge • “King of the four quarters of the world” • Centralized bureaucratic government • System of taxation • First written code of laws • “King of the four quarters of the world” • Centralized bureaucratic government • System of taxation • First written code of laws The Babylonian Empires Babylonian Achievements 12 Month Calendar Mathematics Babylonian Numbers
  • 12. The Hittites •Learned to extract iron from ore and were the first to make tools and weapons of iron. The Assyrians •Centralized bureaucratic government. •Built military roads to move troops quickly. •Founded first libraries.The Phoenicians •Best known for manufacturing and trade •“Carriers of Civilization” •Created first alphabet The Hebrews •Belief in Judaism, first monotheistic faith • Ten commandments
  • 13. Phoenicians Traders, Invaders, and Empire Builders?Traders, Invaders, and Empire Builders? Assyrians TradersTradersInvadersInvaders Hebrews Empire BuildersEmpire Builders The HittitesThe Sumerians The Babylonians TradersTraders Empire BuildersEmpire Builders InvadersInvaders
  • 15. Walk Like an Egyptian •Rich soil, gentle annual flooding • Led by Pharaoh – leader with total power •water management, pyramids, astronomy, hieroglyphs, mummification, calendar, gold •Polytheistic •Women rulers, buy, sell property, inherit, will property, dissolve marriages, still subservient to men • Hierarchy: pharaoh, priest, nobles, merchants, artisans, peasants, slaves •Conquered by (1100 BCE)
  • 17. China: Shang on the Huang Shang: 1700-1100 BCE • Aristocrats and bureaucrats directed the work and life of the Shang. • Warfare a constant feature. • Most commoners worked as semi free serfs in agriculture. Others were artisans, craftsmen. • Stable agri-surplus, trade-centered • N. China, walled cities, strong army, chariots • “The Middle Kingdom” World View • Bronze, pottery, silk, decimal system, calendar • Patriarchal, polytheistic, ancestor veneration, oracle bones
  • 18. It’s Zhou Time! Replaced Shang around 1100 BCE Ruled 900 years, kept customs, traditions Mandate of Heaven Feudal system, nobles gained, bureaucracies, war amongst feudal kingdoms, collapse 256 BCE Established early forms of feudalism in which the King gave large tracts of land to loyal leaders who became lords. These lords provided the king with military forces in exchange for the land.
  • 20. Indus Valley: 3300 – 1700 B.C.E. Outside contact more limited - moutains Kyber Pass connection to outside Twin Cities of Harrappa, Mohenjo-Daro Master-planned, water system, strong central gov’t, polytheistic, written language Pottery, cotton, cloth Cities abandoned, reason unknown Aryans arrive 1500 BCE The Harappan Civilization
  • 21. From Caucasus Mtns. Black/Caspian Sea Nomads who settled Vedas, Upanashads basis for Hinduism Caste system warriors, priests, peasants later re-ordered: Brahmins (priests), warriors, landowners- merchants, peasants, untouchables (out castes) Aryans: The Vedic Age: 1500-500 B.C.E.. ShudrasShudras VaishyasVaishyas KshatriyasKshatriyas Pariahs [Harijan]  Untouchables BrahminsBrahmins
  • 22. Olmecs 1500 BCE (Mexico), Mayans 2000 BCE (Mexico/Guatemala), and Chavin Cult 900 BCE (Andes) developed similarly to River Valley Civilizations: urbanization, polytheistic, irrigation, writing, calendar, monumental buildings, social structure, city-states. The point: Similar pattern of development in different part of earth, no contact The difference: No major river. Had to adapt to rainforest and mountains. Civilization in the Americas
  • 23. Sedentary/Nationalistic Religions Missionary Religions •Born into religion •Society structured around religious ideas •Complex religion and history •No real centralized hierarchy •Very little conversion •Stationary – grounded to the land •Develops out of Sedentary faith •Religion adapts to different cultural practices •Simplistic rules •Tends to have more centralized structure and hierarchy •Spreads through trade routes and conquests – leads to cultural diffusion Religions and Belief Systems Judaism Hinduism Christianity Islam Buddhism Animism Confucianism
  • 24. Southwest Asian Religions Judaism Christianity ISLAM ProtestantEastern Orthodox Sunni Shiite Russian Orthodox Anglican Calvinist Lutheran Roman Catholic Coptic Sufi 3000 BCE 33 CE 622 CE
  • 28. Animism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Africa, Latin America No Founder No holy book – mostly oral traditions All things in nature have a soul (Trees, stones, rivers, etc.) Use of Shaman or Diviners who conducted ceremonies and rituals and used fetishes Ancestor Veneration – Your ancestor’s spirits watch over you and can protect you. Found among many pastoral nomadic tribal villages. Tribal masks inspired Cubist art movement
  • 29. Hinduism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance India 3000 B.C.E. Spread throughout India Stationary Religion Brahman-supreme force: Gods are manifestations of Brahman (Vishnu- preserver, Shiva-destroyer) Reincarnation. Dharma: rules and obligations. Karma: fate based on how dharma was met. Moshka: highest state of being, release of soul Vedas and Upanishads Caste System: Rigid social structure, born into caste, must perform certain job, or Jati. Ganges is sacred river, performance of rituals Spawned Buddhism
  • 31. Buddhism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance India, Nepal 563 B.C.E. Spread throughout India, China, Japan, S.E. Asia Missionary Religion Founded by Siddhartha Guatama No Supreme Being– Buddha “Enlightened one” Four Noble Truths – Life is suffering caused by desire, follow Eight Fold Path Nirvana, state of perfect peace and harmony path may take several lifetimes: Reincarnation, Dharma, Karma Theraveda: meditation, harmony, Buddha not a god (Lesser Vehicle) Mahayana: more complex, greater ritual, reliance on priests. Buddha a diety No Caste system, appealed to lower classes. Not attached to social structure, spread rapidly to other cultures. Ashoka adopted Buddhism. Force of cultural diffusion via trade, Silk Road, missionary Religion
  • 32. Legalism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance China 500 B.C.E. Founded by Han Feizi The Q’in Dynasty- Shi Huangdi Peace & order through centralized, tightly controlled state Mistrust of human nature; reliance on tough laws Punish those who break laws, reward those who follow 2 most worthy jobs: farmer, soldier Accomplished swift reunification of China. Completion of projects like the Great Wall. Caused widespread resentment among common people, led to wider acceptance of Confucianism-Daoism.
  • 33. Confucianism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance China 500 B.C.E. Spread to Japan, S.E. Asia Founded by Confucius (Kong Fu Tse) Political-social philosophy, not religion Moral, ethical, also practical – The Analects Five Right relationships = right society: Parent to Child (Filial Piety), Ruler to Subject, Older to Younger, Husband to Wife, Friend to Friend. Education is valuable and everyone should be able to get one. Become a gentleman. Put aside personal ambition for good of state As a ethical, social, political belief system it was compatible with other religions, could practice Buddhism and Confucianism Embraced by Han, Tang, Song, Ming Dynasties. Civil Service Exam
  • 34. Daoism-Taoism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance China 500 B.C.E. Founded by Lao-tzu, philosopher Dao = “The Way” (of nature/cosmos) Wu wei- non-doing, harmony with nature Eternal principles, passive, yielding. Like water, yet strong, shaping. Yin-Yang – symbol of balance in nature Self-sufficient communities Counter to Confucian activism Emphasis on harmony w/ nature leads gains: astronomy, botany, chemistry Co-existed w/Confucianism, Buddhism, Legalism Added to complexity of Chinese culture
  • 35. Judaism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Middle East, Caanan Jerusalem 3000 B.C.E. Founded by Abraham, Moses Hebrews were chosen by God, special status Personal relationship with God – a covenant Afterlife, tradition, doctrines, philosophy, personal salvation. To honor, serve God, promote prophets – Wailing Wall A religion & culture – Torah, Talmud 10 Commandments, waiting for messiah The First Monotheistic Belief System Led to Christianity and Islam Forced migration – Exodus, Diaspora, Holocaust Like Hinduism – Stationary faith
  • 36. Christianity Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Middle East, Jerusalem 30 C.E. Spread north and west throughout Europe, Americas Founded by Jesus of Nazareth - Bible Splinter group of Jews, quickly spread throughout Roman Empire despite persecution Jesus, son of God, Messiah of Jewish prophecy Devotion to God, love of fellow man - monotheistic Jesus sent to redeem man from sin Salvation by faith in divinity, death, and resurrection of Jesus. Crucified by Roman gov’t 30 CE Emphasis on salvation, eternal life after death appealed to lower classes, women Combo of religion & empire = huge impact on political, social development of Europe Missionary Religion
  • 37. Islam Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Middle East, Mecca, Medina, Jerusalem 622 C.E. Spread North Africa, S.E.Asia, U.S. Founded by Muhammad- Prophet – Koran Five Pillars of Faith: Allah is one true God, Prophet is Muhammad Pray Five times a day facing Mecca Almsgiving – give to the poor Ramadan – Fasting Hajj – Pilgrimage to Mecca Can not eat pork, gamble, drink alcohol, smoke Jihad – Struggle in God’s service Led to Islamic Empires Umayyad Caliphate, Abbasids, Ottoman, Mughal Shiite-Sunni Split Crusades – Holy wars Missionary religion
  • 38. Shintoism Beliefs, Practices, Holy Books Significance Japan 500BCE No founder God in all of us and in all of nature. Our body is the visible temple for the soul. Anaterasu is the Sun Goddess and main god or kami. Emperor is descendant and was seen as divine “Tori” is the symbol of prosperity in Shintoism and the sacred gates that are found in front of all Shinto temples in Japan. People write wishes on the Tori gates wishing for good health, wealth and prosperity. There are no written doctrines There are gods in every object in nature (Kami) Animist - Ancestor veneration Justified power of Emperor During Meiji Restoration, Shintoism was used to unite Japanese During WWII, Kamikaze pilots sacrificed themselves for their Emperor