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THE EMERGENCE OF 
CIVILIZATION 
N E O L I T H I C R E V O L U T I O N & 
R I V E R V A L L E Y C I V I L I Z A T I O N S
EARLY HUMAN SOCIETY 
• Because humans had ways of communication, 
remembering and making things, they were able to 
pass on what they learned and their way of doing 
things from one generation to the next. In a way, 
the first human cultures developed. 
• Culture – refers to a people’s way of life. Culture 
includes such things as language, types of clothing, 
homes, family organization, government, and 
methods of obtaining food. Culture also includes 
crafts, arts, music, and religion.
HUNTERS & GATHERERS 
PALEOLITHIC PEOPLES 
• Earliest human societies were hunters and gatherers; 
they did not now how to grow their own food. 
• They relied on hunting, fishing, and gathering wild plants 
for food. 
• They learned to make fires, spears with pieces of bone or 
stone, and to make canoes and boats out of logs (Stone 
Age) 
• Since they spent most of their time hunting for food, they 
migrated to areas where food could be found. They did 
not live in permanent settlings.
THE NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION 
• About 10,000 years ago, one of the greatest turning 
points in world history occurred… 
• People stop hunting & gathering and started FARMING 
• People learned how to grow food and domesticate animals 
• Anthropologists believe this change first occurred in the 
Middle East, where wild wheat and barley were plentiful. 
• They also learned how to herd farm animals such as 
goats, sheep and cattle. 
• These advances are referred to as the Neolithic 
Revolution.
EFFECTS OF NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION 
• Once agriculture was introduced, people no longer had 
to wander in search of food. 
• Instead they could build permanent homes and villages 
and establish a fixed way of life. 
• Populations grew! 
• Although it all started in 
Southwest Asia, it also took 
place in Southeast Asia, 
Africa, and the Americas.
NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION 
The Emergence of Social Classes 
• Pros & Cons: People could grow more 
food than when they hunted and 
gathered. But they were more 
vulnerable to attack by other peoples. 
• These changes is economics led to 
social and political changes: new 
social classes 
• Warriors – defense of village was a 
concern 
• Priests – to conduct religious rituals in order 
to promote good harvest and protect from 
danger
RISE OF RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS 
• Around 3,500 B.C., the first civilizations arose. 
• Civilization – form of human culture in which people live in 
cities, have complex social institutions, use some form of 
writing, and are skilled at using science and technology. 
• The first civilizations developed in four separate river 
valleys. 
• Each of these river valleys offered mild climate and a water 
highway. 
• Water from rivers was also used for cooking food and drinking. 
• Along the rivers there was also fertile soil, great for growing crops 
and led to abundant harvests and food surplus.
1. MESOPOTAMIA 
(3500 B.C. – 1700 B.C.) 
• First river valley 
civilization 
developed in 
Mesopotamia 
between the Tigris 
and Euphrates Rivers 
(present day Iraq) 
• Mesopotamia was a 
Greek term meaning 
“land between two 
rivers”
MESOPOTAMIA 
(3500 B.C. – 1700 B.C.)
MESOPOTAMIA 
Agriculture 
• Mesopotamia was hot and dry so people learned 
to irrigate the land by diverting water from the Tigris 
and Euphrates Rivers. 
• This allowed farming settlements to flourish and 
people were able to create a surplus of food 
• Other people began to specialize in other activities 
including potters, weavers, metal workers, warriors, 
or priests.
MESOPOTAMIA 
Government 
• People of Mesopotamia built several cities; at first 
each city-state, such as Uruk, Ur, and Babylon, had 
its own ruler. 
• Later several of these city-states 
were united together under a 
single ruler.
MESOPOTAMIA 
Religion 
• Mesopotamians were 
polytheistic, believing in as 
many as 2,000 different gods. 
• Some historians claim 
Mesopotamian religion to be 
the oldest faith. 
• Rulers were often priests. 
• A society governed by religious 
leaders is known as a 
theocracy. 
Stone Sumerian Priest
MESOPOTAMIA 
Building 
• Mesopotamians were the world’s first city-builders. 
• They made their building from mud, bricks and 
crushed reeds. 
• They built walled cities, temples with arches, and 
stepped pyramids known as ziggurats. 
Ziggurat in Baghdad Reconstruction of Ziggurat at Ur
MESOPOTAMIA 
Cultural & Scientific Contributions 
• The Sumerians invented the wheel and the sailboat. 
• Figured how to reroute water to irrigate fields located 
further from the river. 
• Developed tools and weapons of copper and bronze. 
• Sumerians devised a calendar, dividing the year into 12 
months. 
• Later Babylonians developed a number system based 
on 60, providing the basis for our seconds and minutes 
today. 
• They also invented the world’s earliest writing system, 
cuneiform, symbol writing on clay. 
• Only the elite could read and write in cuneiform, generally 
priests and scribes.
A cuneiform writing tablet.
MESOPOTAMIA 
Legal System 
• Babylonians developed the 
earliest written code of laws 
– the Code of Hammurabi. 
• It covered most occurrences 
in daily life. 
• Goals were to ensure justice 
and protect the weak. 
• Strict – “An eye for an eye, a 
tooth for a tooth”
MESOPOTAMIA 
Women in 
Mesopotamia 
• Most girls stayed at home with mothers where they 
learned cooking and housekeeping 
• Women were responsible for raising children and 
crushing grain. 
• Only wealthy women were able to go to marketplace 
and buy goods, complete legal matters when husband 
was absent, and could even own property. They could 
engage in business and obtain divorces.
2. EGYPT 
(3200 B.C. – 500 B.C.) 
• Located in Northeast 
Africa. 
• The world’s longest river, 
the Nile, runs through it.
EGYPT 
Agriculture 
• Each year the Nile floods and 
makes the soil along its bank very 
rich and fertile. 
• With bright sunshine, long 
growing seasons, rich soil, and 
fresh water, Egyptian farmers 
were able to grow large 
amounts of food. 
• Farmers were able to support 
craftsmen, warriors, priests, and 
nobles.
EGYPT 
Government 
• Most powerful person in Egypt was the pharaoh 
(king). 
• The pharaoh was an absolute ruler – owned all 
land, commanded the army, made laws, controlled 
irrigation and grain supplies, and defended Egypt. 
• The pharaoh was considered to be a god. 
• Egypt was a monarchy, a system of government in 
which political power is inherited, power is passed 
down from father to son.
EGYPT 
Society 
• The pharaoh was at the top of the social order. 
• Below the pharaoh came the priests and nobles, 
• Then warriors, scribes, merchants, and craftsmen. 
• At the bottom were peasants and slaves; they spent 
their time farming, herding cattle, and working on 
building projects.
EGYPT 
Religion 
• Egyptians believed the body should be preserved 
after death to participate in the afterlife. 
• When pharaohs died, their bodies were embalmed 
(mummified) and buried in a special room under a 
pyramid. They were surrounded with gold, jewels, 
and other precious objects.
EGYPT 
Accomplishments 
• Medicine – developed 
knowledge of human 
body through 
embalming (preserving). 
Performed surgical 
operations. 
• Hieroglyphics – 
developed one of the 
earliest writing systems, 
based on picture 
symbols.
EGYPT 
Accomplishments 
• Building & Art – built magnificent pyramids, palaces, 
and temples of stone. Decorated building with 
paintings and sculptures. 
• Geometry & Astronomy – developed geometry to 
build projects such as pyramids. By observing the stars 
they developed a calendar based on 364 days.
3. INDIA 
• More than 5,000 years ago the Indus River Valley 
became another center of human civilization. 
• Much like Mesopotamia and Egypt, the region had 
rich soil due to its annual flood.
INDIA 
Agriculture 
• Farmers grew barley, wheat, dates and melons. 
• Food surplus allowed people to build large cities like 
Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro; each city had more 
than 30,000 people.
INDIA 
Building 
• More than 1,000 cities and settlements belonging to the 
Indus River Valley have been excavated. 
• The artifacts that have been discovered show that the 
settlements were technologically advanced. 
• There were dockyards, granaries, warehouses, brick 
platforms and protective walls. 
• They were the first “urban planners” with almost all their 
houses connected to public sewers and a water supply 
• The Harrappans were also the first people known to make 
cotton cloth.
INDIA 
Trade and Collapse 
• Trade was important of 
Harrappan economy. 
• Harrappans also developed 
their own form of writing, 
although scholars are still 
unable to decipher it. 
• No one knows exactly why 
the civilization collapsed, 
but its end occurred 
suddenly.
4. CHINA 
• About 5,000 years after the settlement of the Indus 
River Valley, China’s first civilization emerged in the 
fertile plains along the Huang He (Yellow River).
CHINA 
Agriculture 
• As in the Nile and Indus River Valleys, the fertility of 
the soil along the Huang He was increased by 
periodic floods. 
• Around 4,500 B.C., people along the Huang He 
began growing millet (type of grain). 
• Later they learned to farm soybeans and raise 
chickens, dogs and pigs.
CHINA 
Government 
• Around 1,700 B.C. a ruling 
family, or dynasty, known as 
the Shang, took power. 
• They built the first Chinese 
cities and established their 
capital at Anyang near the 
Huang He. 
• The Shang ruled with the help 
of powerful nobles. 
• Shang kings were military 
leaders, they were also high 
priests that offered sacrifices 
to their royal ancestors.
CHINA 
Cultural Contributions 
• The people living along the Huang He were very 
skilled at many crafts. 
• They created superior weapons and ceremonial 
vessels with their bronze work. 
• They were the first to make silk textiles from silkworm 
cocoons. 
• They developed a system of writing with 
pictographs, known as characters. Each character 
represented one word.
5. ANCIENT HEBREWS 
• Ancient Hebrews, or Israelites, lived south of 
Phoenicia in the area occupied by present-day 
Israel, Lebanon, and Jordan. 
• Hebrews were deeply influenced by both 
Mesopotamia and Egypt. 
• According to tradition, the forefather of the 
Hebrews, Abraham, grew up in Mesopotamia in the 
city or Ur. Later Abraham moved to Israel.
THE HEBREWS 
Religion 
• Unlike other ancient peoples, the Hebrews did not 
believe in many gods; instead they believed in one 
universal God, who was both just and all-powerful. 
• This new religion was called Judaism. 
• Jews did not believe that God had human 
characteristics or the head or body of an animal, like the 
gods and goddesses of Mesopotamia and Egypt. 
• Jews saw their God as an invisible but powerful force or 
spirit that created the world and that demanded proper 
moral conduct. 
• Monotheism, the belief in one God, became the basis 
for several religions, including both Christianity and Islam.
THE HEBREWS 
The Ten Commandments 
• The early history of the Hebrews and their God is told in 
the first books of the Bible, known as the Old Testament. 
• According to the Bible, the ancient Hebrews migrated to 
Egypt to escape food shortages. They lived there for 
hundreds of years and were enslaved. 
• Moses, their leader, later took them out of Egypt and 
freed them from slavery. According to the Bible, Moses 
also presented them the Ten Commandments, which 
came directly from God. 
• The Ten Commandments forbade stealing, murder, 
adultery, and other forms of immoral behavior.
TEN COMMANDMENTS
REVIEW – TEST #1 
THE BIG IDEAS 
1. The earliest humans survived by hunting and gathering 
their food. They used tools of wood, bone, and stone. 
They also learned to make fire. 
2. About 10,000 years ago, people in the Middle East 
developed the first agriculture and domesticated animals 
during the Neolithic Revolution. 
3. A civilization is a form of human culture in which some 
people live in cities, have complex social institution, use 
some form of writing, and are skilled at using science and 
technology. 
4. The first civilizations arose in fertile river valleys, where 
favorable geography conditions allowed farmers to grow 
a surplus of food.
REVIEW – TEST #1 
THE BIG IDEAS 
5. The Sumerians in Mesopotamia invented the wheel, sailboat and cuneiform 
writing. The Egyptians developed an advanced civilization along the 
banks of the Nile. They built large stone pyramids for the afterlife of their 
ruler – the pharaoh – and developed a form of writing known as 
hieroglyphics. 
6. Other early civilizations developed along the Indus River on the Indian 
subcontinent and along the Huang He (Yellow River) in China. 
7. The earliest civilizations were theocracies and monarchies. In a theocracy, 
religious leaders govern; in a monarchy, a hereditary ruler heads the 
government. 
8. Judaism, the religion of the ancient Hebrews (Jews), was the first religion to 
worship only one God. 
5. Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, china were all polytheistic, they believed in 
many gods.
HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 7 MINUTES 
• Check out the video again….. 
• http://worldhistoryforusall.sdsu.edu/movies/flash_lar 
ge.php

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The Emergence of Early Civilizations: Neolithic Revolution and River Valley Societies

  • 1. THE EMERGENCE OF CIVILIZATION N E O L I T H I C R E V O L U T I O N & R I V E R V A L L E Y C I V I L I Z A T I O N S
  • 2. EARLY HUMAN SOCIETY • Because humans had ways of communication, remembering and making things, they were able to pass on what they learned and their way of doing things from one generation to the next. In a way, the first human cultures developed. • Culture – refers to a people’s way of life. Culture includes such things as language, types of clothing, homes, family organization, government, and methods of obtaining food. Culture also includes crafts, arts, music, and religion.
  • 3. HUNTERS & GATHERERS PALEOLITHIC PEOPLES • Earliest human societies were hunters and gatherers; they did not now how to grow their own food. • They relied on hunting, fishing, and gathering wild plants for food. • They learned to make fires, spears with pieces of bone or stone, and to make canoes and boats out of logs (Stone Age) • Since they spent most of their time hunting for food, they migrated to areas where food could be found. They did not live in permanent settlings.
  • 4. THE NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION • About 10,000 years ago, one of the greatest turning points in world history occurred… • People stop hunting & gathering and started FARMING • People learned how to grow food and domesticate animals • Anthropologists believe this change first occurred in the Middle East, where wild wheat and barley were plentiful. • They also learned how to herd farm animals such as goats, sheep and cattle. • These advances are referred to as the Neolithic Revolution.
  • 5. EFFECTS OF NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION • Once agriculture was introduced, people no longer had to wander in search of food. • Instead they could build permanent homes and villages and establish a fixed way of life. • Populations grew! • Although it all started in Southwest Asia, it also took place in Southeast Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
  • 6. NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION The Emergence of Social Classes • Pros & Cons: People could grow more food than when they hunted and gathered. But they were more vulnerable to attack by other peoples. • These changes is economics led to social and political changes: new social classes • Warriors – defense of village was a concern • Priests – to conduct religious rituals in order to promote good harvest and protect from danger
  • 7. RISE OF RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS • Around 3,500 B.C., the first civilizations arose. • Civilization – form of human culture in which people live in cities, have complex social institutions, use some form of writing, and are skilled at using science and technology. • The first civilizations developed in four separate river valleys. • Each of these river valleys offered mild climate and a water highway. • Water from rivers was also used for cooking food and drinking. • Along the rivers there was also fertile soil, great for growing crops and led to abundant harvests and food surplus.
  • 8. 1. MESOPOTAMIA (3500 B.C. – 1700 B.C.) • First river valley civilization developed in Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers (present day Iraq) • Mesopotamia was a Greek term meaning “land between two rivers”
  • 9. MESOPOTAMIA (3500 B.C. – 1700 B.C.)
  • 10. MESOPOTAMIA Agriculture • Mesopotamia was hot and dry so people learned to irrigate the land by diverting water from the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. • This allowed farming settlements to flourish and people were able to create a surplus of food • Other people began to specialize in other activities including potters, weavers, metal workers, warriors, or priests.
  • 11. MESOPOTAMIA Government • People of Mesopotamia built several cities; at first each city-state, such as Uruk, Ur, and Babylon, had its own ruler. • Later several of these city-states were united together under a single ruler.
  • 12. MESOPOTAMIA Religion • Mesopotamians were polytheistic, believing in as many as 2,000 different gods. • Some historians claim Mesopotamian religion to be the oldest faith. • Rulers were often priests. • A society governed by religious leaders is known as a theocracy. Stone Sumerian Priest
  • 13. MESOPOTAMIA Building • Mesopotamians were the world’s first city-builders. • They made their building from mud, bricks and crushed reeds. • They built walled cities, temples with arches, and stepped pyramids known as ziggurats. Ziggurat in Baghdad Reconstruction of Ziggurat at Ur
  • 14. MESOPOTAMIA Cultural & Scientific Contributions • The Sumerians invented the wheel and the sailboat. • Figured how to reroute water to irrigate fields located further from the river. • Developed tools and weapons of copper and bronze. • Sumerians devised a calendar, dividing the year into 12 months. • Later Babylonians developed a number system based on 60, providing the basis for our seconds and minutes today. • They also invented the world’s earliest writing system, cuneiform, symbol writing on clay. • Only the elite could read and write in cuneiform, generally priests and scribes.
  • 16. MESOPOTAMIA Legal System • Babylonians developed the earliest written code of laws – the Code of Hammurabi. • It covered most occurrences in daily life. • Goals were to ensure justice and protect the weak. • Strict – “An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth”
  • 17. MESOPOTAMIA Women in Mesopotamia • Most girls stayed at home with mothers where they learned cooking and housekeeping • Women were responsible for raising children and crushing grain. • Only wealthy women were able to go to marketplace and buy goods, complete legal matters when husband was absent, and could even own property. They could engage in business and obtain divorces.
  • 18. 2. EGYPT (3200 B.C. – 500 B.C.) • Located in Northeast Africa. • The world’s longest river, the Nile, runs through it.
  • 19. EGYPT Agriculture • Each year the Nile floods and makes the soil along its bank very rich and fertile. • With bright sunshine, long growing seasons, rich soil, and fresh water, Egyptian farmers were able to grow large amounts of food. • Farmers were able to support craftsmen, warriors, priests, and nobles.
  • 20. EGYPT Government • Most powerful person in Egypt was the pharaoh (king). • The pharaoh was an absolute ruler – owned all land, commanded the army, made laws, controlled irrigation and grain supplies, and defended Egypt. • The pharaoh was considered to be a god. • Egypt was a monarchy, a system of government in which political power is inherited, power is passed down from father to son.
  • 21. EGYPT Society • The pharaoh was at the top of the social order. • Below the pharaoh came the priests and nobles, • Then warriors, scribes, merchants, and craftsmen. • At the bottom were peasants and slaves; they spent their time farming, herding cattle, and working on building projects.
  • 22. EGYPT Religion • Egyptians believed the body should be preserved after death to participate in the afterlife. • When pharaohs died, their bodies were embalmed (mummified) and buried in a special room under a pyramid. They were surrounded with gold, jewels, and other precious objects.
  • 23. EGYPT Accomplishments • Medicine – developed knowledge of human body through embalming (preserving). Performed surgical operations. • Hieroglyphics – developed one of the earliest writing systems, based on picture symbols.
  • 24. EGYPT Accomplishments • Building & Art – built magnificent pyramids, palaces, and temples of stone. Decorated building with paintings and sculptures. • Geometry & Astronomy – developed geometry to build projects such as pyramids. By observing the stars they developed a calendar based on 364 days.
  • 25. 3. INDIA • More than 5,000 years ago the Indus River Valley became another center of human civilization. • Much like Mesopotamia and Egypt, the region had rich soil due to its annual flood.
  • 26. INDIA Agriculture • Farmers grew barley, wheat, dates and melons. • Food surplus allowed people to build large cities like Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro; each city had more than 30,000 people.
  • 27. INDIA Building • More than 1,000 cities and settlements belonging to the Indus River Valley have been excavated. • The artifacts that have been discovered show that the settlements were technologically advanced. • There were dockyards, granaries, warehouses, brick platforms and protective walls. • They were the first “urban planners” with almost all their houses connected to public sewers and a water supply • The Harrappans were also the first people known to make cotton cloth.
  • 28. INDIA Trade and Collapse • Trade was important of Harrappan economy. • Harrappans also developed their own form of writing, although scholars are still unable to decipher it. • No one knows exactly why the civilization collapsed, but its end occurred suddenly.
  • 29. 4. CHINA • About 5,000 years after the settlement of the Indus River Valley, China’s first civilization emerged in the fertile plains along the Huang He (Yellow River).
  • 30. CHINA Agriculture • As in the Nile and Indus River Valleys, the fertility of the soil along the Huang He was increased by periodic floods. • Around 4,500 B.C., people along the Huang He began growing millet (type of grain). • Later they learned to farm soybeans and raise chickens, dogs and pigs.
  • 31. CHINA Government • Around 1,700 B.C. a ruling family, or dynasty, known as the Shang, took power. • They built the first Chinese cities and established their capital at Anyang near the Huang He. • The Shang ruled with the help of powerful nobles. • Shang kings were military leaders, they were also high priests that offered sacrifices to their royal ancestors.
  • 32. CHINA Cultural Contributions • The people living along the Huang He were very skilled at many crafts. • They created superior weapons and ceremonial vessels with their bronze work. • They were the first to make silk textiles from silkworm cocoons. • They developed a system of writing with pictographs, known as characters. Each character represented one word.
  • 33. 5. ANCIENT HEBREWS • Ancient Hebrews, or Israelites, lived south of Phoenicia in the area occupied by present-day Israel, Lebanon, and Jordan. • Hebrews were deeply influenced by both Mesopotamia and Egypt. • According to tradition, the forefather of the Hebrews, Abraham, grew up in Mesopotamia in the city or Ur. Later Abraham moved to Israel.
  • 34. THE HEBREWS Religion • Unlike other ancient peoples, the Hebrews did not believe in many gods; instead they believed in one universal God, who was both just and all-powerful. • This new religion was called Judaism. • Jews did not believe that God had human characteristics or the head or body of an animal, like the gods and goddesses of Mesopotamia and Egypt. • Jews saw their God as an invisible but powerful force or spirit that created the world and that demanded proper moral conduct. • Monotheism, the belief in one God, became the basis for several religions, including both Christianity and Islam.
  • 35. THE HEBREWS The Ten Commandments • The early history of the Hebrews and their God is told in the first books of the Bible, known as the Old Testament. • According to the Bible, the ancient Hebrews migrated to Egypt to escape food shortages. They lived there for hundreds of years and were enslaved. • Moses, their leader, later took them out of Egypt and freed them from slavery. According to the Bible, Moses also presented them the Ten Commandments, which came directly from God. • The Ten Commandments forbade stealing, murder, adultery, and other forms of immoral behavior.
  • 37. REVIEW – TEST #1 THE BIG IDEAS 1. The earliest humans survived by hunting and gathering their food. They used tools of wood, bone, and stone. They also learned to make fire. 2. About 10,000 years ago, people in the Middle East developed the first agriculture and domesticated animals during the Neolithic Revolution. 3. A civilization is a form of human culture in which some people live in cities, have complex social institution, use some form of writing, and are skilled at using science and technology. 4. The first civilizations arose in fertile river valleys, where favorable geography conditions allowed farmers to grow a surplus of food.
  • 38. REVIEW – TEST #1 THE BIG IDEAS 5. The Sumerians in Mesopotamia invented the wheel, sailboat and cuneiform writing. The Egyptians developed an advanced civilization along the banks of the Nile. They built large stone pyramids for the afterlife of their ruler – the pharaoh – and developed a form of writing known as hieroglyphics. 6. Other early civilizations developed along the Indus River on the Indian subcontinent and along the Huang He (Yellow River) in China. 7. The earliest civilizations were theocracies and monarchies. In a theocracy, religious leaders govern; in a monarchy, a hereditary ruler heads the government. 8. Judaism, the religion of the ancient Hebrews (Jews), was the first religion to worship only one God. 5. Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, china were all polytheistic, they believed in many gods.
  • 39. HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN 7 MINUTES • Check out the video again….. • http://worldhistoryforusall.sdsu.edu/movies/flash_lar ge.php