GRADE 6

Exploring Ancient World Cultures

Human Prehistory

 

Mesopotamia

Around 4000 B.C. farmers living between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers built canals to try to control flooding. They also built cities and developed a system of writing. Eventually, a strong ruler: Sargon, united the region into a kingdom called Sumer. much later Hammurabi conquered Sumer and wrote a code of laws. the movement of the Hebrews into Canaan led to the development of Judaism.

Mesopotamia & A Woman's Role

 

Ancient India

Indian civilization began around 6000 B.C. in the Indus River valley, in what is today Pakistan. Mohhenjo-Daro and Harappa were the most powerful cities in the valley until the arrival of the horse-riding herders from the north. Their meeting changed both cultures and led to the development of a religion called Hinduism. India later became the birthplace of Buddhism as well.

Daily Life in Ancient India

http://rubens.anu.edu.au/student.projects/tajmahal/home.html

 

Ancient China

Around 3000 B.C. farmers in the Haung River valley learned to control the river's floods in order to grow food. A group that ruled over a large area of the valley developed a written language around 1100 B.C. this was the beginning of modern Chinese writing. China grew into a large area. Within it, the teachings of a great scholar shaped life from about 500 B.C. to the present.

Daily Life in Ancient China

 

Ancient Egypt

The story of Ancient Egypt with farmers along the Nile River. They formed communities that grew into cities. In 3100 B.C. Menes united Egypt. Rulers who came after him ordered the building of large, stone monuments such as the pyramids. they also led trading expeditions south and east and increased their land. By 1200 B.C. goods and ideas spread from Egypt's capital city, Thebes, to three continents.

Daily Life in Ancient Egypt

 

Ancient Greece

One of the great paradoxes of history is that the next hesitant advance of European civilization - the development of the first city-states - took place not on the fertile open central European plains, but in a remote island to the south of the Aegean Sea which was completely lacking in metal resources. While the glittering mounted warrior-princes of central Europe dissipated their creative energy in ware fare, a highly cultured yet peaceful society, built on trade and an agricultural surplus, emerged on Crete.

The history of Greece can be traced back to Stone Age hunters. Later came early farmers and the civilizations of the Minoan and Mycenaean kings. This was followed by a period of wars and invasions, known as the Dark Ages. In about 1100 BC, a people called the Dorians invaded from the north and spread down the west coast. In the period from 500-336 BC Greece was divided into small city states, each of which consisted of a city and its surrounding countryside.

Daily Life in Ancient Greece

 

 

 

Daily Life in Ancient Rome

Ancient Rome

If you had lived in ancient times, you could have applied to become a Roman citizen. Not everyone who applied was accepted, but anyone could apply. Would you have wanted to become a Roman citizen? Let's find out!

The ancient Romans were very different from the ancient Greeks. The ancient Romans were down-to-earth realists, not idealists. You can see this in their statues. The Greeks made statues of perfect people. The Romans created real life statues. A statue of one of the Roman emperors is a good example. His nose is huge! The ancient Greeks would never have done that.

The Romans were fierce soldiers and wonderful builders. They built roads all over the Roman Empire, and all roads led to Rome. The ancient Greeks had roads, but they were not built nearly as well, and the Greek's roads did not connect in any particular order. Connect to what? Each Greek city-state was its own unit. In ancient Rome, Rome was the heart of the empire!

 

 

 

 

The Middle Ages

Medium aevum -- Medieval or The Middle Ages. We think of knights in shining armor, lavish banquets, wandering minstrels, kings, queens, bishops, monks, pilgrims, and glorious pageantry.

In film and in literature, medieval life seems heroic, entertaining, and romantic. In reality, life in the Middle Ages, a period that extended from approximately the fifth century to the fifteenth century in Western Europe, was sometimes all these things, as well as harsh, uncertain, and often dangerous.

The Black Death: Bubonic Plague

The Black Death serves as a convenient divider between the central and the late Middle Ages. The changes between the two periods are numerous; they include the introduction of gunpowder, increased importance of cities, economic and demographic crises, political dislocation and realignment, and powerful new currents in culture and religion. Overall, the later Middle Ages are usually characterized as a period of crisis and trouble. The portrait should not be painted unrelievedly bleak, but the tone is accurate enough and echoes voices from the era itself.

The Black Death did not cause the crisis, for evidence of the changes can be seen well before 1347. But the plague exacerbated problems and added new ones, and the tone of crisis is graver in the second half than in the first half of the century. Standing at the century's mid-point, the plague serves as a convenient demarcation.

 

Daily Life in Middle Ages

People of the Middle Ages

 

 

 

 An isicon

The Holy Qur'an

 

 

Ancient Arabia

Arabia (Old-Persian: Arabâya): name of the country to the west and south of Mesopotamia. Three main zones can be discerned: the towns in the regions bordering on the Indian Ocean (modern Yemen and Oman), the nomadic interior (Saudi Arabia), and a northwestern part (Jordan). The Latin names of these three zones are Arabia Felix, Arabia Deserta (Happy Arabia and Desert Arabia) and Arabia Petraea (Arabia ruled from Petra).

Early Islam

In the first place, Islam is an unflinchingly monotheistic faith. Even the readily-accepted notion that God could have a son (Christ) runs counter to this explicit monotheism. Like the Hebrew god, Allah is invisible, without material form; Allah is omnipotent, wrathful on occasion, yet eternally merciful. Like the God of the Genesis account, Allah has created the natural world and endowed humans with life among a world of divinely-created things. This human creature is regarded as free and individual; and the belief that individuality is good is shared among the Semitic faiths. The religions concur too on the presence and the nature of the soul, which lives on after the body has perished. The Koran describes both heaven and hell and forewarns that a Last Judgment will come when each person shall be judged for his or her deeds.

 

 

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