early world history indo-europeans to the middle ages

64
Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Upload: abigail-hensley

Post on 23-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Early World History

Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Page 2: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Animal Domestication

http://www.pnas.org/content/106/suppl.1/9971/F1.expansion.html

Page 3: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-European Invasions

Triggered by flooding of the Black Sea, 5600 B.C.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5a/IE_expansion.png/400px-IE_expansion.png

Page 4: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-European Invasions

http://media.maps.com/magellan/images/WRLH034-H.gif

Page 5: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-Europeans

• Indo-Europeans (Aryan language)– Nomadic tribes – From Steppes of Asia– Herders and Grazers– Warfare using horses

• Chariots

– Swept into Old Europe, Middle East, India

starting about 5,000 BCHittite chariot

http://socialscience.tyler.cc.tx.us/mkho/fulbright/1998/annerye/chariot.jpg

Page 6: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-European horse warfare

Spread of Chariots, 2000-500 B.C.http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/77/Chariot_spread.png

Page 7: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-Europeans

• Religion of war and male domination

– Male gods of sky, thunder, war and mountains

• Warrior Priests

• Imposed ideology– Male dominance

– Hierarchy

• Herding economy

Thorhttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/23/Thor.jpg/300px-Thor.jpg

Page 8: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Government

IdeologyEconomy

Ancient Herding CulturesIndo-European and Hebrew: basis of Western Culture

Herding, Animal agriculture

Capital = head of cattle

Male Warrior Priests

Male domination of women, animals, and nature.

War gods

Page 9: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-European Conquerers

• Aryans in India– Established Caste system

• Hittites and Mittani in the Fertile Crescent

• Luians in Anatolia (Turkey)

• Kurgans in eastern Europe

– Battle-Axe People

• Achaeans, Dorians in Greece

Page 10: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Hittites 1300 B.C.(an Indo-European group)

http://www.johnkinsella.net/Herod_Carte_Hittites.gif

Page 11: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Diffusion of Indo-European Languages

http://www.acns.com/~mm9n/hindu/ARYAN%20ORIGINS_files/image006.jpg

Page 12: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Language Family Tree

httphttp://www.freelang.net/families/pics/indoeuropean_tree_s.jpg

Page 13: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-European languages

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/33/Indo-European_Groups_World_Distribution.gif/742px-Indo-European_Groups_World_Distribution.gif

Page 14: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indo-European languages

http://www.nvtc.gov/lotw/months/december/images/IEMap.jpg

Page 15: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Before Indo -Europeans

• Sedentary agrarian society

• Fertility and nature worshiped

• Goddess gave birth to – World

– Agriculture

• Priests male and female

• Women’s status similar to men’s – Graves equal

Fertility Figurinehttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/50/Venus_von_Willendorf_01.jpg

Page 16: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

After Indo-Europeans• Herding introduced• Warfare, war culture dominates• Fortifications built• Male War Gods worshiped

– Male dominated society, religion• Goddess loses status

– Killed or raped by male god– Becomes consort of male god– Becomes goddess of war

• Women lose status in society– Owned by fathers then husbands– Graves unequal

• Nature loses status in society– Economy based on domination of animals

Page 17: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Early Civilizations

http://www.hyperhistory.com

Page 18: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Early Civilizations

• City states• Elites• Religion• Crop domestication• Animal agriculture• Trade• Metallurgy

– Bronze Age 3000 B.C.– Iron Age 1200 B.C.

• Population explosion

Bronze Age weapons

http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en-commons/thumb/c/cf/180px-Bronze_age_weapons_Romania.jpg

Page 19: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

MesopotamiaLand between two rivers

• Flooding of Tigris and Euphrates fertilized soil

• Irrigation, drainage produced early abundance

• Competition and warfare between city states: – Ur– Uruk– Nippur– Babylon– Kish– Nineveh– Assur, etc.

http://www.crystalinks.com/mcresmap.jpg

Fertile crescent

Page 20: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Mesopotamia

• Over-salinization reduced wheat productivity in south by 2,000 B.C.: – political power shifted

north• Eventual large scale

ecological destruction– Fields and pastures

worked until barren– Forests destroyed for

• Fuel• ship building

http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/fieldday/kids/pictures/kidsfield600/cg_wheat_closeup.jpg

Page 21: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Egypt

• Relative geographical isolation– strong central government,

religion

• Unification of North and South Nile – by 3,500 B.C.

• 2,000 year dynasty ended in Persian conquest – 500 B.C.

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/4396/EgyptMap.gif

Page 22: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Egypt

• Yearly flooding of Nile fertilized soil.

• Irrigation, drainage controlled by Pharaoh

• Abundant crops: wheat. – Later would be conquered

for its productivity

http://www.celsias.com/blog/images/agriculture_egypt.jpg

Page 23: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Indus Valley Civilization

• Arose 3000 BC

• Contemporary of Egypt, Mesopotamia

• Lasted longer– 1500 years

• Conquered by Aryans from north

Page 24: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Aryan Invasion of India

• Aryans invaded 1750 BC• Indus, then Ganges valleys• Horse and herding culture• Vedas and Caste system

– Foundation of Hinduism

• Feudal Kingdoms spread through India– ruled by Brahmins

(Priests)

http://go.hrw.com/venus_images/0299MC02.gif

Page 25: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Ancient Semitic Peoples(non-IndoEuropean)

BODY { SCROLLBAR-FACE-COLOR: #bba57b; SCROLLBAR-HIGHLIGHT-COLOR: #ffd99c; SCROLLBAR-SHADOW-COLOR: #977a00; SCROLLBAR-ARROW-COLOR: #0000e1; SCROLLBAR-TRACK-COLOR: black; SCROLLBAR-BASE-COLOR: #bba57b; scrollbar-3d-light-color: #ffd99C; scrollbar-dark-shadow-color: #404040 } BODY { SCROLLBAR-FACE-COLOR: #bba57b; SCROLLBAR-HIGHLIGHT-COLOR: #ffd99c; SCROLLBAR-SHADOW-COLOR: #977a00; SCROLLBAR-ARROW-COLOR: #0000e1; SCROLLBAR-TRACK-COLOR: black; SCROLLBAR-BASE-COLOR: #bba57b; scrollbar-3d-light-color: #ffd99C; scrollbar-dark-shadow-color: #404040 }

http://www.imninalu.net/2history.htm

Page 26: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Assyrian Empire: 600 B.C.

http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=2551&rendTypeId=4

Page 27: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Assyrian War Bulletin (1000 B.C.)

• “Asshur my Lord commanded me to go forth…I covered the regions of Saraush and of Ammaush with ruins…I proved myself against their armies at the mountain of Aruma, I chastised them, I strawed the earth with their bodies as they had been beasts of the field; I took their cities in possession, I carried away their gods, I led them away captive, them and their goods and their treasures;

http://www.mysteriousworld.com/Content/Images/Journal/2003/Autumn/Osiria/Hunter240.jpg

Page 28: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Assyrian War Bulletin

• “I burned the cities with fire, I destroyed them, I made them even with the ground, I made of them heaps and a desolation; I laid upon them the grievous yoke of my dominion, and in their presence I gave thanks unto Asshur my Lord.”

• “I slew two hundred and sixty fighting men; I cut off their heads and made pyramids thereof. I slew one of every two.”

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3114/2439462705_4f312e0370_o.jpg

Page 29: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Assyrian War Bulletin

• “I built a wall before the great gates of the city; I flayed the chief men of the rebels, and I covered the wall with their skins. Some of them were enclosed alive in the bricks of the wall, some of them were crucified on stakes along the wall; I caused a great multitude of them to be flayed in my presence, and I covered the wall with their skins. I gathered together the heads in the form of crowns, and their pierced bodies in the form of garlands.”

Page 30: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Government

IdeologyEconomy

Assyrian Empire

Conquest

Assyrian Empire

Religion justifies conquest

Page 31: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Biblical Warfare

• Joshua leads the conquest of Jericho:

• “And they utterly destroyed all that was in the city, both man and woman, young and old, and ox, and sheep, and ass, with the edge of the sword.”

• Joshua 6:21

Joshua at Jericho

http://bp2.blogger.com/_CNmuiXT4qj0/RmT-U3RlXyI/AAAAAAAAAEk/4gvl9FD25fE/s400/dore_075.gif

Page 32: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Biblical Warfare

• Saul instructed by God to destroy the Amelekites (1000 B.C.):

“Spare no one; put them all to death, men and women, children and babes in arms, herds and flocks, camels and asses.”

-- I Samuel 15:3

http://siteimages.guggenheim.org/gpc_work_midsize_608.jpg

Page 33: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Persian Empire: 525 B. C.

http://www.spentaproductions.com/images/Achaemenid_Empire_Map_550.jpg

Page 34: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

The World: 500 B.C.

http://www.hyperhistory.com

Page 35: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Empire of Alexander the Great:323 B. C.

http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=1037&rendTypeId=4

Page 36: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Greek Influence

• Alexander the Great conquered the Achaemenid Persian Empire 323 B.C.

• Introduced Hellenistic culture to the mideast

• Maintained by subsequent Greek rulers until 130 B. C.

• Greeks colonized southern Italy and Sicily for grain growing

http://www.topsfieldschools.org/PROCTOR/P_SS/Ancient%20Greece/taranto.jpg

Page 37: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Empire

• Romans conquered Italy and Sicily,

• Romans then conquered the entire Greek world (except for Persia):– Asia Minor– Mesopotamia– Egypt– Much of Europe

http://www.hickmanclass.com/Chapter%2010/Roman%20Empire.bmp

Page 38: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Empire: Wheat Empire

• Roman empire dependent on wheat to feed soldiers– And populace of Rome

• Roman forts were granaries designed to hold a year supply of wheat in case of siege– Soldier’s rations were 3 pounds of

wheat a day. – Barley was punishment rations

• The Roman garrison in Britain consumed 1,277.5 tons of grain/yr– Much of it was brought by ship from

supply depotsRoman Fort

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/183/457568249_198bf34e70.jpg?v=0

Page 39: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Empire: Wheat Empire

http://www.sbceo.k12.ca.us/~vms/carlton/grainmap.jpg

Page 40: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Empire

Elite in Rome

Conquered Peasants, Slaves

Wealth, Tribute

Conquest

Food, Resources

Page 41: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Trade Routes of First Century A.D.

• Extensive trade with India

• Romans never conquered the Persians

• Persians established silk trading routes to China

http://medieval.ucdavis.edu/20A/Slide0004.gif

Page 42: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Trade

• A fleet of specialized grain carriers was used to import wheat from Egypt to Rome– Huge food giveaway program

for citizens

• Romans depleted their treasury importing luxury items and spices from India– Could no longer support food

giveaways or army– Led to collapse of Empire in

WestRoman grain import

http://http://www.sbceo.k12.ca.us/~vms/carlton/ship2.jpg

Page 43: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Inheritance

• Romans inherited 3000 years of Mid East Culture:– Writing– Art– Math– Science– Agriculture– Religion

• Romans passed this culture on to Europe

http://www.hickmanclass.com/Chapter%2010/Roman%20Empire.bmp

Page 44: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Source: Ricardo Salvador

Page 45: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

The World: 500 B.C.

http://www.hyperhistory.com

Page 46: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Shang Dynasty in China

• 1700-1000 BC

• First Chinese dynasty

• Yellow River Basin

http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum

Page 47: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Zhou Dynasty in China

• 1000-221 BC

• Yellow and Yangtze river basins

• Great Wall started in north

http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum

Page 48: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Ch’in Dynasty

• 221-206 BC

• Warring states of China united

• Includes Yellow, Yangtze, and Xi River Basins

http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum

Page 49: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Han Dynasty

• 206 BC-220 AD

• Western expansion opens Silk road

• Southward expansion for rice production

• Central control of dams, canals, irrigation

http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum

Page 50: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

T’ang Dynasty

• 580-907 AD

• Grand Canal Opened– Links Yellow and

Yangtze river basins

– 1100 miles long

http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum

Page 51: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Trade Routes of First Century A.D.

http://medieval.ucdavis.edu/20A/Slide0004.gif

Page 52: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Roman Empire split by 500 AD

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2d/Invasions_of_the_Roman_Empire_1.png/400px-Invasions_of_the_Roman_Empire_1.png

Eastern Roman Empire = Byzantine Empire

Page 53: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Expansion of Islam 632-1000 A.D.

http://www.hyperhistory.com

Page 54: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Arab Empire

• Islam swept through Arabia, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia 632-660 A.D.

• Much of Hellenistic culture of Greeks and Romans lost

• Islam moved through North Africa, reaching Iberian Peninsula

Page 55: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Islamic Jihad

• "Fight and kill the disbelievers wherever you find them, take them captive, harass them, lie in wait and ambush them using every stratagem of war." Qur'an: 9:5

• "Fight them until all opposition ends and all submit to Allah." Qur'an: 8:39

http://historyofjihad.org/egypt5.jpg

Page 56: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Religions of Europe: 1100-1200 A.D.

• Islam was a leader in science, math, and technology– Taught Europe during the

Middle Ages

• Christianity in Europe split:– Roman Catholic– Eastern Orthodox

• Crusades against Islamic control of Holy Land: 1095-1291 A.D.

Page 57: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Mongol Empire 1208-1480 A.D

http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum

Page 58: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Mongol Empire

• Mongols conquered most of Asia – China, Central Asia,

Persia, to Danube River

• Great Military Achievement– Mobile army on

Horseback

http://www.historyofjihad.org/mongols13.jpg

Page 59: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

• Trade within China restricted– Treasury Depleted

• Foreign trade welcomed– Marco Polo visits

China

Mongol Empire

Page 60: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Ottoman Empire 1300-1699 A.D.

• Roman/Byzantine empire in Asia Minor conquered by Ottoman Turks 1176 A.D.

• Ottoman Empire expanded 1300-1699 A.D.

• Trade routes to China and India controlled by Islamic/Ottoman rule

• Forced Europeans to explore alternate routes around Africa

http://courses.wcupa.edu/wanko/LIT400/Turkey/images/MapTurkeyExpansion.gif

Page 61: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Islamic World

Page 62: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Europe: 1400 A.D.

• Many warring countries and city states

• Many languages• Culturally unified by

Catholic Church• Roman Catholic church

in West– Eastern Orthodox in East

• Effort to push Moslems out of Iberia

• Venice a center of trade with Moslems

http://www.euratlas.com/big/europe_1400.jpg

Page 63: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Feudalism

King = warlord

Leases land to Knights, gives protection, justice

Grants land to Barons, gives protection, justice

Leases land to Peasants, gives protection, justice

Pays tax, pledges loyalty in war to Knights

Pays tax, pledges loyalty in war to Barons

Pays tax, pledges loyalty and soldiers to King

Barons

Knights

Peasants

Page 64: Early World History Indo-Europeans to the Middle Ages

Male Domination in Medieval Europe

• Politics

• Military

• Land ownership

• Animal Agriculture

• Trade

• Education

• Science

• Arts

• Religion

• Family

http://karenswhimsy.com/public-domain-images/medieval-costumes/images/medieval-costumes-2.jpg