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Civilization - Early civilizations

Civilization - Early civilizations: Encyclopedia II - Civilization - Early civilizations

The earliest known civilizations (as defined in the traditional sense) arose in Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern-day Iraq, the Nile valley of Egypt, the Indus Valley region of modern-day Pakistan, and the Huang He (Yellow River) valley of China, while smaller civilizations arose in Elam in modern-day Iran, and on the island of Crete in the Aegean Sea. The inhabitants of these areas built cities, created writing systems, learned to make pottery and use metals, domesticated animals, and created complex social structures with class systems. ...

See also:

Civilization, Civilization - Senses of the word, Civilization - 1: Literal and technical definitions, Civilization - 2: Broader sense, Civilization - 3: Human society as a whole, Civilization - 4: A standard of behavior, Civilization - 5: Superior vs. less complex societies, Civilization - What characterizes civilization, Civilization - Civilization as a cultural identity, Civilization - Civilizations as complex systems, Civilization - The future of civilizations, Civilization - The Fall of Civilizations, Civilization - Negative views of civilization, Civilization - Problems with the term civilization, Civilization - Early civilizations, Civilization - Mesopotamia, Civilization - Egypt, Civilization - India, Civilization - China

Civilization, Civilization - 1: Literal and technical definitions, Civilization - 2: Broader sense, Civilization - 3: Human society as a whole, Civilization - 4: A standard of behavior, Civilization - 5: Superior vs. less complex societies, Civilization - China, Civilization - Civilization as a cultural identity, Civilization - Civilizations as complex systems, Civilization - Early civilizations, Civilization - Egypt, Civilization - India, Civilization - Mesopotamia, Civilization - Negative views of civilization, Civilization - Problems with the term civilization, Civilization - Senses of the word, Civilization - The Fall of Civilizations, Civilization - The future of civilizations, Civilization - What characterizes civilization, List of pre-Columbian civilizations

Civilization: Encyclopedia II - Civilization - Early civilizations



Civilization - Early civilizations

The earliest known civilizations (as defined in the traditional sense) arose in Mesopotamia between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in modern-day Iraq, the Nile valley of Egypt, the Indus Valley region of modern-day Pakistan, and the Huang He (Yellow River) valley of China, while smaller civilizations arose in Elam in modern-day Iran, and on the island of Crete in the Aegean Sea. The inhabitants of these areas built cities, created writing systems, learned to make pottery and use metals, domesticated animals, and created complex social structures with class systems.

Civilization - Mesopotamia

The earliest settlement in Jericho (9th millennium BC) in modern-day Palestine, was a PPNA culture that eventually gave way to more developed settlements later, which included in one early settlement (8th millennium BC) mud-brick houses surrounded by a stone wall, having a stone tower built into the wall. In this time there is evidence of domesticated emmer wheat, barley and pulses and hunting of wild animals. However, there are no indications of attempts to form communities (early civilizations) with surrounding peoples. Nevertheless, by the 6th millennium BC we find what appears to be an ancient shrine and cult, which would likely indicate intercommunal religious practices in this era. Findings include a collective burial (with not all the skeletons completely articulated, jaws removed, faces covered with plaster, cowries used for eyes). Other finds from this era include stone and bone tools, clay figurines and shell and malachite beads. Around 1500 to 1200 BC Jericho and other cities of Canaan had become vassals of the Egyptian empire.

Several miles southwest of Ur, Eridu was the southernmost of a conglomeration of early temple-cities, in Sumer, southern Mesopotamia, with the earliest of these settlements carbon dating to around 5000 BC. The Sialk ziggurat of Kashan, Iran, also dates to this era. By the 4th millennium BC, in Nippur we find, in connection with a sort of ziggurat and shrine, a conduit built of bricks, in the form of an arch. Sumerian inscriptions written on clay also appear in Nippur. By 4000 BC an ancient city of Susa, in Mesopotamia, seems to emerge from earlier villages. Sumerian cuneiform script dates to no later than about 3500 BCE. Sumer, which was Mesopotamia's first civilization in what is now Iraq, is recognized as the world's earliest civilization. Other villages begin to spring up around this time in the Ancient Near East (Middle East) as well.

Civilization - Egypt

Anthropological and archaeological evidence both indicate a grain-grinding culture farming along the Nile in the 10th millennium BC using sickle blades. But another culture of hunters, fishers and gathering peoples using stone tools replaced them. Evidence also indicates human habitation in the southwestern corner of Egypt, near the Sudan border, before 8000 BC. Climate changes and/or overgrazing around 8000 BC began to desiccate the pastoral lands of Egypt, eventually forming the Sahara (c.2500 BC), and early tribes naturally migrated to the Nile river where they developed a settled agricultural economy and more centralized society. Domesticated animals had already been imported from Asia between 7500 BC and 4000 BC (see Sahara: History, Cattle period), and there is evidence of pastoralism and cultivation of cereals in the East Sahara in the 7th millennium BC. The earliest known artwork of ships in ancient Egypt dates to 6000 BCE.

By 6000 BC predynastic Egyptians in the southwestern corner of Egypt were herding cattle and constructing large buildings. Symbols on Gerzean pottery, c.4000 BC, resemble traditional hieroglyph writing [2]. In ancient Egypt mortar (masonry) was in use by 4000 BC, and ancient Egyptians were producing ceramic faience as early as 3500 BC. There is evidence that ancient Egyptian explorers may have originally cleared and protected some branches of the Silk Road. Medical institutions are known to have been established in Egypt since as early as circa 3000 BC. Ancient Egypt gains credit for the tallest ancient pyramids and early forms of surgery, mathematics, and barge transport (see Ancient Egypt: Ancient Achievements).

Civilization - India

The earliest known farming cultures in South Asia emerged in the hills of Balochistan, Pakistan, which included Mehrgarh in the 7th millennium BC. These semi-nomadic peoples domesticated wheat, barley, sheep, goat and cattle. Pottery was in use by the 6th millennium BC. Their settlement consisted of mud buildings that housed four internal subdivisions. Burials included elaborate goods such as baskets, stone and bone tools, beads, bangles, pendants and occasionally animal sacrifices. Figurines and ornaments of sea shell, limestone, turquoise, lapis lazuli, sandstone and polished copper have been found. By the 4th millennium BC we find much evidence of manufacturing. Technologies included stone and copper drills, updraft kilns, large pit kilns and copper melting crucibles. Button seals included geometric designs.

By 4000 BC a pre-Harappan culture emerged, with trade networks including lapis lazuli and other raw materials. Villagers domesticated numerous other crops, including peas, sesame seed, dates, and cotton, plus a wide range of domestic animals, including the water buffalo which still remains essential to intensive agricultural production throughout Asia today. There is also evidence of sea-going craft. Archaeologists have discovered a massive, dredged canal and docking facility at the coastal city of Lothal, India, perhaps the world's oldest sea-faring harbor. Judging from the dispersal of artifacts the trade networks integrated portions of Afghanistan, the Persian coast, northern and central India, Mesopotamia (see Meluhha) and Ancient Egypt (see Silk Road).

Archaeologists studying the remains of two men from Mehrgarh, Pakistan, discovered that these peoples in the Indus Valley Civilization had knowledge of medicine and dentistry as early as circa 3300 BC. The Indus Valley Civilization gains credit for the earliest known use of decimal fractions in a uniform system of ancient weights and measures, as well as negative numbers (see Timeline of mathematics). Ancient Indus Valley artifacts include beautiful, glazed stone faïence beads.

The Indus Valley Civilization boasts the earliest known accounts of urban planning. As seen in Harappa, Mohenjo-daro and (recently discovered) Rakhigarhi, their urban planning included the world's first urban sanitation systems. Evidence suggests efficient municipal governments. Streets were laid out in perfect grid patterns comparable to modern New York. Houses were protected from noise, odors and thieves. The sewage and drainage systems developed and used in cities throughout the Indus Valley were far more advanced than that of contemporary urban sites in Mesopotamia and Egypt and also more advanced than that of any other Bronze Age or even Iron Age civilization.

Civilization - China

Developed agriculture appears in the 7th millennium BC in the Peiligang culture (discovered in 1977) of Henan, China, including storing and redistributing crops, millet farming and animal husbandry (pigs). Evidence also indicates specialized craftsmenship and administrators (see History of China: Prehistoric times). This culture is one of the oldest in ancient China to show evidence of pottery-making. China's first historical dynasty, the Xia Dynasty, emerged in 2033 BC and may have been a late Neolithic or early Bronze Age culture.

Attributed to a later Chinese culture, in the Shang Dynasty (1600-1046 BC), are bronze artifacts and oracle bones, which were turtle shells or cattle scapula on which are written the first recorded Chinese characters and found in the Huang He valley, Yinxu (a capital of the Shang Dynasty).

Other related archives

10, 000 years ago, 1046 BC, 10th millennium BC, 1200 BC, 1500, 1600, 2033 BC, 2500 BC, 3000 BC, 3300 BC, 3500 BC, 3500 BCE, 4000 BC, 4th millennium BC, 5000 BC, 6000 BC, 6000 BCE, 6th millennium BC, 7500 BC, 7th millennium BC, 8000 BC, 8th millennium BC, 9th millennium BC, A Study of History, Aegean Sea, Afghanistan, African, Amazon, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Egypt: Ancient Achievements, Ancient Greece, Ancient Near East, Anthropological, Arnold J. Toynbee, Arnold Toynbee, Asia, Balochistan, Pakistan, Bronze Age, Burials, Bushmen, Canaan, Central Asia, China, Chinese, Chinese characters, Civilizations and the Future, Climate change, Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed, Conflict theory, Confucian, Congo Free State, Crete, Crusades, Dark Ages, Decline of the West, Edward Gibbon's, Egypt, Egyptian, Elam, Eridu, Euphrates, Eurasia, Figurines, Franz Boas, Gerzean, Greece, Harappa, Harappan, Heart of Darkness, Henan, History of China: Prehistoric times, History of Rome, Huang He, India, Indian, Indian Ocean, Indus Valley, Indus Valley Civilization, Iran, Iraq, Iron Age, Jane Jacobs, Japan, Jared Diamond, Jericho, John Baker, John Wesley Powell, John Zerzan, Joseph Conrad, Joseph Tainter, Kardashev scale, Karl Marx, Kashan, Korea, Kurdish, Latin, List of pre-Columbian civilizations, Lothal, Medical institutions, Mehrgarh, Meluhha, Mesopotamia, Mesopotamian, Middle East, Mohenjo-daro, Monasteries, Neolithic, New Guinea, New York, Nile, Nile valley, Nippur, Oswald Spengler, PPNA, Pacific Northwest, Pakistan, Palestine, Peiligang culture, Persian, Petrarch, Pottery, Primitivism, Problems with the term, Pueblo, Rakhigarhi, Renaissance, Roger Sandall, Roman Empire, Rome, Sahara, Sahara: History, Cattle period, Samuel P. Huntington, Shang Dynasty, Sialk, Silk Road, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Space civilization, Sudan, Sumer, Sumerian, Susa, Taoism, Taos, Technologies, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Theodor Mommsen, Tibet, Tigris, Timeline of mathematics, Transcendentalists, United States, Ur, Villagers, Western Civilization, Western civilization, White Man's Burden, World War I, World War II, Xanadu, Xia Dynasty, Yellow River, Yinxu, administrators, agrarian society, agricultural, agriculture, ancient Egypt, ancient Egyptian, ancient weights and measures, animal sacrifices, anthropologists, arch, archaeological, aristocracy, armies, arts, ascetics, atrocities, band, bangles, barbarians, barge, barley, baskets, beads, blades, bricks, bronze, bureaucracy, burial, cattle, ceramic, cereals, chiefdom, chieftain, cities, city, clan, clash of civilizations, clay, colonialism, communism, communities, complex, complex systems, complexity, conduit, connotative, constructing, copper, cotton, cowries, craftsmenship, crop rotation, crops, crucibles, cult, cultural evolution, culture, cuneiform, dates, decimal fractions, deforestation, dentistry, division of labor, drainage, drills, ecological, economic, economy, education, emmer wheat, environmentalists, ethnocentrism, etiquette, exploitation, explorers, faience, farming, faïence, fishers, gathering, genocide, global civilization, globalization, goat, government, grain, grinding, herding, hermits, hierarchy, hieroglyph, horticultural, houses, hunters, husbandry, imperialism, industrial society, industry, informational society, irrigation, kilns, lapis lazuli, limestone, long-distance trade, manufacturing, markets, mathematics, medicine, metallurgy, millet, money, mortar (masonry), nation-states, negative numbers, oppression, oracle bones, pastoralism, peas, pendants, pigs, postmodernists, pottery, predynastic Egyptians, pulses, pyramids, racism, religion, religious, ruling class, sandstone, sanitation, science, sea shell, sea-going, seals, sesame seed, settlement, settlements, sewage, sheep, ships, shrine, sickle, silk road, society, soil erosion, state, stone, stone tools, subsist, surgery, sustainable living, systems theory, technologies, temple, tools, totem poles, trade, tribal, turquoise, urban planning, vassals, villages, war, water buffalo, wheat, writing, ziggurat



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Early civilizations", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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