In Beer in Mesopotamia and Egypt, there is an example of Theme 2, Development and Interactions of Cultures. On pg. 19, the author says that the Neolithic drinkers conclusion to the discovery of beer was that it was a gift from the gods. They had many tales on how the gods discovered beer. Also on pg 16, the author said that beers are used in religious ceremonies. This is an example of religion in Theme 2 because at this time in history beer started to religiously affect the Neolithic drinkers.
In Beer in Mesopotamia and Egypt, on pg. 20, the author said that beer might’ve played a central role in the adoption of agriculture, which was one of the most important discoveries in human history. This is an example of Theme 4, Creation, Expansion, and …show more content…
Wine became Greece’s number one product that they traded around the world. In two centuries, it became so widespread that its value went down. This is an example of Theme 4, Creation, Expansion, and Interaction of Economic Systems, on pg.48.
On pg. 51 in Wine in Greece and Rome, there is an example of Theme 3, State-Building, Expansion, and conflict. Greece tested ideas against ideas with the result of democracy. This led to reasoned arguments and conversations about everything in philosophy, it prompted the construction of competing theories in science, and got an adversarial legal system in the field of law.
In Wine in Greece and Rome, on pg. 54, the lower classes in Greece had only less than seven acres of land while the next three classes up had about ten, fifteen, twenty-five acres of land. Wine is also very wealthy so the upper classes owned a lot of that while the lower classes didn’t have as much. This is an example of Theme 5, Development and Transformation of Social Structures.
Spirits in the Colonial