5. Around 1500 B.C, the Hittites were the first in Southwest Asia to work with iron and harden it into weapons of war…
Hammurabi was an emperor that ruled in 1792 to 1750 B.C. In the 3,000 B.C. there were people called Sumerians. They were the first inhabitants of the area. They were a city – state!! There were some threats in this area! One was hostile invaders. To be protected by this threat, they built strong, high walls!…
Akhenaten believed that everybody should be happy. He peacefully lived in the new capital city Akhetaten but was unaware about what was happening outside of Egypt. Tushratta, the king of the Mittani (located in present-day Syria) sent a letter complaining that Akhenaten had sent gold-plated statues rather than sending statues made of solid gold. The Hittites, an empire located in Mesopotamia attacked Mittani. Even though the situation was desperate, Akhenaten refused to send troops to fight against the Hittites. Akhenaten died circa 1335 BC in year 17 of his reign. It is believed that Smenkhkare succeeded the throne. It is believed that Smenkhkare was either Akhenaten’s son or his cousin.…
12. The Hittites who were the most influential ancient Indo-European migrants into southwest Asia are credited for…
4,000 BCE: Sumerians (a people who had migrated into the area from the north) provided final boost toward establishing civilization…
Hittites: The Hittites were an ancient Anatolian people who established an empire at Hattusa in north-central Anatolia around the 18th century BC, which reached its height during the mid-14th century BC under Suppiluliuma I, encompassing an area that…
| Following the collapse of the Hittite kingdom in Anatolia and the Levant (1000 B.C.E), which new regional power arose to fill the power vacuum?…
Egypt and Mesopotamia vary drastically in land and geographic features due to its location. They had more differences than similarities which was a cause for the uniquely different cultures of each.…
Assyrians|Created a large empire known for warfare and cruelty; also built large libraries and created important art and architecture; religion adopted from Babylonians|2000-600BCE; Assyrian farmers date back to 7th century BCE|Semitic people (similar to Hebrews); greatest leader was Sargon II (extended empire, deported people of Israel); strongly influenced by Sumeria; merchants traded throughout the Middle East |Found in what is present day Iraq in the Middle East; Empire eventually extended from present day…
In the life of Egypt and Mesopotamia there were similarities and differences. There are comparisons in culture, social class, and gender. Also parallelism in their religions existed however, the differences found, clearly define them as individual entities.…
Egypt and Mesopotamia were the first river valley civilizations in 3500 B.C.E. They were both similar intellectually, because they both developed written language, and a similar alphabet. They were also similar religiously, because they both were polytheistic and believed their gods ruled them. Mesopotamia and Egypt were different with their achievements, because over time they gained knowledge of things that helped their civilizations, and helped them adapt to their environment.…
The First Civilizations for the River Valley differed among class systems, gender roles, and even trading. Class systems determined whether or not you were high in ranking. Mesopotamia and Egypt both had different views on these class systems. Egypt had pharaohs, which were basically wealthy kings and queen who can control mass numbers of people. Gender roles between these civilizations varied between upper class men and woman to slaves. Upper class men and woman had more freedom than the enslaved people. Slaves were used strictly for work, and they received seldom food and shelter in return. Mesopotamia did not have that many natural resources; therefore, they had to trade with other civilizations to get the necessary needs. Egypt, on the…
The first civilization is the Sumarians. (doc 1). The Sumarians lived in Southern Mesopotamia which is the land where the Tigris and Eurphrates rivers meet. Mesopotamia is also known as The Fertile Crescent because of its fertile soil which is good for farming. The Sumarians had a lot of achievements, they built a number of cities using mud bricks, they developed copper and bronze tools and weapons, and they developed the world’s first known writing. These achievements had a big impact on other civilizations. Their ideas spread across Mesopotamia and their features and…
Ancient Mesopotamia went through many different empires that shared similar parts cultural traits, where as Egypt went through several different rulers, but only a few dynasties. Mesopotamia lied in between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, and its main empires existed from 1650 BCE to around 330 BCE. The ancient Egyptian empires went through four main phases: The Archaic Period (3100-2600 BCE), The Old Kingdom (2660- 2160 BCE), The Middle Kingdom (2200-1730 BCE), and The New Kingdom (1570-1130 BCE). These two civilizations were located in close enough proximity to trade, goods and ideas. Egypt and Mesopotamia branched off of the…
3) Mesopotamia civilization established c. 3500 BCE (Sumerians) & then conquered by the Greeks c. 330 BCE…