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FREE ESSAY ON ANCIENT CIVILIZATION

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Ancient Civilizations
A comparison of different ancient civilizations that grew along various rivers. -- 1,854 words; MLA

Ancient Civilization
A brief history of the ancient civilizations of the Near East, India and China. -- 885 words;

Michael Coe's Book on Ancient Mayan Civilization "The Maya"
Examines Michael Coe's book "The Maya" which pulls together the available data from many different fields of study to produce a comprehensive survey that sheds new light on the beginnings and eventual decline of the ancient Mayan civilization. -- 2,160 words;

India's Ancient Civilization to Modern Day Politics and the Legacy of the British Raj.
A look at India's development from as early as the 3rd millennium and how other nations and civilizations often imposed their rule on India. The primary focus of the paper is on how British rule in India continues to effect modern Indian politics. -- 3,960 words;

Impact of Ancient Religions on Civilizations
This paper examines the impact made by ancient religions on the respective civilizations. -- 1,125 words;

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ANCIENT CIVILIZATION

Describe Paleolithic and Neolithic cultures. What were the main characteristics of each?
The Paleolithic Old Stone era began in about 40,000 - 10,000 B. C. The beginning of this
period was marked by the first human hunter-gatherer societies. Hunting, fishing, and
gathering of fruits and nuts were the main economic endeavors at the time. The
responsibilities in these hunter-gathering societies were shared. The men of this period
did the very dangerous hunting of large wild animals like bison and reindeer, while women
gatherer fruits and nuts for an entire year. The small communities of 25-50 people came
to consensus on decisions and ideas were shared. The extended family was core. Men and
women both played a roll in child bearing. The people of this era lived in huts and
caves. Caves were idealistic living quarters; they could be heated in the cold weather
months and were cool in hot weather months. Caves were also good advantage points for
observing prey. Caves were also the sites of representational art. Paleolithic cave
paintings were of bison, horse, reindeer and mammoths. Historians believe that art may
have been the cave dwellers' attempts to control the environment through magic. Other
representational art of this time included (Venus) figurines of women. The female
figurines exaggerated the buttocks and breasts of women, perhaps in attempt to control
fertility of women. Men spent a lot of time fashioning tools, like the javelin for
hunting. The skilled craftsmanship of tools and the artists demonstrates at least a
limited specialization of skills and division of labor, so these societies required
organization in the villages. The desire to trade ideas and merchandise with other
societies developed. 
The Neolithic New Stone era began sometime around 10,000 B. C. The beginning of this
period was marked by the domestication of animals and plants. With men occupied in
hunting, it may well have been females who first unraveled the secrets of agriculture.
Humans specialized in the wild plants they collected and the animals they hunted. They
began to learn how to control the environment in order to domesticate plants and animals.
The domestication of animals perhaps started with dogs, which were useful in hunting.
Then they learned to keep sheep, goats, chickens and cattle. Next came farming. They
learned to grow wheat, barley, then legumes (beans). Craft specialization was evident, in
addition to farming and shepherding, occupations in trading and accounting, iron working,
clothing making, jewelers, artists and mining developed. The villagers mined copper
(period was also known as Copper Age), gems, perhaps for pottery and hunting tools.
Accountants were used for trade transactions. Technological advancements came into use
like the wheel and complex metal casting. In Europe, elaborate temple complexes and other
monuments were built, which required complex mathematics. Also during the Neolithic
period, religions developed. Gods and goddesses controlled everything. Gods and goddesses
of the earth and fertility were worshipped. There was a strong urge to create cities near
water. The organization and engineering that took place in this period is what lead
humans to civilization.
Discuss the causes of ancient civilization.
Civilizations evolved in response to the need in the Neolithic communities for
organization and engineering. Early civilizations were very complex. In early
civilizations there is evidence of large and specialized labor forces, strong government,
technology to control the environment, significant projects in art and thought and the
invention of writing. As Neolithic communities grew, there was a strong urge to create
cities near water. The first civilizations began in Mesopotamia between the Tigris and
Euphrates Rivers and in the valley of the Nile River in Egypt around 3500 - 3000 B. C..
Large and efficient irrigation and drainage projects created channels, dikes, or dams to
control floodwaters and to improve the fertility of the land. 
There was a need for social and economic hierarchies. The city was a society of
strangers. There were single people as well as nuclear families in monogamous
relationships. Civil rights came because you lived in a city. With individual freedoms
came more responsibilities. There were five main social classes. The first class was the
royal family, which marked the first form of government - monarchy. The position of king
or queen was inherited. If there was not an eldest son, the daughter became queen. The
second class in the hierarchy was the aristocracy. The third class was made of the
burghers or the artisans, mechanics, teachers, accountants, scribes and translators. The
fourth class was made of the serfs. Serfs could not be bought or sold, but could not
leave the land on which they worked, they had specific jobs. 
The river valley society developed into city-states, independent political units that
each contained a rural countryside with villages controlled by a capital city. The urban
landscape's most visible sign of centralized authority was the temple. The temple was the
most important authority in religion, politics and economics. Temples were wealthy and
powerful and commanded loyalty because only a strong institution could control the large
amount of manpower required to build these elaborate works of architecture. Religion and
politics went together, and this was the monarchy's way to prove their legitimacy. The
religions at this time were polytheistic. For instance there could be 3 gods per city and
1 national god.
There were military forces in early civilizations. The original police were the king's
guards and temple guards. There were special military drills developed to train the
armies to address the military's main concern, how to deal with outsiders.
Discuss Egyptian art, architecture, literature, and religion.
Art - Egyptian art consisted mainly of sculptures carved in stone, wood, or metal. They
were statues of kings, queens, gods and goddesses, husband, wives, adults and children,
officials, priests, scribes. The body posture was rigid and stiff. The face was very
individualistic and drawn from life. Other art was exemplified in the tombs. The tombs
were decorated with rich, multicolored wall paintings, the first narrative painting.
There are scenes of the gods, court ceremony, ordinary life, war and recreation. The
paintings served a religious purpose - representations of the living were meant to
perpetuate them in the afterlife. Egyptian craftsmen were masters of gold jewelry-work,
glassmaking, and wood working. 
Architecture - Egyptian architecture included royal tombs, palaces, forts, pyramids and
temples. These structures were built in harmony with the unique landscape. Stone temples
like Ramesses II's project at Abu Simbel, two chambers were carved out of rock, and in
front of the larger chamber were four seated colossal statues of Ramesses carved out of
rock. Great Pyramids demonstrated the king's abililty to organize a vast labor force. 
Literature - Ancient Egyptian literature is notable for its variety. Religious subjects,
historical and commemorative records, technical treaties in mathematics and medicine,
business contracts, and royal proclamations. The fibers of the papyrus plant could be
made into writing paper. Egyptian writing is best known for hieroglyphics, a system of
pictures and abstract signs that represent sounds or ideas. Hieroglyphics were used only
for monuments and ornamentation.
Religion - Polytheistic - human, animal cats dogs crocodiles gods were worshipped or
Henotheist worship of one god without denying the existence of others, Moral do unto
others - you come before judges in the underworld where your sins are weighed.and the
sinless are admitted into eternal life, Immortality - focus on the afterlife. Death could
be an extremely pleasant continuation of life on earth. Preserved bodies - embalming the
Egyptian mummy. The ka soul was immortal. Chief Gods Re (Sun) Osiris (Earth/Death)
4 Mesopotamian Groups
Sumerians - The Sumerian city-states were the foundation for all civilizations. They were
the first literate society. The potesi was the king or governor of the city state. He was
a representative on earth of the gods. Cities were really governed by the gods,
Ziggarats, or stepped towers were the main temples of the city-state. Epic of Gilgamesh
was a story of heroic deeds. It showed the connection between gods and humans. The main
themes are friendship, loss, and the inevitability of death.
Babylonians - absolute monarchy - Hammarabi's Code was harsh and it showed the inequity
of law. Serfs had little rights. Nobility had more rights, privileges and
responsibilities. Weights and measures. Fate divination. All humans are weak/defective.
Sacrifices to the Gods were given. Humans are very separated from the Gods
Assyrians - War and conquest. Asshur was their main God, a war-god,. Cavalry units First
state to rule both Tigris and Euphrates and the Nile River Valleys. Expansionist theory.
Military and merchantile power. Mass deportation. Conquered a country and uprooted the
people. Punished rebellion.
Chaldeans - Neo Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar conquered and destroyed Jerusalem in 586
BC. He deported the Judeans to Babylon in an event remembered as Babylonian Captivity.
Cosmopolitan empire. Diverse, but superior and sophisticated. He rebuilt Babylon on a
grand scale. Great interest in astronomy and astrology for religious reasons. Planets
were Gods, can't be contained. Astronomers of that time could predict equinoxes and lunar
eclipses and could calculate the movements of the moon and stars. 

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