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  • The Ancient Near East and Mesopotamia form a vast area

  • and one of the cradles of civilization.

  • It is in this vast area where the fundamental transition from lifestyles,

  • based on hunting and gathering to agriculture, took place.

  • It was here where temples and cities were first erected,

  • where the metal was first worked,

  • where the writing appeared and where great kingdoms and empires emerged.

  • The heart of the Middle East is Mesopotamia,

  • land between rivers, as named by the Greek historians.

  • This vast geographic area of ​​almost 80,000 km2,

  • includes modern Iraq and parts of Iran and Syria.,

  • where the Tigris and Euphrates which,

  • thanks to irrigating the fertile plains through which they run,

  • made the life in this region of extreme conditions,

  • with current temperatures above 50 degrees in summer and very low annual rainfall.

  • The land and water were the main resources,

  • providing abundant grass and a thriving agriculture.

  • The inhabitants of Mesopotamia were offered a variety of animals for food.

  • The steppes were inhabited by gazelles, deer and wild asses.

  • In the mountains there were deer, wild boars, tigers, lions,

  • bears and wild goats.

  • Towards 6500 BC,

  • sheep, goats, pigs and cows are in the diet of the people of Mesopotamia.

  • It was not until the end of the third millennium BC

  • when the horse and camel are domesticated.

  • The emergence of agriculture led to major changes.

  • From 8500 BC, the sedentary stretches across the Middle East.

  • Places like Jericho, Shanidar, Zawi Chemi, Karim Shefer, Cayönü, Jarmo and others

  • have great advances in farming techniques and materials.

  • In the Anatolian upland, Hacilar, Hasan Can and Suberde show a high degree of civilization,

  • but the largest settlement and best preserved is Çatal Huyuk.

  • With an area of ​​12 ha, throughout all the settlement there may be about 1000 homes,

  • in which must have lived a population of more than 5000 people.

  • Walls are made of mud and almost stuck to each other,

  • the entrance to the houses are made from the roof,

  • which was reached by a ladder.

  • The decoration of houses, with paintings, skulls and bull's horns, among other elements,

  • as well as structures called sanctuaries,

  • have allowed the suggestion that its population reached a high level of ritualization.

  • By the sixth millennium,

  • advanced places like Samarra or Hassunna,

  • have a pottery decorated with geometric motifs.

  • More importantly than these cultures was the one of Tell Halaf,

  • between 5600 and 4500 BC.

  • Its people developed new technical skills

  • and created one of the most beautiful ceramics in the entire history of this region.

  • A short time later, in southern Mesopotamia a flourishing settlement occurs;

  • the people, maybe coming from east or southern Iran attracted

  • by the area's natural resources:

  • abundant water, lush palm groves and conditions for hunting and fishing.

  • The most significant deposits were from Eridu, El Obeid, Uruk and Jemdet Nasr.

  • El Obeid, between 4800 and 3750,

  • presented the features of an advanced society and a theocratic organization.

  • The Ubaid period is characterized by its unique households,

  • with Madhhur Tell in Iraq being one of the best studied.

  • On this site, archaeological excavations brought to light a house,

  • the house of Usaid, built with walls made of adobe bricks.

  • It consisted of a large central room, flanked by a series of smaller rooms.

  • But the most interesting part

  • was that in the place remains of elements from the daily life were found,

  • such as vessels for eating, drinking, cooking or storing food, stone hoes, grinding stones, etc..

  • Uruk provides to humanity the oldest known examples of writing,

  • between 3500 and 3000 BC.

  • It's an already complete system with over 700 different signs,

  • and their role should be primarily economic,

  • to control and manage the wealth of the temples.

  • The first clay tablets recorded the sale of products such as grain, beer or livestock.

  • Others are lists that scribes learn to read and write.

  • The signs are often obvious, meaning simple figures in which,

  • for example, a spike represents the barley.

  • Over time they adapted the form of signs to write with a reed stylus.

  • The result was that the incisions were wedge shaped, hence the name of cuneiform.

  • Along with writing, other inventions of this period are on the path to civilization.

  • Uruk's culture was spread throughout the lower Mesopotamia,

  • provides full control of new techniques such as the wheel and the car,

  • the navigation, the potter's wheel, the plow or smelting.

  • The work of copper, from the fourth millennium BC,

  • the lost wax method, allowed making articles of gold, silver and lead.

  • While these developments arise, society is becoming increasingly urban.

  • City-state like Lagash, Ur, Kish and Tutub,

  • among many others, populate the landscape of southern Mesopotamia.

  • Now divided, we are in the third millennium,

  • in two large regions, Sumer and Akkad.

  • Sumerian cities, as Kafadye are dominated by a large temple,

  • and are surrounded by walls because disputes are frequent.

  • Some even count 24,000 residents and have a great market.

  • Protecting individual property

  • and ensuring proper treatment becomes an important issue,

  • and for that reason, cylinder seals are made,

  • in which are recorded scenes that are marked to pass on a clay surface.

  • The city-state, even though it was politically autonomous,

  • shared cultural traits like language or religion.

  • The ruler of one of these cities, Sargon of Akkad,

  • will rise above the rest and founded the first major state in the region, Akkadian,

  • in 2400 BC.

  • Also, the temples of the cities are evolving into stepped ziggurats.

  • One of the oldest and most famous was built in Ur in 2100 BC.

  • The great ziggurat of Babylon may have inspired the biblical description of the Tower of Babel.

  • By 2000 BC, Akkadian supremacy already disappeared due to external pressures.

  • The Middle East is a land of warring city-states,

  • where each one aims to achieve military and political supremacy,

  • establishing complicated alliances.

  • The political work is well known thanks to the tablets discovered

  • in the royal palaces of Mari and Ebla.

  • These tablets illustrate taxes and fees, numbers of slaves and craftsmen,

  • or details about the surrounding cities.

  • The kings of Babylon, Larsa and Eshnunna, direct political federations.

  • The most important of all is Hammurabi,

  • king of Babylon between 1792 and 1750 BC.

  • Hammurabi issued a legal code covering wide variety of topics:

  • trade agreements, matrimonial disputes, land disputes, etc..

  • The great Babylon, which means the gate of the gods, now live in all its glory,

  • thanks to being the center of worship of the god Marduk.

  • With its great ziggurat, its walls, its Ishtar Gate,

  • its beautiful gardens and glazed reliefs, Babylon will become a mythical city.

  • From 1500 BC, the region will live troubled times.

  • While Egypt is consolidating the New Kingdom,

  • the Hittite Empire dominates Anatolia and the United Mitanni controlled the Upper Euphrates.

  • Relations are strained;

  • the cities are besieged and battles are fought in the open field.

  • During this period until 1155 BC,

  • the cities of southern Mesopotamia are dominated by Cassita Dynasty,

  • which had its capital in Babylon.

  • The Cassita introduce the kudurru,

  • a type of marker used to record transfers of land.

  • By 1000 BCE begins an era dominated by the construction of large empires.

  • The first is the Assyrian, who, around 700,

  • will extend from the eastern Mediterranean to the Iranian plain.

  • Assyrian rulers adorned their most important cities with temples and palaces,

  • such as Dur Sharrukin now Khorsabad, city built by Sargon II.

  • The monarch is now the great ruler of peoples and leader of expeditions,

  • and for their enjoyment and omnipotence rises the palace,

  • symbol of his power.

  • Assyrian power will not last long, as an enemy coalition sacked the royal cities in 612.

  • This led to a new empire in the East, centered in Babylon,

  • which will also be demolished in 539 by another emerging power, the Persians.

  • Cyrus the Great is the founder of an empire that eventually will be extended

  • through Iran, Mesopotamia, Syria, Asia Minor, Thrace and parts of India.

  • One of their great rulers, Darius, sent up his residence to Persepolis,

  • A city that will begin to get rich in a lavish way,

  • especially thanks to their palaces.

  • The graves of these and other leaders will record the splendor of Persian civilization.

  • However, a number of rebellions and wars weakened the Persian power.

  • The expansionist ambitions of a young Macedonian king, Alexander the Great,

  • led him to confront and defeat easily the once powerful Persian empire.

  • It was in 331 BC and the Persian defeat not only put an end to an era

  • where Mesopotamia was, somehow, the center of the world,

  • but it marked the beginning of another

  • in which power is transferred to the thriving nations of the Mediterranean.

The Ancient Near East and Mesopotamia form a vast area

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大文明:メソポタミア (Grandes Civilizaciones: Mesopotamia)

  • 39 6
    Xiaodan Xu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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