Ancient Civilizations: Prehistory To Egypt: S4Carlisle
Ancient Civilizations: Prehistory To Egypt: S4Carlisle
Ancient Civilizations: Prehistory To Egypt: S4Carlisle
Ancient Civilizations:
Prehistory to Egypt
Ancient Civilizations: Prehistory to Egypt
1
Chapter 1
learning objectives
Understand the distinctive artistic, literary,
and cultural accomplishments of the ancient
civilizations of Europe, Mesopotamia and Egypt.
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Prehistory
A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Background
Chapter 1
Paleolithic Period
The Paleolithic period corresponds to the geological Pleistocene era, known as the Ice Age. D
uring
this era, glaciers moved over the European and
Asian continents, forcing people to move south,
around the Mediterranean and into Africa. These
early people were nomads. They followed herds of
bison, deer, horses, and mammoths, depending on
these animals for their existence.
Neolithic Period
By 9500 b.c.e., during the Neolithic period, or
New Stone Age, humans began to farm. They
Art
Paintings in the cave at Lascaux in southern
France are believed to have been created between 15,000 and 13,000 b.c.e., the images
probably added over a long time (fig. 1-1).
Extremely lifelike bison, horse, mammoth, reindeer, boar, and wolf demonstrate the artists keen
observation and ability to record an image remembered after the model was no longer before
the eyes. These naturalistic objective documents
convey a sense of the animals animation. The
paintings were created by people who depended
on these animals for food.
The fact that the paintings are deep inside
the cave, combined with the absence of evidence
of habitation where the paintings are located
and the subject matter of the animals on which
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Global Perspective
Australia: Paintings of Animals
Stone Age Australians lived a nomadic life of hunting and gathering. In northern Australias
Arnhem Land, X-ray style animals were painted on rocks from c. 2000 b.c.e. to today
(fig. 1-2) by Aboriginals. The descriptively named style is characterized by the depiction
of bones, internal organs, muscle, fat, and other physical details within the outlines of the
bodiesa different form of realism than that found in the prehistoric cave paintings of
France. However, in Australia, as in France, food animals were depicted. Particularly notable
are the X-ray paintings on rocks at Ubirr.
Chapter 1
1-2 X-ray style animal painting, c. 2000 b.c.e.present, Ubirr, Arnhem Land, Australia
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Mesopotamia
A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Background
Chapter 1
Mesopotamian civilization developed in the valley between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in
what is present-day Iraq. The word M
esopotamia
is Greek for the land between the rivers.
Mesopotamia was the most fertile land in the
Fundamentals of Civilization
Spotlight
Beer
The beer that people drink today is an alcoholic beverage made by fermenting grains
and usually includes hops. However, the process of making beer was discovered nearly
8,000 years ago, around 6000 b.c.e. in Sumeria. The Sumerians made beer out of halfbaked crusty loaves of bread, called bappir. They crumbled this bread into water, fermented
it, and then filtered the liquid through a basket. Surviving records indicate that about half of
each grain harvest was used for the production of beer, including kassi, a black beer; kassag,
fine black beer; and kassagsaan, the finest premium beer.
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Art
Sumerian temples were built on raised stepped
platforms made of brick known as ziggurats, as
that at Ur [El Muqeiyar], Iraq (fig. 1-5) View the image on myartslab.com
Viewthe
theimage
image on
on myartslab.com , which was
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A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Religion
Like most early religions, Sumerian religion focused on seasonal fertility and was p olytheistic,
having many gods and goddesses. These divinities possessed human forms and personalities.
Though they were anthropomorphic, they were
immortal. The four chief gods were Anu, the
heaven god; Ninhursag, the mother goddess;
Enlil, the god of air; and Enki, the god of water.
Chapter 1
Literature
Gilgamesh
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Spotlight
The First Poet: Enheduanna
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Chapter 1
The earliest known poet was from Mesopotamia and wrote in the Sumerian language. Her
name was Enheduanna, and she was the daughter of the Akkadian king Sargon. Her bestknown poems are hymns to gods and goddesses, most notably to Inanna, the Sumerian
goddess of love.
Critical Thinking
How might you account for the fact that two stories of great floods
appear in the literary and religious writings of two different civilizations and cultures?
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A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Chapter 1
The Akkadian kingdom lasted less than 200 years. For the next
300 years, until about 1900 b.c.e., Mesopotamia was in a state of
constant conflict. In 1792 b.c.e., Hammurabi [hamoo-RAH-bee], the
first great king of Babylon, united the city-states of Akkad and Sumer
under his rule. One of Hammurabis great accomplishments was to
create a code of laws, which is the earliest known written body of laws.
The 282 laws are arranged in six chapters:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
personal property
land
trade
family
mistreatment
labor, including wages
Art
Between the ninth and seventh centuries b.c.e., stone guardians
(fig. 1-11), placed at gateways, were an Assyrian style. These composite creatures combine the body of a lion, wings of a bird, and
head of a man. Further, they are a curious combination of relief and
sculpture in the round. When viewed from the front, two front legs
are visible. Seen from the side, four legs are visible and the creature
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Chapter 1
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A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
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figures are divided by cedar trees, the ancient
tree of life. Remaining traces of pigment indicate that the reliefs were once brightly colored.
The ancient Persian preference was for precise
technical execution, pattern, and symmetry. The
Palace of Persepolis was burned in 330 b.c.
by Alexander the Great (356323 b.c.e.), who
defeated Persia.
Egypt
Background
Ancient Egyptian civilization developed slowly
from about 5000 b.c.e. to approximately
3100 b.c.e. without a central government. Egypt
was divided into an Upper Egypt and a Lower
Egypt, which were united by King Narmer around
3100b.c.e. This historical event is documented on
the Palette of Narmer (fig. 1-13), carved of slate,
c. 3100 b.c.e. On the front, Narmer and his
troops examine the decapitated enemy dead. On
the back, Narmer is about to strike an enemy.
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Ancient Writing:
Cuneiform and Hieroglyphics
By about 3000 b.c.e., the people of ancient
Mesopotamia were using a type of writing called
cuneiform, characterized by wedge-shaped characters. The original purpose of this writing was
to keep agricultural records. Cuneiform writing
began as a system of simple symbolic pictures.
For example, the symbol for cow was an abstract
picture of a cows head:
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Chapter 1
1-13 Palette of Narmer, front and back, c. 3100 b.c.e., first dynasty, slate, height 25" (63.5 cm).
Egyptian Museum, Cairo
Around 2000 b.c.e., pictograms became associated with sounds. This was the basis for the
development of phonetic writing, which we use
today.
Ancient Egyptians used a pictographic writing called hieroglyphics. For centuries, scholars
thought that the glyphs used in hieroglyphics
represented complete ideas rather than units
of sound. Until 1822, the meaning of the hieroglyphics was unknown. In that year, a Frenchman, Jean Franois Champollion, deciphered
the Rosetta Stone (fig. 1-14), a large stone fragment found near the town of Rosetta in the Nile
Delta. Incised on the stone is a decree in honor
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A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Chapter 1
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Karma
Karma means action; it involves a kind of moral
cause and effect, in which ones actions affect
moral development. The form in which a person
is reincarnated depends on ones actions; karma
places responsibility for ones actions on ones
self. The law of karma suggests that the present
condition of ones life has been determined by
actions in previous existences.
1-14 Rosetta Stone, c. 196 b.c.e., basalt. British
Museum, London
of the Egyptian pharaoh Ptolemy V (196 b.c.e.) in
three different languages, one of which is Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Critical Thinking
Why do you think writing became so important
in the ancient world? What was gained with the
invention of writing? What do you think was lost?
Religion
Ancient Egyptian religion was polytheistic, meaning there were several gods. Among the most
important gods were those of the cosmic forces,
including the sun, earth, sky, air, and water. The
Nile River was worshipped as a deity. These
natural forces were often depicted as animals
or humans, or as combinations of the two. The
sun, for example, was portrayed sometimes as a
falcon and other times as a falcon-headed man
wearing a sun disk as a crown.
Among the most important of the Egyptian
gods was Osiris, whose worship spread throughout the country. The legend of Osiriss death at
the hands of his brother Set, and the search
for the corpse by Isis, Osiriss wife, plays an
important part in Egyptian mythology. It is also
connected with Egyptian belief in the afterlife.
The Afterlife
Egyptians prepared themselves during life for
the hereafterthe afterlife. Old Kingdom Egyptians believed that the body of the deceased
needed to be preserved so that his ka, or vital
spiritual essence, akin to the Christian concept of the soul, could live on. This is why the
Egyptians embalmed and bound their dead
as mummies. The process of mummification
involved emptying the bodily cavities of their
organs, refilling them with spices and Arabic
gums, and then wrapping the body in layers of
cloth strips. A likeness of the person was made
in stone, as a backup, should anything happen
to the mummy. The need to house the dead in a
tomb that would last forever gave rise to Egypts
conception of architecture, most notably in their
monumental pyramids.
Ethical Considerations:
Book of the Dead
The Egyptian Book of the Dead spells out the
procedures the dead had to use before being
admitted to the Field of Reeds, the eternal realm
of the god Osiris. There the soul of the deceased
was weighed against how well he or she had
treated others and respected the gods. A favorable judgment meant that the soul would join
other living souls in a place of peace and joy.
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Global Perspective
India: Hindu Gods
At the center of Hindu religious thought is the concept of Brahman [BRAH-man], the indivisible spiritual reality and the divine source of being. In ancient Hinduism, Brahman is the essence of the universe, manifested in creation, preservation, and destruction. Early Hinduism
is thus a monolithic religion, perhaps even a monotheistic one. The Brahman essence unifies
all existence. However, Brahman is an intellectual idea, a spiritual concept rather than what
we might think of as a god. There develops, thus, a tension in Hinduism with its monotheistic roots and its later polytheistic pantheon of gods. In later Hinduism, the three functions
of the Brahman essence (creation, preservation, and destruction) are divided among three
gods: Brahma [BRAH-ma], the creator; Vishnu [VEESH-noo], the preserver; and SHIVA
[SHEE-vah], the destroyer. Later Hindu worship focuses on a pantheon of gods who personify natural forces. Vishnu is the god of benevolence, forgiveness, and love. His consort and
companion is Lakshmi [LAHK-shmee]. Among Vishnus avatars, or appearances in earthly
form, is Krishna [KREESH-na], believed by some Hindus to have been later reincarnated as
the Buddha. Shiva represents the complementary oppositions of life: motion and calm, male
and female, light and dark. He is also the god of the dance. His most frequent consort is Parvati, who bore him several sons. Their most popular son is Ganesha, the elephant-headed
deity associated with prosperity. Hindu gods and goddesses are often depicted with multiple
arms and legs to show their immense power. One example is the dancing Shiva (fig. 1-15).
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India: Hindu Religious Concepts
A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Chapter 1
An unfavorable judgment meant that the souls huge stones. With characteristic Egyptian mathheart would be devoured by the monster Ament. ematical precision, the three Great Pyramids
For those who had not led a good life, the Book
are aligned, their corners oriented north, south,
of the Dead (fig. 1-16) View the
the image
imageon
onmyartslab.com
east, and west. The ratio of the width at the
View the image on myartslab.com contained incantations to pro- base to the height of each pyramid is eleven
tect against an unfavorable judgment.
to seven. Inside each pyramid, corridors lead
to the burial chamber. The largest and oldest
Architecture
pyramid, that of Cheops, contains approximately
The Great Pyramids (fig. 1-17) at Giza were built 2,300,000blocks, each averaging 2 tons, and
during the fourth dynasty of the Old Kingdom. covers thirteen acres. The exteriors of the pyraThe three pyramids are of the pharaohs Cheops
mids were once entirely encased in polished
(c. 2530 b.c.e.); Chefren (c. 2500 b.c.e.); and
pearly white limestonea few blocks remain in
Mycerinus (c. 2470 b.c.e.). Extraordinary accom- place on the pyramid of Chefren.
The concern for concealment brought
14 plishments of engineering, accommodating the
Egyptian need for permanence, the pyramid is
about the end of monumental mortuary architecthe most stable geometric form, except perhaps
ture. In the New Kingdom, instead, the funerary
for the cone. The pyramids are built of solid
Temple of Queen Hatshepsut (fig. 1-18), conlimestone masonry, the blocks cut with metal
structed against a cliff at Deir-el-Bahari, Thebes,
tools in the eastern Nile cliffs, marked by the c.1480 b.c.e. in the early eighteenth dynasty by
masons with red ink to indicate their eventual the architect Senmut, is far from her actual burial.
location, floated across the river during the sea- The huge complex includes three terraces, once
sonal floods, dragged up temporary ramps, and
filled with gardens, with columnar porticoes and
moved into their final positions. Egyptian builders
halls, connected by ramps to chapels cut into the
used no cement, relying instead on the weight of
cliff. Like all Egyptian buildings, the Temple of
Hatshepsut was roofed
with stone, the result
being rooms filled with
forests of supports,
because the distance
between supports must
be small enough to
span with a stone lintel. Square or sixteensided columns as well
as statues support the
1-17 Great Pyramids, Giza, mid-third millennium b.c.e., fourth dynasty
View an Architectural Simulation on the Pyramid on myartslab.com
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15
Chapter 1
temples, most of which had similar plans. Because the temple was
considered the home of the gods,
the plan was based on those used
for homesmade larger and more
1-19 Temple of Amen-Mut-Khonsu, Luxor, major
permanent.
The columns, in the form of construction under Amenhotep III, c. 1390, and Rameses II,
c. 1260 b.c.e.
lotus and papyrus reeds bound together, are used for both structure
and decoration. All Egyptian columns are believed to have been
Sun court of
painted originally. In addition, paAmenhoptep III Birth room Barque
pyrus, lotus, and palm leaves were
shrine
carved on the walls.
The Temple of Rameses II
(fig.1-21) at Abu Simbel was built
c. 1260 b.c.e., during the nineteenth dynasty, the faade and inOffering table
Colonnade
ner rooms cut into the sandstone
Court of
room
Ramesses II
on the west bank of the Nile. The
temple was erected in honor of 1-20 Plan
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Sculpture
A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Egyptian sculptors focused on the human figure, depicted, with few exceptions, in one of four poses:
Chapter 1
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1.
2.
3.
4.
sitting on a block
standing
sitting cross-legged
kneeling
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Painting
The paintings preserved on the walls of ancient
Egyptian tombs document daily life of the time.
Artists gave greater importance to the clarity with
which information is conveyed than to realistic
representation. Egyptian art does not portray
what is seen, but what is known, each person
and object shown in its most characteristic form.
No attempt is made to create an illusion of threedimensional space.
Ti Watching a Hippopotamus Hunt (fig.1-26)
Viewthe
theimage
imageononmyartslab.com
myartslab.com was
View
the
image
painted on a wall of Tis tomb in Saqqara,
c. 25002400 b.c.e., during the fifth dynasty of
the Old Kingdom. Ti stands on a small boat and
directs his servants, who hold harpoons. He is
distinguished from them by his larger size. The
water of the Nile River is represented by wavy
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A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Chapter 1
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Global Perspective
China: Burial of the First Emperor of China
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Chapter 1
Literature
Ancient Egyptian Poetry
The oldest Egyptian poems, dated c. 2650 b.c.e., are religious.
Most are incantations and invocations to the gods. One of the most
important is the pharaoh Akhenatens Hymn to the Sun.
Ancient Egyptian Love
In this poem, Akhenaten presents himself as the son of
Poem Excerpts
Aten, and then describes the sun rising: At dawn you
I love you through the daytimes,
rise shining in the horizon, you shine as Aten in the sky
in the dark,
and drive away darkness by sending forth your rays.
Through all the long divisions of the night,
those hours
Another important early poem, The Song of the Harper
I, spendthrift, waste away alone,
(1160 b.c.e.), is not religious. This poem emphasizes the
and lie, and turn, awake til whitened dawn.
joys and pleasures of life in an attitude of carpe diem,
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A n c i e n t C i v i l i z at i o n s: Pr eh i story t o E gy p t
Chapter 1
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The earliest known Chinese literature is lyric poetry. The earliest collection is The Book of
Songs, which contains material passed down orally from as early as the tenth century b.c.e.
First written down in the sixth century b.c.e., The Book of Songs is one of five Confucian classics. The poems in it are concerned with love and war, sorrow and celebration; they reflect
the perspectives of all social strata of ancient Chinese society. The Book of Songs remains
essential reading for educated Chinese people to the present day.
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Critical Thinking
The question, What is art? has yet to be
Terms
anthropomorphism p. 6
monotheism p. 12
battered p. 5
Neolithic p. 2
cromlech p. 3
Paleolithic p. 2
culture p. 4
polytheism p. 6
cuneiform p. 11
dualistic religions p. 8
pylon p. 15
henge p. 3
relief p. 8
hieroglyphics p. 11
stele p. 6
ideogram p. 11
weeper holes p. 5
megalithic p. 3
ziggurat p. 5
Study and Review on myartslab.com
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Chapter 1
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Timeline
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c. 3000 b.c.e.
Writing begins in
Mesopotamia
c. 24902472 b.c.e.
King Mycerinus and
his Queen, Egypt
2100
c. 2000 b.c.e.
Stonehenge,
Salisbury Plain,
Wiltshire,
England
1950
c. 19001600 b.c.e. Epic of
Gilgamesh
c. 1480 b.c.e.
Temple of
Queen
Hatshepsut
500
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