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CHAPTER 2Early Civilizations, 3500–600 b.c.e.Questions2.1 What were the main features of civilization as a form of human organization?2.2 What did the river valley civilizations have in common?2.3 How did Mesopotamian and Egyptian political structures compare?2.4 How did Mesopotamian and Egyptian religions compare?2.5 Why do we know less about Harappan civilization than about Egypt?2.6 How does early China illustrate the main features of river valley civilizations?2.7 How did conditions in the Americas differ from those in Asia and North Africa during the formation of early civilizations?2.8 How and why did the early civilization period come to an end and what where the main religious changes introduced by Judaism?Chapter Outline I. CivilizationFirst developed in Mesopotamia, after about 3500 B.C.E.Spread to other places and developed independently in China and Central AmericaFour distinctive features of civilizations:Develop economic surplus and distribute that surplus unequallyDevelop formal governments with bureaucraciesDevelop or acquire writingDevelop large and important urban centersDisagreement between scholars on the definition of civilizationObjections often center on the connotation that civilization is better than other forms of human organizationII. Tigris—Euphrates CivilizationFirst civilization in Middle East—Mesopotamia Developed: writing, law, trade, religion, money, elaborate architecture, city planningBy 4000 B.C.E., farmers familiar with copper, bronze, and had invented the wheelThey had a pottery industry and developed artistic formsIrrigation required coordination of communities leading to complex political structuresBy 3500 B.C.E., the Sumerians had developed the first real civilizationAchievements of the SumeriansAlphabet and writing (cuneiform)Astronomy, numerical systemReligionProfessional priests, rituals, shrinesZiggurats first monumental architecturePolytheism (gods in aspects of nature)Patron gods, earth from water, flood story, gloomy afterlifeLegacy carried into Old Testament influencing Judaism, Christianity, IslamPolitical and Social OrganizationCity-StatesEstablish boundariesState religionCourtsKingsDefense, warPriestsWith kings, administer state land and slavesSlaveryWarfare ensured supply of slavesVariable existence, slaves could purchase freedomCommerceAgricultural prosperityIrrigation, wheeled carts, fertilizersSilver means of exchange, first money, facilitated tradeDefenseRegion a constant temptation for invadersDifficult to defendFell to Akkadians who continued Sumerian culturePeriod of decline, followed by Babylonian ruleBabyloniansExtended own empire, bringing civilization to other parts of Middle EastHammurabiLaw Code establishing courts, duties, rights, punishmentsInvasions persisted, fragmentation followedSemitic peoples and languages came to dominate but continued culture of the conqueredGreatest turmoil between 1200 and 900 B.C.E., favoring smaller, regional kingdomsAfter 900 B.C.E., Assyrians, then Persians, created large new empires in the Middle EastView the Closer Look on MyHistory Lab: Enemies Crossing the Euphrates to Escape AssyriansIII. Egyptian CivilizationCivilization formed by 3000 B.C.E. along Nile RiverBenefited from trade and technological influence of MesopotamiaVery different society and culture then MesopotamiaLess open to invasionUnified state for most of its historyEconomy more government-directed, smaller business classGovernmentPharaoh, powerful king, intermediary between gods and menPharaohs built pyramids (splendid tombs) for themselves from 2700 B.C.E. onwardContinuityDespite some disruptions, Egyptian civilization basically intact until after 1000 B.C.E.Spread into Sudan, impact on later African cultureInteraction with African kingdom of KushCultural achievementsScience and alphabet less developed than MesopotamiaMath more advanced and influential than MesopotamiaArt lively, colorful; architecture influentialRead the Document on MyHistory Lab: An Egyptian Hymn to the NileRead the Document on MyHistory Lab: Egyptian Folk Tale, c. 2000 b.c.e.IV. Egypt and Mesopotamia ComparedEgypt more stable and optimistic than MesopotamiaEgypt emphasized strong central authority, Mesopotamian politics shifted over a substructure of regional city-statesMesopotamia developed more technological improvements and had wider ranging trade contactsSocial status of women likely higher in EgyptBoth civilizations emphasized social stratification, featured a powerful priestly group, emphasized astronomy and mathematics, and left important heritages in their regions and adjacent territories V. River Valley Civilization in IndiaCivilization formed by 2500 B.C.E. along Indus RiverLarge cities: Harappa and Mohenjo Daro, buildings had running waterTraded with MesopotamiaDeveloped own alphabet and artistic formsReasons for Harappa’s fall remain unclearInvasions by Indo-Europeans, environmental issues, and natural calamities destroyed muchAfter Harappa’s FallFall led to long transitional period, sometimes called the Vedic and Epic ages1500–700 b.c.e.: Aryan migrationsAryans gradually converted to agricultureDeveloped a series of literary epics and important religious works: Vedas, Mahabharata, Ramahyana, UpanishadsAryan ideas and social forms increasingly influentialWatch the Video on MyHistory Lab: The Aryans in IndiaRead the Document on MyHistory Lab: Selections from the Rig-VedaVI. ChinaDeveloped independently along Yellow River (Huanghe), later contact with India and Middle EastBy 2000 B.C.E., irrigation, advanced technology, science, music, intellectual life, pottery, writing (ideographic)By 1000 B.C.E., introduced iron and working with coalShang kingdom laid foundations for Chinese civilization by 1500 B.C.E.Silk manufacturing developedAncestor worship beganShang rulers directed important ritualsA. The Zhou DynastyShang followed by the Zhou (flourished 1029–700 b.c.e.)Ruled through alliances with landed families Zhou innovationsEncouraged settlers to move southClaimed “mandate of heaven”Promoted cultural unityFall of the ZhouPolitical fragmentation and the arrival of new migrating peoples ended the Zhou dynastyView the Closer Look on MyHistory Lab: A Bronze Axe Head from the Shang DynastyVII. Early Civilizations of the AmericasDistinctive conditions in the AmericasFew animals available for domesticationCivilizations developed without the use of metals for tools and weaponsContact between civilizations complicated by need to travel through climate zonesAgriculture developed between 7000 and 5000 b.c.e.Many groups continued to combine agriculture with huntingAgriculture contributed to development of more complex social and cultural formsA. The OlmecsAround 1500 b.c.e., Olmecs established first American civilizationOlmec innovationsIrrigationCitiesWriting systemMonumental architectureCalendarOlmec stateHereditary eliteElaborate religionWide trade networkReasons for Olmec collapse about 800 b.c.e. unclearB. Chavín and the Andean WorldGeography of the AndesChallenges and opportunitiesBetween 1800 and 1200 b.c.e., more complex society emergedIrrigationLarge ceremonial structuresPottery making expandedChavín de HuantarLocated in highlands of PeruChain art and religion spread and influenced regionChavín decline around 300 b.c.e. was followed by a long period of political decentralizationView the Closer Look on MyHistory Lab: The Basalt Olmec HeadsVIII. The End of the River Valley PeriodA. The Heritage of the River Valley CivilizationsLasting impactMonuments like pyramidsInventionsWheelTamed horseAlphabets and writing implementsMathematical concepts like square rootCalendarFunctional monarchies and bureaucraciesThese are the foundations of all later civilizationsAll of the pioneering civilizations were in decline by 1000 B.C.E.Dividing line between early and later civilizations, especially in IndiaIndia: much ignorance of link between early and later civilizationsChina: definite connection between Shang and all that followedClaim that Western civilization originated in Middle East and Egypt not precise and difficult to evaluateB. New States and Peoples around 1000 b.c.e.Connection between early and later civilizations found in smaller culturesRegional cultures influenced by Mesopotamians and EgyptiansOften flourished while larger civilizations were in declineBecame influential in their own rightKushStrongly influenced by EgyptConquered Egypt but were driven out by AssyriansTraditions continued in later kingdom of EthiopiaPhoeniciansSimplified writing, devised 22 letter alphabet, predecessor of Latin and GreekImproved Egyptian numbering, set up colonies and trading centers around MediterraneanLydians first introduced coined moneyC. JudaismJews most influential of smaller Middle Eastern groupsSemitic, influenced by Babylonians, settled around Mediterranean around 1200 B.C.E.Introduced monotheismSingle God guided destinies of the Jewish peoplePriests and prophets defined and emphasized this beliefHistory of God’s guidance of his people, basis for the Hebrew BibleJewish religion and moral code survived foreign rule from 772 B.C.E. to Roman conquest in 63 B.C.E.Judaism survives to this day, also basis of Christianity and IslamDurability sustained by lack of interest in converting non-JewsJewish God increasingly abstract, less humanlikeRepresents basic changeGod: powerful, rational, justLinked ethical conduct and moral behaviorReligion a way of life not a set of rituals and ceremoniesGreatest impact when Jewish beliefs were embraced by proselytizing faithsCHAPTER 3Classical Civilization: ChinaQuestions3.1 How did the sequence of dynasties in classical China build a successful empire?3.2 What were the distinctive features of China’s political system under the Han?3.3 What was the relationship between Confucianism and Daoism?3.4 How did Confucianism affect Chinese social and family structure?3.5 What were the most important complexities in classical Chinese society?Chapter Outline I. Patterns in Classical ChinaA. The Zhou dynastyZhou contributions to Chinese politics and cultureExtended the territory of China by taking over the Yangzi RiverHeightened cultural focus on central governmentAsserted “mandate of heaven”Promoted cultural unityPolitical crisis at end of Zhou empire prompted philosophers to consolidate and define Chinese cultureDuring the Warring States period (402–201 b.c.e.), the Zhou system disintegratedB. Qin DynastyQin Shi Huangdi (First Emperor) deposed the last of the ZhouConsolidated China in 35 years; unification by 221 b.c.e.Resistance crushed, warriors disarmedUpper classes forced to live in capital XianyangRegional provinces, emperor appointed bureaucratic oversightGreat Wall3000 miles protecting north borderWide enough for chariotsLargest construction in historyForced labor conscripted by bureaucracy from peasantryNational census to calculate tax revenue and labor serviceCommon writing, coinage, weights and measuresPromoted new manufactures like silk; new irrigation projectsAttacked possible subversives, burned books, killedDied in 210 B.C.E., massive peasant revolts eruptedPeasant leader established Han dynasty in 207 B.C.E.C. The Han Dynasty400 years, until 220 C.E.Rounded out basic political and intellectual structureMaintained Qin centralization, reduced brutalityExpanded territory: Korea, Indochina, central AsiaDirect contact with India, Parthian Empire in Middle EastParthians conduit for trade with Roman EmpireEstablished peace and prosperityImproved bureaucracy, formal training, Confucian emphasisPromoted Confucian culture, built shrines to ConfuciusCultural supplement to government actionDeclined after first 200 years; central control weakened; Huns invaded, took overBetween 220 and 589 C.E., chaos before restoration of orderPolitical and cultural structures from classical period enduredRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Sima Qian, The Life of Meng Tian, Builder of the Great WallRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Li Si and the Legalist Policies of Qin Shi HuangView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: The Terra-Cotta Army of the First Qin EmperorII. Political InstitutionsQin and Han: strong, distinctive governmentQin: stressed central authorityHan: stressed powers of bureaucracyPolitical structure explains how such a vast territory could be ruledAfter classical period, framework streamlined, but never fundamentally alteredKey elements of Chinese political structure:Strong local units, family ties, ancestor worship for wealthy landownersAncestor worship less frequent among common folk, village ties importantLanded nobles provided courts of justice and military organizationQin and Han additions:Attacks on local warrior-landlordsSingle law codeCentralized tax authorityAppointment of regional governors answerable to emperorRegional governors appointed officials of smaller regionsImperial ministries: finance, military, justice, etc.A. Strong BureaucracyEnd of Han period: 130,000 bureaucrats, 0.2 percent of populationEmperor Wu Ti instigated civil service examsChinese literature, law: scholar-bureaucratic traditionEstablished schools: most candidates from upper classes, not allBureaucracy functioned as check on arbitrary imperial authorityBureaucracy continued into 20th century, outlasted the empire itselfB. Role of the StateMilitary: no consistent development by Han period as China not expansionistJudicial: local authorities managed crime and legal disputesIntellectual life: research in astronomy, maintaining historical recordPrimary keeper of Chinese beliefs: Confucian philosophy, valuesEconomy: direction over production of iron and saltStandard currency, weights, measures encouraged trade throughout empirePublic works: canals, irrigation systemsGrain, rice storage to control supply, prices; manage unrest or bad harvestsIndividual effect: taxes, period of labor service, code of law, threat of punishmentInvaders like Huns could topple dynasty but devise a better system of governmentIII. Religion and CultureBelief system linked with political structureUpper-class values:Good life on earthObedience to stateLittle speculation about GodTolerant of beliefs if no contradictions with political loyaltiesZhou rulers believed in god/gods but no attention to nature of a deityPrimary belief in harmony between earth/heaven and harmonious earthly lifeRituals to unify society, avoid individual excessUpper classes engaged in exercises, archery; venerated ancestorsChopsticks invented to encourage polite habits, tea introducedEmergence of philosophies to reduce conflict, inform lasting Chinese cultureA. ConfucianismConfucius (Kong Fuzi) means “Kung the philosopher”Lived approximately from 551 to 478 B.C.E.Life of travel, teaching, preaching political virtue and good governmentBelieved in divine order but did not speculate about it, not a religious leaderDominant values of Chinese civilization secular system of ethics not religiousVirtues:Respect social superiors, including fathers, husbands as leaders of familyModerate behaviorVeneration for custom, ritual, traditionLeaders at all levels should seek wisdomWith virtuous leadership, sound political life should followSayings captured in AnalectsHan dynasty revived Confucian order, learning, teaching, ethics, literatureConfucianism premised on individual responsibility for behaviorPersonal restraint, proper socialization, respect for family, compassionLeaders expected to be paragons of virtueEducation centralRulers:Moral rectitude, humility, kindness, eager to learnTrue happiness in doing good for allB. LegalismAlternative during Qin and early Han periodsDisdain for ConfucianismValued pragmatism, authoritarianism, forceBelieved humans to be evil by nature, requiring restraint and disciplineProper state: military rule, people labor, educated discourse or courtesy frivolousNever popular, did attach to Confucianism, justifying strong-arm tacticsProved adaptability, integration of Chinese belief systemsConfucianism never single belief in ChinaMost appealing for upper class with time to spend on learning, mannersBroader adoption oriented to taste for ritual and mannersPeasants gravitated to polytheistic beliefs, honoring conciliatory spiritsGradual integration of spiritual beliefs with Confucian valuesC. DaoismMore religious philosophy, arose around same time as ConfucianismAppealed to upper class interested in spiritualityAccepted Chinese understanding of harmony, added sense of nature’s mysteryIntroduced durable division in Chinese religious, philosophical cultureDaoism furthered by Laozi in 5th century B.C.E., never widely exportedStressed nature contains divine impulse that directs all lifeRetreat from societyContemplate the life force: Dao, “the way of nature”Daoist ethics, harmony with nature:Humility, frugalityPolitical activity and learning irrelevantGeneral condition of the world not importantFollowing Han collapse: Daoism also Buddhism from India, guaranteed no religious unity in ChinaDaoism politically compatible with ConfucianismD. Literature, Art, ScienceLiteratureFive Classics (begun in early Zhou period, edited during time of Confucius)Historical treatises, speeches, political materialsDiscussion of etiquette and ceremoniesClassic of Songs: 300 poems on love, joy, politics, family lifeLiterary tradition: mastery, elaboration, recitation of Five ClassicsBasis of civil service examArtDecorative: detail, craftsmanship, precision, geometryCalligraphy and carving: bronze, pottery, jade, ivory, silk screensArchitecture: a few palaces and the Great WallLack of unifying religion discouraged monumental structuresScienceEmphasis on practicality, predictabilityAccurate calendar based on 365.5 days developed by 444 B.C.E.Calculated movement of Saturn, Jupiter; sunspots; 1500 years before EuropeImprovements in instrumentation, example: kind of seismographMedicine: precise anatomical knowledge, principles of hygieneMathematicsHow things work; example: music and advances in acousticsRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Confucius: Selections from the AnalectsRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Confucian political philosophy: an excerpt from MenciusRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: The Way of the State IV. Economy and SocietyDivide: literate, landholder gentry (2%) and masses of subsistence peasantsPeasants: dues, service to lords; depended on intense mutual cooperationProperty: village or extended family, not individual in Southern rice region“Mean” people: unskilled labor like rough transport, low statusSocial status: inherited by generation; talented peasants access to education, riseA. The Confucian Social SystemThree main social groupsTop, landowning aristocrats, educated bureaucrats (mandarins)Next, laboring masses: peasants, urban artisans (on estates or independent)Bottom, unskilled (performers included here), required to wear green scarvesHousehold slaves existed, but their numbers were few, no slaves for productionB. The Han Capital at Xi’anUrban growth continued under the HanXi’an established pattern for Chinese imperial citiesStrong city wallsPopulation of 100,000 to 250,000C. Trade and TechnologyTrade increasingly important in Zhou and Han dynastiesLuxuries: silks, jewelry, leather goods, furnitureFood exchange between wheat and rice growing regionsMerchant class arose, copper coins, trade with India; but trade not focal pointConfucian emphasis on learning and political serviceTechnology advancementsImproved agricultural implements: Ox-drawn plows introduced around 300 B.C.E.Han period, collar improved for draft animals; centuries before othersPulleys, winding gear to bring iron ore to surfaceIron toolsLampsWatermillsPaperRemained dependent on agricultureHigher productivity and population led to larger cities and manufacturingSmall-shop artisans, manual methods, increased output of textiles, tools, and porcelainInterest in improved techniquesArtisans only a minority of the populationC. Gender and Family LifeTight family organizationSolidified economic, social, political lifeImportance of unityAuthority of husbands and fathersConfucian saying: “there are no wrongdoing parents”Law courts did not prosecute parents who injured or even killed a childLaw courts would punish a child who scolded or attacked a parentWives expected to be obedient to husbandsLittle frictionRestraint a virtueHarmony a virtueWomen subordinate but had own roles and potential influencePower through sons or as mothers-in-law of younger women brought into homeHierarchy of children for all social classesPrimogeniture (first born son inherits property and position)Boys superior to girlsV. A Distinctive MixtureTechnology, religion, philosophy, political structure evolved with little outside contactWorldview: Civilized island surrounded by barbarians; some trade with India, Middle EastNeither had a need, nor desire, to learn from othersNo desire to teach othersBuddhism from India, during and after Han decline, notable exceptionChinese isolation and cultural pride theme across the agesA. Social and Cultural Links to PoliticsNo sharp division between public/private, political/social; China a single wholeConfucian view of government as an extension of family relationships captures worldviewB. Complexities in Classical ChinaEndemic tensions and disparitiesConfucianism and Daoism could cohere but also engendered mutual disdainConfucianism and policingConfucian belief in human goodness, importance of mutual respect, ceremonyNot always compatible with stern punishments used as general warning in societyPresumption of guilt, subject to torture before trialPracticed alternating torture with benevolence to gain confessionsRepresents concurrent but not entirely compatible assumptionsKEY TERMSShi Huangdi: first emperor of China; founder of Qin dynasty.Qin: dynasty (221–207 b.c.e.) founded at the end of the Warring States period.Han: dynasty succeeding the Qin ruled from 202 b.c.e. to 220 c.e.Zhou: originally a vassal family of the Shang; possibly Turkic-speaking in origin; overthrew Shang and established 2nd Chinese dynasty (1122–256 b.c.e.).Great Wall: Chinese defensive fortification built to keep out northern nomadic invaders; began during the reign of Shi Huangdi.Confucius: major Chinese philosopher born in 6th century b.c.e.; sayings collected in Analects; philosophy based on the need for restoration of social order through the role of superior men.CHAPTER 4Classical Civilization: IndiaQuestions4.1 How did India’s geography affect the characteristics of classical society in India?4.2 What were the main political phases in classical India?4.3 Why was the state less important in classical India than in classical China?4.4 What was the relationship between Hinduism and Buddhism?4.5 What were the main features of the caste system?4.6 What was India’s trading position in the classical world?Chapter Outline I. The Framework for Indian History: Geography and CultureBuddhist, Brahmin rivalry shaped social hierarchies and gender rolesMauryan Empire, India’s first empire, shaped by Buddhist teachingInvasion, political fragmentation until Gupta empire in 4th c. C.E.Gupta reasserted Brahmin control, HinduismPeriod of scientific, artistic, literary, philosophical, and architectural achievementContrast with ChinaIndian focus on religion, social structure, Hindu way of lifePolitical structure less cohesive, less importantUnique cultural developments: religion, science, economics, family lifeSimilarities with ChinaAgricultural imperative: survival, village life, local allegiance, patriarchyGreat cities, extensive trade, social and economic complexityFormal intellectual life, schools and academiesA. Formative InfluencesGeographyCloser to other civilizations than ChinaInfluences from Middle East, Mediterranean, PersiaTopographyHimalayan barrier to East AsiaPasses in northwest link to Middle EastDivisions in subcontinent: Two river regions: Indus and Ganges (agriculture)Mountainous north (herding)Mid-continent mountains and Deccan plateauSouthern coastal rim (trading, seafaring)Considerable economic, racial, linguistic diversityClimateMost of India, especially river plains semitropicalMonsoon rains variableSometimes flooding, drought, starvationGood years supported two harvests and large populationB. Brahman CultureAryans developed a series of epics which would become the literary language of the new cultureCaste system emerged, “Varna” means Aryan social class, in order:Kshatriyas (warrior, governing class) Brahmans (priestly class)Vaisyas (traders and farmers)Sudras (common laborers) Untouchables (performed reviled tasks, became a reviled people)At first, Kshatriyas top class, during Epic Age Brahmans replaced themGradually, caste hereditary, intermarriage punishable by deathJati, subgroups, also tied to occupation and social station by birthAryan gods and goddessesRegulated nature, possessed human qualitiesSimilar to other Indo-European traditions, but developed into lasting religionNature not just set of gods but a divine forceBy end of Epic period, religion combination of rituals, beliefs, and mysticismGautama Buddha built a religion on this mysticismView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Gupta Sculpture LokanathaII. Patterns in Classical IndiaBy 600 B.C.E., formative period at an endCities and trade grewSanskrit furthered literary cultureIrregular pattern to political erasNorthwest border allowed for landmark invasions16 major states in the plains of northern IndiaOne empire of size: Magadha327 B.C.E., Alexander the Great invaded, created border state of BactriaA. The Mauryan Dynasty322 B.C.E. Chandragupta Maurya seizes powerHe and successors build unified empireNot sure what he borrowed from Persia or AlexanderEstablished:Large armies, thousands of chariots and elephant-borne troopsSubstantial bureaucracyPostal systemAutocraticBecame a religious asceticPassed empire to sonAshoka (269–232 B.C.E.)Grandson of ChandraguptaBloody extension of empireConversion to BuddhismDharma, law of moral consequences, ethical guide to unify empirePromoted BuddhismHonored Hinduism, built shrinesBuddhist missionaries to Middle East Hellenistic kingdoms, Sri LankaInstructed officials in humane treatment, goal of moral welfareTrade and communication improvements: roads, inns, wellsAfter AshokaAshoka’s style of government of limited impactBuddhist current persistedRegional kingdoms resurfacedKushans, invaders from northwest, adopted BuddhismForeign association discouraged Indians from the religionBy 185 B.C.E., empire endedB. The GuptasKushan state collapsed by 220 B.C.E.Gupta built empire by 4th century C.E.Allowed autonomy of elitesTwo centuries of political stabilityOverturned by Huns in 535 B.C.E.Basic political pattern of classical age:Empires alternating with regional ruleEconomic, cultural advance without interruptionRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Emperor Ashoka, from the Edicts of AshokaView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Lion Capital of Ashoka at SarnathIII. Political InstitutionsPersistent political featuresRegionalismDiverse political formsAutocratic kings and emperorsAristocratic assembliesPolitical base of empires shakyMauryan rulersDepended on armies, feared betrayalGupta EmpireClaimed Hindu gods appointed themEstablished tax systemLocally ruled with deference to Gupta EmpireGupta representative at each ruler’s courtNo single language imposedSanskrit promoted among educated classes, but no effect locallyLittle bureaucracyPromoted some public works like roadsSpread uniform law codesSponsored universities, art, literatureGupta golden age of achievementGupta age not singular for political theory or institutionsKautilya, Chandragupta’s minister, wrote a political treatise on efficient authorityNo political theory of value or service like ConfucianismNo political ethics like Greece or RomeWhy no political theory or ethical system in India?Importance of local units of organizationCaste rulesCastesInterpreted by priestsRegulated social relationshipsRegulated work rolesSame function as government structures in other culturesBasis of public orderAfter Epic Age, more and more complex subgroupsDefined groups one could eat with or marry withinHereditary principleNot possible to rise above one’s casteCould drop, if marrying down or working below levelUpward mobility possible within a casteMeans of integrating diverse populations without integrating their culturesPromoted toleranceAvoided slavery, untouchables scorned and poor but not ownedPolitically, loyalty was to casteCaste regulated details of behaviorDetailed political administration rendered less necessaryIV. Religion and CultureIndian civilization rested largely on widely-shared cultural valuesHinduism gained ground on Buddhism under GuptasProvided cultural cement across languages and castesIncorporated varietyDid not displace minority religionsStill major religion of IndiaProminent cultural tradition independent of political systems or regimesRational scientific cultural legacyA. The Formation of HinduismGradual developmentOrigin in Vedic and Epic AgesMelding of polytheism, ritual, and mystic divine principlesSome developments in reaction to Buddhism and IslamHinduism incorporated:Ritual, ceremonyUnity of individuals with all-embracing divinePolitical and economic goals (artha)Worldly pleasures (karma)Many paths of worship, tolerance, fluidityEarly Hinduism called “Brahmanism” due to emphasis on brahman leadership, ritualHindus call their religion “Dharma” meaning, moral pathGods changed from natural to abstract representationsVaruna was god of the sky and became guardian of ideas of right and wrongIncreased emphasis on gentle, generous behaviorUpanishads: shallowness of worldliness, favored contemplation of world spiritEach creature’s soul part of universal spiritAttacked brahman focus on correct practices, rituals, ceremonies, rewardsHinduism embraced tension between mystical and prosaicBy 1st century C.E., Hinduism a more formal religionShared doctrines of brahman priests and mystics (gurus)Holy essence or divine principle (brahma) incorporates all living thingsSeveral gods are divine aspects of brahmaVishnu: the preserverShiva: the destroyerDivine soul more important than world of the sensesLife’s quest: seeking union with divine soulMay take many lifetimes, reincarnationBodies die, souls do not, they pass to other humans or animalsThe caste trajectory depends on goodness of lifeMany good lives earn the soul full union with brahmaSuffering ceasesChannels for a good life:Renouncement of the world, practice of mediation and yoga (means “union”)Rituals and rules of the brahmansProper ceremoniesPrayersDietary habitsTreating cows as sacredDevotions to lesser gods and local deitiesSymbolic sacrificesEpic poems key texts and shared ethics:Moral law of dharma guide for worldly and spiritual goalsFocus on consequencesNeed to act: serving family, making a living, armed dutiesHonor, duty, pleasure, compatible with spiritualityLess prescriptive than Christianity and IslamHinduism accommodated variety of expressions, practices, beliefsConsistent distinction between good and evil behaviorReinforced castes, promising hope for each to achieve a higher levelSustained through priests, and gurusB. BuddhismPrince Siddharta Gautama, born 563 B.C.E.Questioned the fairness of life in context of poverty and sufferingLived as Hindu mysticAfter 6 years, felt he found the truthTook to wandering life, asceticismBeliefs regarding HinduismAccepted spiritual truth like reincarnationDenied other beliefs such as casteTruth as he saw it: BuddhismMaterial world a snare warping human relationships and causing painAll things decay, holding to youth, health, life itself, source of sufferingSalvation from release from self, door to nirvanaSelf-regulation and pursuit of holy life, individual effortContrast with HinduismDenied spiritual value of castes, rituals, priestsSpread of BuddhismExample and teaching of monksMonks organized in monasteries, but preached throughout worldGrowth in India spurred by AshokaBuddha increasingly seen as divineFocus on contemplation, charity, pietyBrahman opposition in India, especially under GuptasAshoka and Kushan missionary successSri Lanka, China, Korea, JapanOther religions dissenting from Hinduism emerged, tooReligion not the only intellectual development in classical ageLegal writing prominentKamasutra “laws of love” written in 4th century C.E.C. Arts and SciencesLiteratureGupta periodEpics written down in Gupta periodStory collections, PanchatrantaSinbad the Sailor and other well-known adventure storiesClassical stories often secularEmphasis on imagination and excitementSometimes included godsDramaRomantic adventuresContemporary films follow this traditionScienceGupta periodUniversity center of NalandaAttracted students across Asia and Indian brahmansLecture halls, libraries, observatory, model dairyReligion, philosophy, medicine, architecture, agricultureThe Greek Interlude, Alexander the Great, 327 B.C.E. Contact with Hellenistic world improved mathematics and astronomyAstronomyAryabhatta, important astronomerLength of solar yearMathematical measurementsAccurate circumference of the earth—and indicated it is roundDaily rotation of earth on axisPredicted, explained eclipsesDeveloped a theory of gravityTelescopic proof of seven planetsMedicineBone settingsPlastic surgeryInoculation against smallpox, using cowpox serumStress on cleanliness in hospitals, including sterilization of woundsPromotion of ethical standardsUnderstanding of astronomy, medicine, similar in West only in modern timesMathematics“Arabic” numbering (West learned of Indian system through Arabs)ZeroDecimalsNegative numbersSquare rootsTable of sinesValue of pi, more accurate than GreeksArtStupas, shrines to Buddha sponsored by AshokaMove to stylized representations of human form under GuptasSculpture, paintingPeople, animals, natureReligious valuesSpontaneity and imagination more prominent than in China or WestV. Economy and SocietyEffect of caste systemLow-castes few rights, servants easily abusedUpper-castes constrained largely by ethics rather than lawVillage leaders charged to limit interference from landlordsFamily lifePatriarchalRights of women increasingly limitedAs agricultural technologies improve, women’s roles circumscribedHindu debate if women had to be reincarnated as men before advancingMarriage unions, economic arrangements arranged by parentsWomen also recognizedEpics recognized women’s independent contributionsStories of strong-willed women and goddessesStories celebrated female emotion and beautyEmphasis on loving relationships and sexual pleasureExpectation that husband and wife enjoy mutual supportMarabharata epic called a man’s wife his truest friendChildrenIndulged in early yearsWith increased age, expected to participate as a workerGeneral expectation of aid to older family membersFamily emotional as well as economic unitEconomyRivaled China in technologyBriefly surpassed China’s upper classes in prosperityDevelopments in chemistryBest steel in the worldMost superior iron making until a few centuries agoFirst to manufacture textiles: cotton, calico, cashmereArtisan guilds and shopsTradeGreater emphasis on merchants, trade than China or MediterraneanMerchantsHigh caste statusIn North, wide travel across Asia, Middle EastIn South, Tamil sea trade with Middle East, Roman EmpireTraded silks, cotton, dyes, drugs, gold, ivoryBrought back pottery, wine, metals, gold, some slavesSouthern trade with Southeast Asia like MalaysiaManufactured goods and cultureCaravan trade developed with ChinaGupta Empire known for its wealth as well as religious and intellectual lifeWealth relegated to small upper classMost people lived on margins of subsistenceRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Cast(e)aways? Women in Classical IndiaVI. Indian Influence and Comparative FeaturesClassical India huge influence on other parts of the worldComparatively the greatest of influencing civilizationsDominated Indian Ocean, waters of southern Asia, much travelNot political dominationInfluence by way of goods, intermarriage, cultural ideas and artifactsThailand, Burma, parts of Indonesia, VietnamBuddhism and Indian art expanded into ChinaBuddhist missionaries in the Middle East introduced ideasAffected Greeks and Roman StoicsThrough them, affected ChristianityClassical civilization in India lasted longer than in China or RomeAfter Gupta fall, enduring religion, culture, social and family networkCivilization could survive long periods of foreign dominationA. China and India ComparedContrasts demonstrate diversity, vitality of classical ageArt and poetryChina: restrained India: dynamic, sensual styleReligionChina: religion and philosophy, separate spheresIndia: unified religion, tolerant of minority beliefsPolitical, social structureChina: centralized governance, bureaucraticIndia: organized through strict caste systemCultural emphasisChina: more materialist, despite Daoist influenceIndia: more otherworldlyScienceChina: practical orientationIndia: practical too, but went further in mathematicsSimilarities between China and IndiaAgricultural societiesLarge peasant classClose-knit villages Cities, merchant activity secondary rolePolitical power in hands of estate ownersTaxed peasantryPatriarchal family structureDifferences other than the political, cultural, artisticChina: Emphasis on restraint, etiquette in family lifeVillage control often succumbed to estate owner pressureTrade advanced by governmentIndia: More emotional expectations in family interactionsVillage control over land stronger than ChinaTrade advanced by merchantsKEY TERMSBuddha: creator of a major Indian and Asian religion; born in the 6th century B.C.E.; taught that enlightenment could be achieved only by abandoning desires for earthly things.Alexander the Great: successor of Philip II; successfully conquered the Persian empire prior to his death in 323 B.C.E.; attempted to combine Greek and Persian cultures.Himalayas: mountain region marking the northern border of the Indian subcontinent.monsoons: seasonal winds crossing Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia; during summer bring rains.Sanskrit: the classical and sacred Indian language.Varnas: clusters of caste groups in Aryan society; four social castes—brahmans (priests), warriors,merchants, and peasants; beneath four Aryan castes was group of socially untouchable Dasas.Indra: chief deity of the Aryans; depicted as a colossal, hard-drinking warrior.Chandragupta Maurya: founder of the Mauryan dynasty, the first empire in the Indian subcontinent; first centralized government since Harappan civilization.Mauryan: dynasty established in Indian subcontinent in 4th century B.C.E. following the invasion of Alexander the Great.Ashoka: grandson of Chandragupta Maurya; extended conquests of the dynasty; converted to Buddhism and sponsored its spread throughout his empire.dharma: the caste position and career determined by a person’s birth; Hindu culture required that one accept one’s social position and perform their occupation to the best of one’s ability in order to have a better situation in the next life.Kushans: see Kush, Chapter 3.Guptas: dynasty that succeeded the Kushans in the 3rd century C.E., which included all but southern Indian regions; less centralized than Mauryan Empire.Kautilya: political advisor to Chandragupta Maurya; wrote political treatise.gurus: originally referred to as brahmans, who served as teachers for the princes of the imperial court of the Guptas.Vishnu: the brahman, later Hindu, god of sacrifice; widely worshipped.Shiva: Hindu god of destruction and reproduction; worshipped as the personification of cosmic forces of change.reincarnation: the successive rebirth of the soul according to merits earned in previous lives.nirvana: the Buddhist state of enlightenment; a state of tranquility.Kamasutra: written by Vatsayana during Gupta era; offered instructions on all aspects of life for higher-caste males, including grooming, hygiene, etiquette, selection of wives, and lovemaking.stupas: stone shrines built to house relics of the Buddha; preserved Buddhist architectural forms.scholar-gentry: Chinese class created by the marital linkage of the local land-holding aristocracy withthe office-holding shi; superseded shi as governors of China.CHAPTER 5Classical Civilizations in the Middle East and MediterraneanLearning Objectives5.1 Why was the rise of Persia such an important development in the early part of the classical period?5.2 What changes occurred between the Greek and Hellenistic periods in the eastern Mediterranean?5.3 What were the causes of Roman expansion?5.4 What are the main issues in defining the Greek and Roman political legacy?5.5 What was the relationship between Greek and Roman culture?5.6 How did the social structures of the classical Mediterranean and classical China compare?5.7 What were the main legacies of classical Mediterranean societies?Chapter OutlineI. The Persian Tradition550 B.C.E., Cyrus the GreatThe Persian Empire: northern Middle East into northwest IndiaConquered peoples retained culture such as cuneiformAdvanced iron technologyEnormous impactPolitical Styles and InnovationsEmphasesToleration of diversityAuthoritarianismLittle power sharingCentralization of laws, tax collectionUnified infrastructurePaved roads Connecting Indian border with Mediterranean and EgyptMovement for commerce and troopsRegularly spaced inns, rest and change of horsesPostal serviceGrowth of new trans-regional tradeCentralized bureaucracyControl of officials in distant regions of empireOversight of tax collectionZoroasterianismZoroaster (630–550 B.C.E.)Revised Sumerian polytheismIntroduced monotheismBanned intoxicants and animal sacrificeDoctrinesLife a battle between two divine forces: good and evilIndividual salvation a free choice of God over evilLast judgmentThe righteous gain heaven, “House of Song”The evil gain eternal painSpread widely among emperors and population alikeEnormous effect on Judaism, Christianity, IslamSmall groups of Zoroastrians survive todayDistinctive painting and architecture, spread beyond bordersDurabilityLong period of peace, prosperity in Middle EastConquests included North Africa and Indian River valleyAt height, empire of 14 million peoplePersia proper (present day Iran) 4 million peoplePersian language and culture survived Hellenistic periodPersian states persisted in eastView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Persepolis: A Royal CityRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: The “Cyrus Cylinder”View the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Zoroastrianism: An Ancient Religion in Modern TimesRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Darius the Great: Ruler of PersiaII. Patterns of Greek HistoryA. GreeceRiver valley civilizations spread to Greek islandsGreeks Indo-European peopleBy 2000 B.C.E., Crete showed influence of EgyptBy 1400 B.C.E., Mycenae on Greek peninsulaInfluenced by CreteMemorialized by Homer, Trojan WarWaves of invadersDestroyed by 800 B.C.E.Stages of Greek Development800 B.C.E.–600 B.C.E.Mountainous terrainRapid rise of city-statesTyranny of oneAristocratic councilExtensive tradeCommon cultural formsCommon written language, derived from Phoenician alphabetShared celebrationsOlympic GamesTwo leading city-statesSparta: military aristocracy, slave populationAthens: commercial, use of slaves, proud of artistic, intellectual leadership500 and 449 B.C.E.Sparta, Athens, smaller states together defeated Persian invasionDuring and after this period, high point of Greek, especially Athenian, culturePeriod of colonizationEastern MediterraneanSouthern Italy5th Century B.C.E.Rule of Pericles in AthensAristocratDemocratic political structureCitizens assembliesElected officialsPassed lawsPericles ruled by negotiation, influenceConstrained further expansionCould not prevent war between Athens and Sparta431–404 B.C.E.Peloponnesian Wars338 B.C.E.Philip II of Macedon conquered Greek city-statesSon, Alexander the Great, extended Macedonian EmpireMiddle East, Persia, into India, through EgyptAlexander died at age 33 after 13 years of conquestSuccessor states ruled regionallyHellenistic periodExtended, consolidated Greek art and cultureBlended with Middle Eastern formsTrade flourishedScientific centers flourished like at AlexandriaView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Alexander and Darius at the Battle of IssusRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Plutarch on Alexander the GreatIII. Patterns of Roman HistoryRepresents final stage of classical Mediterranean civilization1st century C.E., Rome subjugated Greece and Hellenistic kingdomsOrigin of Roman stateLocal monarchy in central Italy around 800 B.C.E.509 B.C.E., aristocrats drove out monarchyEstablished Roman RepublicRepublicRegional conquestsExpansionPunic Wars 264 to 146 B.C.E.CarthageHannibalRome seized western Mediterranean, including Greece and EgyptPolitical instabilityAmbitious generalsRebellion of the poor45 B.C.E. Julius Caesar defeated adversaries in civil war, ends Republic27 B.C.E. Augustus Caesar triumphed, instituted structure of Roman Empire200 years of peace, prosperity to Mediterranean world and up into Europe180 C.E. marks beginning of slow fall for next 250 yearsInvaders overturned the government in Rome in 476 C.E.Manifestation of declineTrade levels fellBirth rate fellGovernment less effectiveTwo strong emperors: Diocletian and Constantine313 C.E. Constantine tried to unite empire under ChristianityIn west, government localEmpire unable to supply order or justiceArmies filled with non-RomansInability to defend against influx of invadersSimilar timing, experience as Gupta India and Han ChinaSummaryMediterranean civilization built on earlier culturesTook firm shape in Greek city-statesIntroduced diverse political formsCommercially based economyColoniesDecline of city-statesMacedonian conquestFormation of Hellenistic world from Middle East to EgyptRoman RepublicDistinguished by political virtue, stabilityEmbarked on conquestsReplaced Republic with EmpireEmpire controlledMediterraneanWestern, southeastern EuropeNorth Africa200 years of peace, prosperity, gloryView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: A Roman WarshipIV. Greek and Roman Political InstitutionsPolitics extremely important“Politics” derived from “polis,” the Greek word for city-stateAthenian and Roman concept of “the good life”Political participationDiscussing affairs of stateGeopolitical influenceCity-states surrounded by several hundred square milesRelatively smallIntense local identification, sense of ownershipConcern for rights and obligationsCivic military dutyEven under EmpireLocal city-states relatively autonomousPride in Roman citizenshipConcept of active citizenship unique to Mediterranean civilizationNo unifying set of political institutions to rival imperial ChinaDiverse political forms, comparatively more similar with IndiaLater societies, reflected on diverse Mediterranean political formsMonarchy not preferredRule by “tyrants” common“Tyranny” a Greek termEffective rulersPromoted public worksProtected common people from abusive aristocracyHellenistic kings adopted these attributesRoman generals adopted these attributesA. GreeceDemocracy (derived from Greek demos, “the people”)Alternative political form5th century B.C.E. AthensRejected aristocratic rule and tyrantsDirect democracyGeneral assembliesAll citizens membersThose present made all major decisions of stateMet every 10 daysExecutive officers, judges Chosen for brief termsSubject to review by assemblyChosen by lotWomen had no political rightsHalf of adult males not citizensSlavesForeignersNot like todayDid elicit widespread political participation and devotionEmbodied democratic principles consistent with todayPericles led Athens during period of highest gloryWeakness of direct democracy apparent during Peloponnesian WarsMajoritarian politicsPursuit of reckless policy for private endsAristocratic assembly the most common political structureDeliberations established guidelines for state policyCheck on executive powerSparta an exampleMilitary aristocracyImposed rigorous military service on elitesPower over large slave populationPericles in Athens was an aristocrat“Aristocracy” derives from Greek “rule of the best”Belief in class capable of political virtueB. RomeRoman RepublicConstitutional attempt to reconcile political formsReliance on principle of aristocracyCitizen assembliesElect magistratesNo legislative actionMagistratesRepresent interests of common peopleSenateLegislative bodyComposed mainly of aristocratsExecutive officesComposed of senatorsTwo ConsulsShared primary executive powerDictatorAppointed during crisesIdeal of public serviceCultivated in SenateEloquent public speakingInterest in the general goodClassical Mediterranean political theoryAristocratic political culturePolitical participationPolitical ethicsDuties of citizensImportance of incorruptible servicePolitical skills like oratoryCicero, senator and author of political theoryContrast with ConfucianismGreater emphasis on participation in deliberative bodiesGreater emphasis on analysis of political formsRoman EmpireRetained strong local autonomyOutright overthrow of distant rule, exceptionalExample, dissolution of Jewish state in 63 C.E.Response to major local rebellionGeneral tolerance for local customs and religionsPreserved Senate, though more as form than contentStrong, well-organized armyCodified, equitable lawRoman LawGreek precedent8th century B.C.E. AthensBalance between property rights and needs of the poorAccess to law courts, administered by fellow citizensRoman precedent450 B.C.E., Twelve TablesRestraint on upper-class arbitrary actionShared legal principles between wealthy and commonersRoman Law of Roman EmpirePrinciple of rule of law not of individualsSteadily took over role of fathers, landholders in some instancesPrinciple that law should be flexible to circumstance without varying widelyPrinciple that common sense should prevailPrinciple of law as primary regulator of social lifeExpansion of citizenshipRoman-appointed judgesUniform lawsUnified property and commercial lawPrinciple that officials are subject to the lawPrinciple that law should be fair and reasonedGovernment functionsConcentration on system of courts and the militarySecuring supplies of grainPublic worksRoads, harbors for military transport and commerceStadiums, public bathsCity of RomeOver 1 million inhabitants“Bread and circuses” policyGladiators and other entertainmentsCheap foodColonies of Romans also given theaters, stadiums, baths, etc.Particularly important for Romans stationed far away, such as in EnglandOfficial religionReligious festivalsReinforced loyalty to stateOther religions tolerated as long as not in conflict with state loyaltyAttacks on ChristiansIrregularResult of Christian refusal to pay respects to stateChief political legacies of Mediterranean worldLocalismFervent political interestsIntense loyalty to the stateDiversity of political systemsPreference for aristocratic ruleImportance of lawUnusually elaborate and uniform set of legal principlesSheer accomplishment of Roman EmpireUnifying a region never before or since bound togetherThere was attention to careful legal proceduresThere was no clear definition of individual rightsWith the exception of first 200 years of Roman Empire, war not uncommonSometimes, emphasis on duty to state could lead to a totalitarian frameworkSparta such an exampleRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Aristotle, The Creation of the Democracy in AthensRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Livy, The Rape of Lucretia and the Origins of the RepublicRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Polybius: “Why Romans and Not Greeks Govern the World”V. Religion and CultureGreeks and Romans did not create world religionIndia, Persia, some extent China, didChristianity arose, developed during Roman EmpireSpread eased by Roman infrastructure and peaceReligion itself not a product of Greco-Roman cultureWould become influenced by Greco-Roman worldOf historical importance only after Empire began its declineGreco-Roman religionSpirits of nature as gods and goddesses involved in human affairsGreek and Roman pantheons differently named, but much the samePantheon reflected natural phenomena, occupations, literature, historyPolitical importance of ceremonies to the godsForetelling futureBringing good harvests, etc.Greco-Roman religion had a this-world, human orientationStories like soap operasEngendered literary tradition Common heritage with IndiaGods and goddessesExpression of human passions and foiblesSymbols of inquiry into human natureFocus on manipulating human affairs and meaningsDifferent from Indian interest in higher planes of spiritualityLack of spirituality divided Greco-Roman populationOrdinary people drawn to mystery religions coming out of Middle EastProvided greater solace in times of difficultySense of contact with the divineUpper classes dissatisfied with lack of ethical contentEstablished moral philosophiesMoral systems such as Aristotle’s in Greece, Cicero’s in RomeFocus on personal moderation, balance in human behaviorStoics emphasized inner moral independence, discipline, and braveryVarious moral systems were major contributionsDeveloped independently from religionLater blended with ChristianityPhilosophy and ScienceClassical philosophy and political theoryEmphasized powers of human thoughtSocrates in Athens (b. 469 B.C.E.)Question conventional wisdomChief duty: improvement of the soulAthenian government thought he was undermining loyaltyGave Socrates choice of suicide or exileSocrates chose suicideLegacy: rational inquiry demands skeptical questioningGreek interest in rationalitySome similarity with ConfucianismGreater emphasis on questioning and abstract speculationsCarry over into inquiry concerning physical natureNo radically new scientific findings from Greece or RomeFocus on rational orderSpeculations concerning universal structureMathematical constructsGreek, Hellenistic work in geometry impressiveTheorems of PythagorasHellenistic scientific advancement, especially from Middle East and EgyptAnatomy Galen on medical treatmentEuclid on geometryPtolemy on sun’s rotation around the earthContradicted Middle Eastern knowledgeBecame standard Western belief for extended periodRoman scienceTaught Greek and Hellenistic science at schoolRoman engineering unique achievementsRoadsAqueductsArchesArt and literature conveyors of Greco-Roman valuesReligion inspired artHuman-centered qualities themesRealistic portrayalsBeauty of the human formGods as foils for explorations into human natureSappho, female Greek poet, around 600 B.C.E.Dance and music vital to festivals but precise styles not well-preservedDrama central role in cultureComedies and tragediesEmphasis on tragediesHuman reason, balance precarious virtues Humans easily ensnared in emotion and uncontrollable consequencesSophocles’ Oedipus, term still used as a psychological conditionEpic traditionIliad, Odyssey attributed to Homer in the 8th century B.C.E.Virgil used epic form to link Roman and Greek histories and mythsRome contributed to poetic formDemonstration of richness of Latin languageDramas performed for thousands of peopleVisual artsSculptureExample: Phidias in 5th century B.C.E. AthensRomans continued heroic-realist traditionArchitectureGreeks invented “classical” architectureMonumental constructionSquare or rectangularColumned porticosDoric, Ionic, Corinthian columnsFilled with sculpturesRoman engineeringGrander scaleDomesUses in Rome:Public everyday spaces: temples, baths, marketplacesPrivate homes: villas around courtyardsStructures for popular entertainments: chariot races, gladiatorsRoman style blended with Christianity during the later empireGreeks also pursued ceramicsRomans also pursued paintingRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Vitruvius, “On Symmetry” from The Ten Books on ArchitectureVI. Economy and Society in the MediterraneanPolitics and formal culture urban phenomenaMajority of Greeks and Romans were farmersLocal rituals and festivalsTied to concerns like harvestConcerns for an afterlifeFree farmers owned their landSubstantial population in Greece and RomeConstant tension with large landholdersAttempts to appropriate landForce free farmers into tenancyIssue of free farmingShaped politics between tyrants and aristocratsShaped politics between democrats and aristocratsDecline of Roman RepublicResult of too many farmers’ dependency on large landownersLost ability to vote freelyA. Agriculture and TradeGreek and much Italian soil unsuitable for grain though grain necessaryShifted production to olives and grapesFor cooking and wineForced conversion to market economyCapital investment neededAdequate sales needed to purchase life’s necessitiesReason so many farmers went into debtGave advantage to large landholdersProduction to scaleGreater access to capitalCommercial agriculture chief reason to establish empireGreeks, especially Athens, established colonies to gain access to grain productionTraded olive oil, wine, manufactured products, silverRome, sought its granary in Sicily and then North AfricaHeavy grain cultivation in North Africa led to soil depletionAccounts for later reduced agricultural fertilityTrade key concernPrivate merchants transported goodsGovernments invested in regulatory practices and infrastructureLuxury items from craftsworkers embellished upper-class lifestylesDesired luxury items from India and ChinaWestern disadvantage as their products were cruderExported animal skins, exotic African animals, precious metalsStatus of merchantsHigher than ChinaLess than IndiaIn Greece, merchants usually foreignIn Rome, clearly recognized but not fully accepted as patriciansB. SlaverySlaves key ingredient of classical economyAthensJustified in Aristotle’s philosophyHouseholdsSilver mines, especially brutal conditionSpartaAgricultural workRomeHouseholdsTutoring children of elitesCultured Greeks highly valuedMinesAgricultural workSteady spread from final years of RepublicThemeSlaves necessarySlaves come from conquered territoriesIncreased need for military expansionTechnologyGreek improvementsShipbuildingNavigationRoman improvementsEngineering urban living, troop movements, etc.Little interest in agricultural or manufacture improvementsUpper-class interests in politics and artSlave labor inhibited need for efficiencyFamily Tight patriarchal family structureWomen had vital economic functions in farming and agricultural householdsUpper class Roman women influential in householdsIn law and culture, women inferiorFemale infanticide practicedPotential drain on family economyHusbands had considerable rights over wivesRoman law modified traditional family controlsMany Greek and Roman women active in businessWomen could control urban property, even if only a minority shareGeneralizationsFew can be made, as the classical Mediterranean world was diverseMany people lived as farmers in the manner of their ancestorsTempting to remember only urban achievementsThese exerted the greatest influence on later agesOrdinary life had its own influencePosed own challenge, opportunity for new movements like ChristianityC. Pressing the EnvironmentRome’s economy had serious environmental consequencesAir pollutionGarbageLead poisoningDeforestationOver-grazing and over-farmingRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Aristotle on SlaveryRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Slaves in the Roman CountrysideVII. Toward the Fall of RomeFall not like Han ChinaNo disruption, revival pattern of civilizationFall not like Gupta IndiaNo central religion to link civilizationsFurther complicationsCollapse not uniform across territoryNo single civilization rose to claim mantle of Greco-Roman worldNo across-the-board maintenance of institutions or valuesGreco-Roman world would live on, but selectivelyA. A Complex Legacy600 years of Persia, Greece, Hellenistic period600 years of RomeGreek legacyPolitical ideasArt and philosophyNot politicsNot religionComplication in North American appropriation of Greco-Roman worldSelf-conscious roots in U.S. Constitution and theory of framersPublic buildings copied from classical modelsWestern education steeped in Greco-Roman historyHowever, no straight line between worldsGreater direct line with Middle Eastern legacyMany revivals and modifications before Greek science impacted EuropeDemocracy did not spread out of GreeceComplication regarding PersiaHellenistic conquest mutual cultural exchangeGreek forms introduced in PersiaPersian bureaucracy, centralization copied by Hellenistic kingsZoroastrianism gained wider range of influenceJudaism, Christianity, Islam influencedNo tidy homogenizationLater Persian kings reasserted Persian waysMiddle East point of exchange between merchants and culturesKEY TERMSCyrus the Great: (c. 576 or 590–529 B.C.E.); founded Persian Empire by 550 B.C.E.; successor state to Mesopotamian empires.Zoroastrianism: Persian religion that saw material existence as a battle between the forces of good and evil; stressed the importance of moral choice; a last judgment decided the eternal fate of each person.Olympic Games: one of the pan-Hellenic rituals observed by all Greek citystates; involved athletic competitions and ritual celebrations.Pericles: Athenian political leader during 5th century B.C.E.; guided development of Athenian Empire.Peloponnesian War: war from 431 to 404 B.C.E. between Athens and Sparta for domination in Greece; the Spartans won but failed to achieve political unification in Greece.Philip of Macedonia: ruled Macedon from 359 to 336 B.C.E.; founder of centralized kingdom; conquered Greece.Hellenistic: culture associated with the spread of Greek influence and intermixture with other cultures as a result of Macedonian conquests.Roman Republic: the balanced political system of Rome from circa 510 to 47 B.C.E.; featured an aristocratic senate, a panel of magistrates, and popular assemblies.Punic Wars: three wars (264–146 B.C.E.) between Rome and the Carthaginians; saw the transformation of Rome from a land to a sea power.Carthage: founded by the Phoenicians in Tunisia; became a major empire in the western Mediterranean; fought the Punic wars with Rome for Mediterranean dominance; defeated and destroyed by the Romans.Hannibal: Carthaginian general during the second Punic War; invaded Italy but failed to conquer Rome.Julius Caesar: general responsible for the conquest of Gaul; brought army back to Rome and overthrew republic; assassinated in B.C.E. by conservative senators.Caesar Augustus: (63 B.C.E.–14 C.E.) name given to Octavian following his defeat of Mark Antony and Cleopatra; first emperor of Rome.Diocletian: Roman emperor from 284 to 305 C.E.; restored later empire by improved administration and tax collection.Constantine: Roman emperor from 312 to 337 C.E.; established second capital at Constantinople; attempted to use religious force of Christianity to unify empire spiritually.Polis: city-state form of government typical of Greek political organization from 800 to 400 B.C.E.Direct democracy: literally, rule of the people—in Athens, it meant all free male citizens; all decisions emanated from the popular assembly without intermediation of elected representatives.Senate: assembly of Roman aristocrats; advised on policy within the republic; one of the early elements of the Roman constitution.Consuls: two chief executives of the Roman republic; elected annually by the assembly dominated by the aristocracy.Aristotle: Greek philosopher; teacher of Alexander; taught that knowledge was based upon observation of phenomena in material world.Cicero: conservative senator and Stoic philosopher; one of the great orators of his day.Stoics: Hellenistic philosophers; they emphasized inner moral independence cultivated by strict discipline of the body and personal bravery.Socrates: Athenian philosopher of later 5th century B.C.E.; tutor of Plato; urged rational reflection in moral decisions; condemned to death for corrupting minds of Athenian young.Sophocles: Greek writer of tragedies; author of Oedipus Rex.Iliad and Odyssey: Greek epic poems attributed to Homer; defined relations of gods and humans that shaped Greek mythology.CHAPTER 6The Classical Period: Directions, Diversities, and Declines by 500 C.E.Learning Objectives6.1 What were the main similarities and differences between Africa and the Americas by the early centuries C.E.?6.2 What were the main differences in the process of decline in classical China and in classical India?6.3 What were the causes of decline in the Roman empire?6.4 How did the organization of Christianity reflect its complex relationships with the Roman empire?QuestionsI. Beyond the Classical CivilizationsChanges in Classical PeriodNortheastern AfricaJapanNorthern EuropeThe AmericasStage set for later linksA. Developments in Africa’s Kush and Its HeritageSouthern Nile, Egyptian borderIndependent existence by 1000 B.C.E.Writing based on hieroglyphicsCenter of iron workingConquered Egypt by 750 B.C.E.Divine kingshipMajor citiesDefeated by Axum, c. 300 C.E.Axum fell to EthiopiaAxum and Ethiopia traded with eastern Mediterranean until fall of RomeJewish merchants introduced Judaism, Ethiopian Jews still existGreek merchants introduced Christianity, 4th century C.E.End of Roman empire trade, end of extensive contactsGrowth of independent Christian churchGrowth of world’s oldest continuous monarchyInfluence on sub-Sahara AfricaNot entirely knownIron-working spread, expanding agricultureDivine kingship appeared elsewhereNot clear if related to KushitesKushite writing did not spreadSub-Sahara Africa north of great jungles up to 500 B.C.E.Extension of agricultureVillage life, similar to todayWest AfricaRegional kingdoms formed toward end of classical periodFirst: GhanaTrade with southeast Asia 100 C.E.Spurred development of root cropsSpurred agricultural developmentSpurred growth of kingdomsDifficulties of expansion southDense vegetationDiseases afflicting livestockB. Japan and Northern EuropeJapan, 200 C.E.200,000 years of migration from Korean peninsula ceasedExtensive agricultureTribalChiefsTribal gods, ancestorsSocial differentiationIron-workingBy 400 C.E.Regional statesBrought in scribes from KoreaShintoism national religion by 700 C.E.Worship of political rulersWorship of nature, especially god of riceDifferent from major classical religions and philosophiesNationalization of politics between 400 and 600 C.E.Basis of imperial houseEmperor worshipOnset of contacts with ChinaNorthern EuropeTeutonic/Celtic/Slavic peoples Modern Germany, England, Scandinavia, eastern EuropeLoosely organized regional kingdomsSome, succumbed to Roman EmpireAt empire’s end, regionalism reemergedNo written languageException where Latin had been importedAgriculture primitiveHuntingScandinavian skills in sailingExpanded trade, pillaging after 600 C.E.Religion, gods and rituals to placate natureLater, influenced by ChristianityNo unificationUntil about 1000 C.E., most backward region of worldC. The AmericasOlmec civilization 800 to 400 B.C.E.Foundation for later civilizationsCentral AmericaNo writingMassive pyramid religious structuresMaize cultivation, potatoes, other cropsStatues, icons of jadeAccurate calendarOrigins, end unknownNo trace after 400 B.C.E.Artistic, religious influence on successor civilizationsSuccessorsDeveloped hieroglyphic alphabetBuilt city of Teotihuacan for trade, worshipMigration, regional warsMaya civilization emerges from 400 C.E. onwardOlmec, successors in Central America equivalent of river valley civilizations of Asia, Middle EastSimilar civilization developed in Andean region of South AmericaPrecursors to the IncaTwo early centers of civilization in the AmericasDeveloped in isolation from developments elsewhereLacked advantages of contacts: copying, reacting, etc.Lacked technologies like wheel and iron workingAhead of European developmentPolynesia1000 B.C.E., population of Polynesian islands400 C.E., population of Hawaiian islandsOutrigger canoesBrought pigsAdapted local plantsPowerful local kingsCaste systemIn sum, classical period for areas outside China, India, MediterraneanExpanding agriculture Early civilizationsEarly contactsFolded into world history after classical periodView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: The Pyramid of the Sun in TeotihuacanRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: The Pyramid of the Sun in TeotihuacanII. Decline in China and India200 to 600 C.E., all three civilizations collapsed entirely or in partNomadic invasionsRome fell to Germanic invadersGermanic invaders were harassed by Asiatic HunsOther Huns overran Gupta IndiaSimilar nomads toppled Han ChinaPrior internal problems afflicted Rome and ChinaGuptas had not resolved region’s tendency to political fragmentationA. Decline and Fall in Han ChinaHan decline in 1st century C.E. Central control diminishedBureaucratic corruptionLocal rulers arbitraryFree peasants over-taxedLost landBecame day laborersSold children into serviceDaoist revolutionary effortYellow Turbans184 C.E., revolution30,000 students attack decadenceDisease devastated population, perhaps cut in halfPopulation dropProsperity dropImperial court: intrigue, civil warInability to push back invadersHan fellThree centuries of chaosRegional rulers, weak dynastiesBuddhism importedThreatened cultural unityOnly case of cultural import until 20th centuryLate 6th centuryDrove out invaders in the northSui dynasty reunited China618, Tang dynastyGlorious periodConfucianism and bureaucratic system revivedSigns from previous periodBuddhist minorityNew styles in art and literatureNo permanent disruptionStructures of classical China strongInvaders had assimilated Chinese traditionsB. The End of the Guptas: Decline in India Decline less drastic than Han ChinaGupta control over local princes weaker by 5th centuryHuns invaded in fifth centuryIntegration of HunsIndian warrior caste“Rajput” regional princesCultural developmentBuddhism displaced by HinduismDevi: mother godHigh prosperity7th century Muslim invadersLittle outright conquestSome conversion to IslamStrengthened HinduismEmotionalismHindi vernacularDistracted from science, mathTook control of Indian OceanIndia remained prosperousReduced Indian commercial dynamismEmpire goneHinduism and caste system remained strongView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: A Buddhist Pilgrim of the Seventh CenturyView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: A Tang Painting of the Goddess of MercyRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: From the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea: Travel and Trade in the Indian OceanIV. The Decline and Fall of the Roman EmpireA. Wide-Ranging Signs of Decline180 C.E. symptoms of declinePopulation declinedArmy recruitment difficultArbitrary, brutal emperorsEconomic hardshipTax revenues lessPervasive despondencyB. Causes of Roman DeclineConstitutional crisesWeak emperorsArmy intervention in politicsPlaguesSouthern Asia trade introduced diseasesEpidemics decimated populationRome went from 1,000,000 to 250,000ConsequencesEconomic life deterioratedNon-Roman army recruits (Germanic soldiers)Need to pay soldiersLittle tax revenueSpiral of declineCultural decline: cause or consequence?Upper class devoted primarily to leisureNo more political devotionNo more economic vigorLittle cultural creativityNo new art or literary stylesNo inventions, discoveriesFocus on textbooksSimplified compendiaAdded superstitionsFewer childrenOnly area of cultural dynamismChristian theologiansCould Rome have withstood plagues and invaders?Cultural decline already was underwayDifficult times require vigorous cultural elitesC. The Process of Roman DeclineCourse of declinePolitical and economic decentralizationPeople sought military and judicial protection locallyForeshadowed European manorial systemEstate system reduced Imperial authorityEstates sought self-sufficiencyLess tradeCities shrankLess revenueVicious circleAttempt at recoveryDiocletian (284–305)Economic regulationIncreased administrationEmperor worshipPersecution of ChristiansConstantine (312–337)Capital at ConstantinopleChristian unityTolerationAdopts Christianity himselfEastern Empire remained effective, unifiedChristianity spreadEast/West split worsened conditions in westAttempts to regulate economyReduced productionDecline in tax revenuesArmy deterioration5th century Germanic invasionsWelcomed by manyGermanic invaders never more than 5% of populationGermanic kingdoms in western Roman territory by 425Last Roman emperor deposed, 476D. Attila the HunAttila the Hun (406–453)Organized loose kingdom that extended from Germany to ChinaInvaded France in 451Contributed to Rome’s collapseE. Patterns of Decline?Comparison with China, IndiaNo shared political cultureNo bureaucratic traditionsNo strong unifying religionChristianity and Islam too lateF. Results of the Fall of RomeMediterranean unity endedSplit into 3 zonesByzantine EmpireNorth Africa and the southeastern shores of the MediterraneanWestern portion of empire: Italy, Spain, and points northRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Eusebius of Caesarea, selections from the Life of ConstantineRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Sidonius Apollinaris, Rome’s Decay and A Glimpse of the New OrderIV. The Development and Spread of World ReligionsEnd of classical period not just about decay and collapse200 to 600 C.E., rise of world’s major religionsSeeking solacePlaguesPolitical instabilityChanged religious mapChristianity surged throughout Mediterranean with demise of RomeBuddhism surged into eastern Asia600, Islam emerges as the most dynamic force for next centuriesReligion reshaping worldSpread widelyCrossed cultural and political boundariesChristianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam laterEmphasis on spiritualityDevotion to pietyHope of afterlifeImportance of divine powerResponded to political instability and povertyConversionHundreds of thousands of peopleAsia, Europe, AfricaEffectMaintaining larger religious claimsSyncretism: blend of old with newLocalized religious experienceA. Christianity Compared with BuddhismStarted smaller, grew bigger; one of two largest world faithsRole in formation of eastern and western European civilizationsSimilar emphasis on salvation and guidance by saintsCrucial differencesChristian church structure, copy of Roman EmpireChristian premium on missionaries, conversionsChristian insistence as the one truth, intoleranceB. Early ChristianityContextRigidity of Jewish priesthoodMany Jewish reform movementsNew interest in MessiahNew interest in afterlife for the virtuousJesus of NazarethCrystallized reform movement ideasBelieved to be MessiahSent by God to redeem human sinGentle and charismaticPreached, gathered disciplesNo expectation of new religionDisciples believed in resurrectionSecond Coming signified end of world, judgmentSecond Coming didn’t happenDisciples fanned out, began preachingSupporters in various parts of Roman EmpireTenetsOne loving GodVirtuous life: dedication to God and fellowshipWorldly concerns secondary“Christ” Greek for “God’s anointed”Christ’s sacrifice to prepare humanity for afterlifeBelief, good works, discipline of the flesh lead to heavenRituals, Christ’s Last Supper, lead to same goalAppealGreek and Roman gods sterileSimple life and spiritual equality appealing especially to poorEarly fervor and rituals appealingSpreadRoman Empire, ease of travelEurope, Middle East, Persia, Axum, EthiopiaPaul of TarsusShift from Jewish reform to independent religion for allChurch structure: local groups selecting elders; city bishopParallel of provincial government structureDoctrineWriting, collecting work of disciplesNew Testament of the Christian BibleC. Christianity Gains GroundPeriodic persecutionsChristianity Gains Ground10% of empire by 300Constantine convertsLegalized ChristianityState interferenceInvites new troublesEasier to spread WestDecaying empire, increases appeal of faithChaos freed bishopsCentralized bishopric, pope in RomeIndependent churchEastImperial control, way of lifeTwo different church organizations east/westBeliefs held in commonTrinity: Father, Son (Christ), Holy GhostEmphasis on single belief: anti-heretical, no competitionFormal theologyAugustine and othersElements of classical philosophyChristian beliefAddressed nature of free will, sin, punishment, faithBrought rational thought together with faithSyncretismExample: Christ’s birth made to coincide with winter solsticePracticesMysticism in the Middle EastMonasticism in the WestBenedictAppealed to peasantsDeveloped Benedictine RuleSpread to other monasteries and conventsBenedictine RuleDiscipline of work, study, prayerFocused pietyAvoid divide between the saintly and the ordinaryCross-class/cross social-group appealLike Hinduism in this respectAppealed to elites and peasants alikeEqual importance of male and female soulsMen and women worshipped togetherBig differences from classical Mediterranean cultureOtherworldlyRitualsSpiritual equalityRelationship to state secondaryAnti-slavery, pro-brotherhood (later slavery, new context)Respect for workSexual restraintClassical values preserved (aside from church organization and some philosophy)Roman architectural styles, though simplifiedLatin, language of church in westGreek, language of church in eastMonastic libraries preserved classical and Christian learningD. The New Religious MapMost people believe in one of the great faithsShift away from polytheismRaised new social questionsFacilitated global tradeE. In the Wake of Decline and Fall By 600 C.E., the major civilizations looked very different from classical world Change uneven Classical heritage used by different successor civilizations in different waysKEY TERMSAxum: a state in the Ethiopian highlands; received influences from the Arabian peninsula; converted to Christianity.Ethiopia: kingdom located in Ethiopian highlands; replaced Mero? in first century C.E.; received strong influence from Arabian peninsula; eventually converted to Christianity.Sahara: desert running across northern Africa; separates the Mediterranean coast from southern Africa.Shintoism: religion of the early Japanese court; included the worship of numerous gods and spirits associated with the natural world.Teotihuacan: site of classic culture in central Mexico; urban center with important religious functions; supported by intensive agriculture in surrounding regions; population of as many as 200,000.Maya: classic culture emerging in southern Mexico and Central America contemporary with Teotihuacan; extended over broad region; featured monumental architecture, written language, calendrical and mathematical systems, highly developed religion.Inca: group of clans centered at Cuzco that were able to create an empire incorporating various Andean cultures; term also used for leader of empire.Polynesia: islands contained in a rough triangle with its points at Hawaii, New Zealand,and Easter Island.Yellow Turbans: Chinese Daoists who launched a revolt in 184 C.E., promising a golden age to be brought about by divine magic.Sui: dynasty succeeding the Han; grew from strong rulers in northern China; reunited China.Tang: dynasty succeeding the Sui in 618 C.E.Harsha: ruler who followed Guptas in India; briefly constructed a loose empire in northern India between 616 and 657 C.E.Rajput: regional military princes in India following the collapse of the Gupta Empire.Devi: mother goddess within Hinduism; devotion to her spread widely after the collapse of the Gupta and encouraged new emotionalism in religious ritual.Islam: major world religion having its origins in 610 C.E. in the Arabian peninsula; meaning literally “submission”; based on prophecy of Muhammad.Diocletian: Roman emperor (284–305 C.E.); restored later empire by improved administration and tax collection.Constantine: Roman emperor (321–337 C.E.); established his capital at Constantinople; used Christianity to unify the empire.Byzantine Empire: eastern half of the Roman Empire; survived until 1453; retained Mediterranean, especially Hellenistic, culture.Augustine (Saint): North African Christian theologian; made major contributions in incorporating elements of classical philosophy into Christianity.Coptic: Christian sect in Egypt, later tolerated after Islamic takeover.Mahayana: version of Buddhism popular in China; emphasized Buddha’s role as a savior.Bodhisattvas: Buddhist holy men who refused advance toward nirvana to receive prayers of the living to help them reach holiness.Jesus of Nazareth: prophet and teacher among the Jews; believed by Christians to be the Messiah; executed c. 30 C.E.Paul: one of the first Christian missionaries; moved away from insistence that adherents of the new religion follow Jewish law; use of Greek as language of Church.Pope: Bishop of Rome; head of the Catholic church in western Europe.Council of Nicaea: Christian council that met in 325 C.E. to determine orthodoxy with respect to the Trinity; insisted on divinity of all persons of the Trinity.Benedict of Nursia: founder of monasticism in the former western half of the Roman Empire; established the Benedictine rule in the 6th century.CHAPTER 7The First Global Civilization: The Rise and Spread of IslamLearning Objectives7.1 What were the major ways in which the city of Mecca interacted with the bedouin tribes that lived in the desert areas around it?7.2 Which aspects of Muhammad’s religious message do you think accounted for its powerful appeal to both urban dwellers and nomadic peoples in Arabia and beyond?7.3 What were the key factors that made possible the rapid Arab conquests in the Middle East and Central Asia and North Africa?7.4 In what ways was the Islamic religion a faith that elevated the status and opportunities of women, and what were the constraints on this process?Chapter OutlineI. Desert and Town: The Harsh Environment of the Pre-Islamic Arabian WorldBedouinsCamel herdingAgricultureA. Clan Identity, Clan Rivalries, and the Cycle of VengeanceGrouped into tribesShayksFree warriorsRivalryB. Towns and Long-Distance TradeEntrepots Mecca Umayyad clanQuraysh tribe Ka’baMedinaView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: MedinaC. Marriage and Family in Pre-Islamic ArabiaWomen had important rolesPolygyny, polyandryD. Poet and Neglected Gods Animism, polytheismIncluding AllahII. The Life of Muhammad and the Genesis of IslamBanu Hasim clanOrphanedMeccaKhadijahRevelations, 610Via GabrielA. Persecution, Flight, and VictoryKa’ba gods threatenedInvited to Medina, 622 HijraReturned to Mecca, 629Read the Document on MyHistoryLab: The Holy Qur’anB. Arabs and IslamUmmaC. Universal Elements in IslamFive PillarsAcceptance of IslamPrayerFasting during RamadanPayment of zakatHajjII. The Arab Empire of the UmayyadsDeath, 632Succession struggleA. Consolidation and Division in the Islamic CommunityAbu BakrRidda WarsRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Al-Tabari and Ibn Hisham from “The Founding of the Caliphate” B. Motives for Arab ConquestConversionsBootyC. Weaknesses of the Adversary EmpiresSasanian EmpireZoroastrianismDynasty ended, 651ByzantiumD. The Problem of Succession and the Sunni-Shi’a SplitUthmanThird caliphMurderedAliRejected by UmayyadsSiffin, 657Loses supportAssassinated, 661Son, Hasan, renounces caliphateSon, HusaynKilled, Karbala, 680Sunni – UmayyadsShi’a – Ali’s descendantsMu’awiyaCaliph, 660E. The Umayyad ImperiumPush westStopped at Poitier, 732Retain IberiaF. Converts and “People of the Book”Malawi, convertsDhimmi, people of the bookJews, ChristiansLater Zoroastrians and HindusG. Family and Gender Roles in the Umayyad AgeIslamic ideas prevailed at firstH. Umayyad Decline and FallRevoltsMervAbassid revolt750, Umayyads defeated by AbassidsRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Harun al-Rashid and the Zenith of the CaliphateIII. From Arab to Islamic Empire: The Early Abassid EraSunni ruleRepressed Shi’aBaghdadNew capitalRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Sunni versus Shi’ite: Letter from Selim I to Ismail IRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Baghdad: City of WondersIslamic Conversion and Mawali AcceptanceIntegration of new converts into Islamic communityEfforts to make new convertsAcceptance of non-Arab Muslims as equalsMost converts won over peacefullyB. Town and Country: Commercial Boom and Agrarian ExpansionUrban expansionAyanView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Al-Hariri, Assemblies (Maqamat)C. The First Flowering of Islamic LearningBuildingMosques, palacesCHAPTER 8Abbasid Decline and the Spread of Islamic Civilization to Southand Southeast AsiaLearning Objectives8.1 What were the major sources contributing to the decline of the Abbasid dynasty?8.2 Discuss the major advances in the arts and sciences that occurred in the Islamic world in the late-Abbasid period.8.3 How did Hindu religious leaders and organizations counter the considerable appeal of Sufi missionaries and their efforts to win converts in South and Southeast Asia from the 10th through the 16th centuries?8.4 Beyond the Sufis, who were the major agents and were the motivations for conversion to Islamic religion in South and Southeast Asia in this same era?Chapter OutlineI. The Islamic Heartlands in the Middle and Late Abbasid ErasAbbasid Empire weakened, 9th–13th centuriesPeasant revoltsAl-Mahdi (775–785)Shi’a unreconciledSuccession not secureImperial Extravagance and Succession DisputesHarun al-RashidSon of al-MahdiThe Thousand and One NightsBarmicidesPersian advisorsDeath followed by civil waral-Ma’munB. Imperial Breakdown and Agrarian DisorderCivil unrestCaliphs build lavishlyTax burden increasedAgriculture sufferedC. The Declining Position of Women in the Family and SocietySeclusion, veilPolygynyD. Nomadic Incursions and the Eclipse of Caliphal PowerFormer provinces threatened AbbasidsBuyids, PersiaTook Baghdad, 945SultansSeljuk Turks1055, defeated BuyidsSunnisShi’a purgedDefeated Byzantines, EgyptE. The Impact of the Christian Crusades1096, Western European Christian knightsSmall kingdoms establishedSaladin retakes landsLast in 1291Read the Document on MyHistoryLab: A Muslim View of the Crusades: Beha-ed-Din, Richard I Massacres Prisoners after Taking Acre, 1191II. An Age of Learning and Artistic RefinementsUrban growthMerchants thriveA. The Full Flowering of Persian LiteraturePersian, the court languageAdministration, literatureArabic in religion, law, sciencesCalligraphyFirdawsiShah-NamaEpic poemSa’diOmar KayyanRubaiyatRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: The Rubaiyat (11th c. c.e.) Omar KhayyamB. Achievements in the SciencesMathBuilt on Greek workChemistryExperimentsAl-RaziAl-BiruniSpecific weightsMedicineHospitalsCourses of studyView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Islamic science and alchemy: page from “The Lanterns of Wisdom and the Keys of Mercy”Read the Document on MyHistoryLab: Ibn Battuta, selections from the RihlaC. Religious Trends and the New Push for ExpansionSufisMysticismUlamaConservativeAgainst outside influenceGreek philosophy rejectedQur’an sufficientAl-GhazaliSynthesis of Greek, Qur’anic ideasOpposed by orthodoxy Read the Document on MyHistoryLab: Science and Mathematics: Al-Ghazzali, “On the Separation of Mathematics and Religion”D. New Waves of Nomadic Invasions and the End of the CaliphateMongolsChinggis KhanHulegu1258, Baghdad fellLast Abbasid killedRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Giovanni Di Piano Carpini on the MongolsIII. The Coming of Islam to South AsiaBy 1200, Muslims rule much of north, centralConflict between two different systemsHindu religion v. Muslim monotheismMuslim egalitarianism v. Indian caste systemA. Political Divisions and the First Muslim InvasionsFirst Muslims as traders, 8th centuryAttacks led to invasionMuhammad ibn QasimUmayyad generalTook Sind, Indus valleysIndians treated as dhimmiIndian Influences on Islamic CivilizationScience, math, medicine, music, astronomyIndia influenced Arab scholarsRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: A World Traveler in India (1300s) Ibn BattutaC. From Booty to Empire: The Second Wave of Muslim Invasions10th century, Turkish dynasty established in AfghanistanMahmud of GhazniBegan invasion of IndiaMuhammad of GhurPersianState in Indus valleyThence to BengalHis lieutenant, Qutb-ud-Din AibakFormed state at DelhiDelhi sultanate ruled for 300 yearsD. Patterns of ConversionConverts especially among Buddhists, lower castes, untouchablesAlso conversion to escape taxesMuslims fled Mongols, 13th, 14th centuriesE. Patterns of AccommodationHigh-caste Hindus remained apartMuslims also often failed to integrateF. Islamic Challenge and Hindu RevivalBhaktiDevotional cultsEmotional approachCaste distinctions dissolvedShiva, Vishnu, Kali especiallyMira Bai, Kabir, Songs in regional languagesG. Stand-off: The Muslim Presence in India at the End of the Sultanate PeriodBrahmins v. ulama> Separate communitiesIV. The Spread of Islam to Southeast Asia ShrivijayaA. Trading Contacts and ConversionTrading leads to peaceful conversionSufis importantStarted with Sumatran portsMalaccaThence to Malaya, Sumatra, Demak (Java)Coastal cities especially receptive Buddhist elites, but population converts to IslamB. Sufi Mystics and the Nature of Southeast Asian IslamMystical and animist strainsRetention of pre-Islamic beliefs and practicesWomen retained stronger positionMerging of Islamic and pre-Islamic cultureKEY TERMSlateen: triangular sails attached to the masts of dhows by long booms or yard arms; which extended diagonally high across the fore and aft of the ship.al-Mahdi: third Abbasid caliph (775–785); failed to reconcile Shi’a moderates to his dynasty and to resolve the succession problem.Harun al-Rashid: most famous of the Abbasid caliphs (786–809); renowned for sumptuous and costly living recounted in The Thousand and One Nights.Buyids: Persian invaders of the 10th century; captured Baghdad; and as sultans, through Abbasid figureheads.Seljuk Turks: nomadic invaders from central Asia; staunch Sunnis; ruled from the 11th century in the name of the Abbasids.Crusades: invasions of western Christians into Muslim lands, especially Palestine; captured Jerusalem and established Christian kingdoms enduring until 1291.Saadin: (1137–1193); Muslim ruler of Egypt and Syria; reconquered most of the crusader kingdoms.Ibn Khaldun: great Muslim historian; author of The Muqaddimah; sought touncover persisting patterns in Muslim dynastic history.Shah-Nama: epic poem written by Firdawsi in the late 10th and early 11th centuries; recounts the history of Persia to the era of Islamic conquests.ulama: Islamic religious scholars; pressed for a more conservative and restrictive theology; opposed to non-Islamic thinking.al-Ghazali: brilliant Islamic theologian; attempted to fuse Greek and Qur’anic traditions.Mongols: central Asian nomadic peoples; captured Baghdad in 1258 and killed the last Abbasid caliph.Chinggis Khan: (1162–1227); Mongol ruler; defeated the Turkish Persian kingdoms.Hulegu: grandson of Chinggis Khan; continued his work, taking Baghdad in 1258.Mamluks: Rulers of Egypt, descended from Turkish slaves.Muhammad ibn Qasim: Arab general who conquered Sind and made it part of the Umayyad Empire.Mahmud of Ghazni: ruler of an Afghan dynasty; invaded northern India during the 11th century.Muhammad of Ghur: Persian ruler of a small Afghan kingdom; invaded and conquered much of northern India.Qutb-ud-din Aibak: lieutenant of Muhammad of Ghur; established kingdom in India with the capital at Delhi.bhaktic cults: Hindu religious groups who stressed the importance of strong emotional bonds between devotees and the gods or goddesses—especially Shiva, Vishnu, and Kali.Mir Bai: low-caste woman poet and songwriter in bhaktic cults.Kabir: 15th-century Muslim mystic who played down the differences between Hinduism and Islam.Shrivijaya: trading empire based on the Malacca straits; its Buddhist government resisted Muslim missionaries; when it fell, southeastern Asia was opened to Islam.Malacca: flourishing trading city in Malaya; established a trading empire after the fall of Shrivijaya.Demak: most powerful of the trading states on the north Java coast; converted to Islam and served as a dissemination point to other regions.CHAPTER 10Civilization in Eastern Europe: Byzantium and Orthodox EuropeLearning Objectives10.1 What was the relationship between the Byzantine Empire and the earlier Roman Empire and what were the main similarities and differences?10.2 How does the Byzantine Empire fit the theme of state building and expansion?10.3 Why did the two major regional versions of Christianity part? How significant was the split?10.4 What were the main commonalities among societies that developed in eastern Europe during the postclassical period?10.5 What kinds of imitation affected Russia’s development in the postclassical period?Chapter OutlineI. Civilization in Eastern EuropeTwo major postclassical Christian civilizationsCentered on Rome and ConstantinopleClose relations with Islamic worldPlayed major roles in long-distance tradeA. The Power of the Byzantine EmpireMaintained high levels of political, economic, and cultural activityStrong connection to Roman EmpireShaped cultural development of Balkans and western RussiaMajor agent of interregional tradeSimilarities between eastern and western EuropeChristian missionariesMonotheismStruggle for political definitionTrade and contact with major civilizationsGreco-Roman legacyDifferences between eastern and western EuropeDifferent versions of ChristianityLittle mutual contactEast more developed than West, with greater involvement in international tradeII. The Byzantine EmpireEmperor Constantine4th century c.e., ConstantinopleEmpire dividedCapitals at Rome and ConstantinopleGreek languageOfficial language from 6th centuryA. Justinian’s AchievementsJustinian Attempted reconquest of ItalySlavs, Persians attack from eastBuilding projectsHagia SophiaLegal codificationRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Emperor JustinianB. Arab Pressure and the Empire’s DefensesCenter of empire shifted to eastConstant external threatsArab MuslimsBulgarsDefeated by Basil II, 11th centuryC. Byzantine Society and PoliticsEmperors resembled Chinese rulersCourt ritualHead of church and stateSophisticated bureaucracyOpened to all classesProvincial governorsEconomic controlRegulation of food prices, tradeSilk productionTrade networkAsia, Russia, Scandinavia, Europe, AfricaArtsCreativity in architectureView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: A Holy Emperor: Basil IIView the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: Hagia Sophia II. The Split Between Eastern and Western ChristianityA. The SchismSeparate pathsPatriarch Michael1054, attacks Catholic practiceMutual excommunication, pope and patriarchB. The Empire’s DeclinePeriod of decline from 11th centurySeljuk TurksTook most of Asian provinces1071, ManzikertByzantine defeatSlavic states emergedAppeal to west brought crusaders1204, Venetian crusaders sacked Constantinople1453, Constantinople taken by Ottoman Turks1461, empire goneRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Chronicle of the Fourth Crusade (12th–13th c.) Geoffrey de VillhardouinRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Nestor-Iskander on the Fall of Constantinople (1450s)III. The Spread of Civilization in Eastern EuropeInfluence through conquest, conversion, tradeCyril, Methodius, to SlavsCyrillic scriptA. The East Central BorderlandsCompetition from Catholics and Orthodox GreeksCatholicsCzechs, Hungary, PolandRegional monarchies prevailedJews from Western EuropeIV. The Emergence of Kievan Rus’A. New Patterns of TradeSlavs from AsiaIronworking, extended agricultureMixed with earlier populationsFamily tribes, villagesKingdomsAnimistic6th, 7th centuriesScandinavian merchantsTrade between Byzantines and the northc. 855, monarchy under RurikCenter at KievVladimir I (980–1015)Converts to OrthodoxyControlled churchRead the Document on MyHistoryLab: Ibn Fadlan’s Account of the Rus’View the Closer Look on MyHistoryLab: The Baptism of VladimirB. Institutions and Culture in Kievan Rus’Influenced by Byzantine patternsOrthodox influenceOrnate churchesIconsMonasticismArt, literature dominated by religion, royaltyFree farmers predominantBoyars, landlordsLess powerful than in the WestC. KievLeading City of Kievan Rus’Location facilitated both defense and control of regional tradeReligious centerImportant economic hub1200: population of 50,000D. Kievan DeclineDecline from 12th centuryRival governmentsSuccession struggledAsian conquerorsMongols (Tartars)13th century, took territoryTraditional culture survivedE. The End of an Era in Eastern EuropeMongol invasions usher in new periodEast and West further separatedKEY TERMSHagia Sophia: great domed church constructed during reign of Justinian.Belisarius: (c. 505–565); one of Justinian’s most important military commanders during the attempted reconquest of western Europe.Greek fire: Byzantine weapon consisting of mixture of chemicals that ignited when exposed to water; used to drive back the Arab fleets attacking Constantinople.Bulgaria: Slavic kingdom in Balkans; constant pressure on Byzantine Empire; defeated by Basil II in 1014.icon: images of religious figures venerated by Byzantine Christians.Cyril and Methodius: Byzantine missionaries sent to convert eastern Europe and Balkans; responsible for creation of Slavic written script called Cyrillic.Kiev: commercial city in Ukraine established by Scandinavians in 9th century; became the center for a kingdom that flourished until the 12th century.Rurik: legendary Scandinavian, regarded as founder of Kievan Rus’ in 855.Kievan Rus’: the predecessor to modern Russia; a medieval state that existed from the end of the 9th to the middle of the 13th century; its territory spanned parts of modern Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia.Vladimir I: ruler of Kiev (980–1015); converted kingdom to Orthodox Christianity.Russian Orthodoxy: Russian form of Christianity brought from Byzantine Empire.Yaroslav: (975–1054); Last great Kievan monarch; responsible for codification of laws, based on Byzantine codes.boyars: Russian landholding aristocrats; possessed less political power than their western European counterparts.Tatars: Mongols who conquered Russian cities during the 13th century; left Russian church and aristocracy intact. ................
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