Zafar Sir

11th History Writing and City Life Chapter 1 Conceptual Notes

What is the meaning of Mesopotamia


-The word derived from two Greek words

-Mesopotamia Located between the rivers Euphrates and Tigris and Mesopotamia is a fertile land

Mesopotamia 

Major Sources of Historical Information about Mesopotamia 


There are buildings , statues , tombs , Jewellery, tools, coins, tablets , and written documents

Language of Mesopotamia 

Geographical Location of Mesopotamia

Agriculture and Climate of Mesopotamia

The Oldest Cities of Mesopotamia

The Construction of cities in this civilization began in 3000 BC its famous cities were URUK Ur and Mari .

The City of Ur lacked a town planning system with narrow and winding streets. the drainage system was poor the residents of Ur considered omens when building their homes

After 2000 BC the City of Mari , upstream of the Euphrates river , flourished as a royal capital located at a crucial trading point it was a prosperous and prosperous city The Royal Palace of Gymrilam and a temple have been discovered here

Writing Skills 

The First tablet found in Mesopotamia date back to around 3200 BC . They were written in cuneiform script using the sharp point of a reed. these tablets were dried in the sun.

Features of the Writing system

The Cuneiform symbol used to represent a sound is not a single consonant or vowel

There were different symbols for different sounds which meant that the scribe had to learn hundreds of symbols

These had to be written on a wet strip before it dried

A skilled person was required to write

In this the sounds of a particular language had to be given a visual form

Cuneiform 

It is derived from the Latin words cuneus meaning left and forma meaning shape

Time Calculation 

The Scholarly tradition of time calculation and mathematics is Mesopotamia’s greatest contribution to the world

The People of this civilization were familiar with multiplication, division, square root , compound interest etc.

For Time Calculation the people here divided a year into 12 months , 1 month into 4 weeks , 1 day into 24 hrs. And 1 hr. into 60 minutes

Types of Mesopotamian Cities 

Urbanization/ settlement of cities 

cities and towns were not merely places for large numbers of people to live. when an economy develops economic activities beyond food production , the population density in a given location increases , consequently towns begins to string up

In addition to food production , trade manufacturing and various services also play an important role in urban economics. Urban residents are not self- sufficient and must rely on other residents of the city or village for goods or services . they engage in frequent transactions thus we see that rural communities are also involved in urban activities

Features of urban Life 

There is division of labor in urban life

People involved in different works remain connected with each other through transactions

Essential items for Urban manufacturers like fuel, metal various types of stones wood etc. come from different places

Movement of Goods in the cities of Mesopotamia 

No matter how rich Mesopotamia’s food resources were , it lacked mineral resources much of the south lacked stone for making tools, seals , coins and Jewellery

The wood of Iraqi date palms and poplar trees was not particularly good for making carts , cart wheels or boats

No metal was available there to make tools, utensil and ornaments

The Mesopotamians probably imported wood , copper, tin silver gold shells and various types of stones from turkey and Iran or the countries across the Gulf for which they exported their textiles and agricultural products in large quantities

Transportation 

The easiest and cheapest mode of transportation was waterways . this was the reason why waterways were the most Important mode of transport for Mesopotamian cities.

Temples of Mesopotamia 

Some early Mesopotamian temples resembled ordinary houses differing only in that their outer walls curved inward and outward at regular intervals Ur(The Moon) and Inanna (the goddess of love and war) were the principal deities

Worship of the deity 

Rulers of Mesopotamia 

The Division of time was adopted by Alexanders successors and from there it reached Rome and the Islamic world  and later medieval Europe

Gilgamesh- he was the ruler of the city of Uruk a great warrior who had subjugated far-flung regions

The Assyrian ruler Ashur Banipal had established a library in Nineveh by importing many clays tablets from Babylonia

Nabopolasar liberated Babylonia from Assyrian rule in 625 BC

Babylon renamed a major city until its defeat by Alexanders in 331 BC. Nabonidus was the last ruler of the independent Babylon

 

 

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