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Ancient Mesopotamian Civilizations

Ancient Mesopotamian civilizations formed along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in modern-day Iraq and Kuwait beginning around 12,000 BCE. Some major civilizations included the Sumerians, Akkadians, Assyrians, and Babylonians. The Sumerians developed one of the first writing systems, cuneiform script, as well as innovations like the wheel. Power shifted between civilizations over time, with the Akkadian Empire and later Assyrian Empire ruling large parts of Mesopotamia and beyond before the Babylonian Empire rose to prominence under King Hammurabi in the 18th century BCE.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
102 views2 pages

Ancient Mesopotamian Civilizations

Ancient Mesopotamian civilizations formed along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers in modern-day Iraq and Kuwait beginning around 12,000 BCE. Some major civilizations included the Sumerians, Akkadians, Assyrians, and Babylonians. The Sumerians developed one of the first writing systems, cuneiform script, as well as innovations like the wheel. Power shifted between civilizations over time, with the Akkadian Empire and later Assyrian Empire ruling large parts of Mesopotamia and beyond before the Babylonian Empire rose to prominence under King Hammurabi in the 18th century BCE.

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jojo
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Ancient Mesopotamian civilizations

Overview
Mesopotamian civilizations formed on the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers in what is today Iraq and Kuwait.
Early civilizations began to form around the time of the Neolithic Revolution—12000 BCE.
Some of the major Mesopotamian civilizations include the Sumerian, Assyrian, Akkadian, and Babylonian civilizations.
Evidence shows extensive use of technology, literature, legal codes, philosophy, religion, and architecture in these
societies.

Civilizations born along rivers


By roughly 6000 to 8000 years ago, agriculture was well under way in several regions including Ancient Egypt, around
the Nile River; the Indus Valley civilization; Mesopotamia, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers; and Ancient
China, along the Yellow and Yangtze rivers. This is because the regular river floods made for fertile soil around the
banks and the rivers could also supply fresh water to irrigate crops. It’s no coincidence that as agriculture allowed for
denser and denser populations along with more specialized societies, some of the world’s first civilizations developed
in these areas as well.

Ancient Mesopotamia
Mesopotamia—mainly modern-day Iraq and Kuwait—in particular is often referred to as the cradle of civilization
because some of the most influential early city-states and empires first emerged there—although it’s not the only
place! Its modern name comes from the Greek for middle—mesos—and river—potamos—and literally means a
“country between two rivers.” Those two rivers are the Tigris and Euphrates. Not only was Mesopotamia one of the
first places to develop agriculture, it was also at the crossroads of the Egyptian and the Indus Valley civilizations. This
made it a melting pot of languages and cultures that stimulated a lasting impact on writing, technology, language,
trade, religion, and law.
Associated with Mesopotamia are ancient cultures like the Sumerians, Assyrians, Akkadians, and Babylonians.
Learning about this time period can be a little confusing because these cultures interacted with and ruled over each
other over the course of several thousand years. These terms can also be associated with city-states, languages,
religions, or empires—depending on the time and context we are looking at.

Sumerians
Let’s start with Sumer. We believe Sumerian civilization first took form in southern Mesopotamia around 4000 BCE—
or 6000 years ago—which would make it the first urban civilization in the region. Mesopotamians are noted for
developing one of the first written scripts around 3000 BCE: wedge-shaped marks pressed into clay tablets. This
cuneiform—another way to say wedge-shaped—script was also adapted by surrounding peoples to write their own
languages for roughly 2000 years, until Phoenician, which the letters you are reading now are based on, began to
become the dominant script in the first millennium BCE. Cuneiform is also the script that one of the world’s first
great works of literature, The Epic of Gilgamesh, was written in. Mesopotamians used writing to record sales and
purchases, to write letters to one another, and to tell stories. The incredibly important invention of the wheel is also
credited to the Sumerians; the earliest discovered wheel dates to 3500 BCE in Mesopotamia.
Sumerians built ships that allowed them to travel into the Persian Gulf and trade with other early civilizations, such
as the Harappans in northern India. They traded textiles, leather goods, and jewelry for Harappan semi-precious
stones, copper, pearls, and ivory.
Sumerian religion was polytheistic—or worshipped multiple gods—many of which were anthropomorphic—they
took human-like form. Temples to these gods were constructed atop massive ziggurats which were in the centers of
most cities. These structures would have taken thousands of people many years to construct.
A black-and-white image of an Epic of Gilgamesh tablet on a black background with cuneiform (wedge-shaped)
writing.
A tablet from the Epic of Gilgamesh. Image courtesy Boundless.
Akkadian Empire
Around 3000 BCE, the Sumerians had significant cultural interchange with a group in northern Mesopotamia known
as the Akkadians—named after the city-state of Akkad. The Akkadian language is related to the modern languages of
Hebrew and Arabic. These languages are known as Semitic languages. The term Semitic comes from the biblical
character Shem, a son of Noah, the purported progenitor of Abraham and, accordingly, the Jewish and Arab people.
Around 2334 BCE, Sargon of Akkad came to power and established what might have been the world’s first dynastic
empire. The Akkadian Empire ruled over both the Akkadian and Sumerian speakers in Mesopotamia and the Levant
—modern day Syria and Lebanon. The Empire of Akkad collapsed in 2154 BCE, within 180 years of its founding.
The Akkadian Empire is pictured in brown. The directions of the military campaigns are shown as yellow arrows.
Map of the Akkadian Empire. Image courtesy Boundless.

Assyrian Empire
Assyria is named for its original capital, the ancient city of Ašur—also known as Ashur—in northern Mesopotamia.
Ashur was originally one of a number of Akkadian-speaking city states ruled by Sargon and his descendents during
the Akkadian Empire. Within several hundred years of the collapse of the Akkadian Empire, Assyria had become a
major empire.
For much of the 1400 years from the late twenty-first century BCE until the late seventh century BCE, the Akkadian-
speaking Assyrians were the dominant power in Mesopotamia, especially in the north. The empire reached its peak
near the end of this period in the seventh century. At that time, the Assyrian Empire stretched from Egypt and
Cyprus in the west to the borders of Persia—modern-day Iran—in the east. The major exceptions to Assyrian
dominance were the Babylonian Empire established by Hammurabi and some more chaotic dark ages where there
wasn’t a dominant power.

Babylon
Map of Babylonia at the time of Hamurabi. Map is of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers and the surrounding areas.
Empire highlighted in brown and, near Babylon, red.
The extent of the Babylonian Empire at the start and end of Hammurabi's reign. Image courtesy Boundless.
Babylon was a minor city-state in central Mesopotamia for a century after it was founded in 1894 BCE. Things
changed with the reign of Hammurabi, from 1792 to 1750 BCE. He was an efficient ruler, establishing a centralized
bureaucracy with taxation. Hammurabi freed Babylon from foreign rule and then conquered the whole of southern
Mesopotamia, bringing stability and the name of Babylonia to the region.
One of the most important works of this First Dynasty of Babylon was the compilation in about 1754 BCE of a code of
laws, called the Code of Hammurabi, which echoed and improved upon the earlier written laws of Sumer, Akkad, and
Assyria. It’s similar to the Sumerian king Ur-Nammu of Ur’s code, written from 2100 to 2050 BCE. Hammurabi’s code
is one of the oldest deciphered writings of significant length in the world. Written in about 1754 BCE by the sixth king
of Babylon, Hammurabi, the Code was written on stone stele—slabs—and clay tablets. The Code consists of 282 laws
with scaled punishments depending on social status, adjusting "an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth". For example,
if a person from a noble class broke an enslaved person’s arm, they would have to pay a fine, whereas if a noble
person broke another noble person's arm, the offending noble would have their arm broken. Some have seen the
Code as an early form of constitutional government, the presumption of innocence, and the ability to present
evidence in one's case.
The Babylonian Empire established by Hammurabi lasted for 260 years until Babylon got sacked by invaders in 1531
BCE. In the period between 626 BCE and 539 BCE, Babylon asserted itself again over the region with the Neo-
Babylonian Empire. This new empire was overthrown in 539 BCE by the Persians who then ruled over the region until
the time of Alexander the Great, 335 BCE.

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