A | B |
Mesopotamia | flat plain in what is now southern Iraq |
specialization | the development of different jobs |
empire | group of territories or nations under a single ruler or government |
Sargon | King of Akkadians who conquered all of Mesopotamia; empire lasted for more than 200 years |
Sumer | a region in southern Mesopotamia where many cities had formed |
city-states | independent state made up of a city and the surrounding land and villages |
scribe | record keeper |
Sumerians | inventors of the wheel |
artisans | skilled craftsperson |
Hammurabi | king who created Babylonian empire; known for his collection of laws called the Code of Hammurabi |
cuneiform | Sumerian system of writing made up of wedge-shaped markings |
irrigation | method of bringing water to a field from another place to water crops |
nomad | person who regularly moves from place to place |
history | study of the past |
civilization | complex society with cities, organized governments, art, religion, class divisions, and a writing system |
technology | tools and methods used to help humans perform tasks |
fossil | the trace or imprint of a plant or animal that has been preserved in rock |
artifacts | weapon, tool or other item made by humans |
primary source | an account of an event created by someone who took part in or witnessed the event (treaties, letters, diaries, laws) |
secondary source | information gathered by someone who did not take part in or witness an event (journal articles, encyclopedias, history textbooks) |
archaeologists | scientists who learns about past human life by studying fossils and artifacts |
anthropologists | scientists who studies the physical characteristics and cultures of humans and their ancestors |
geologists | scientists who study the physical structure and processes of the earth and planets of the solar system |
historian | person who studies and writes about the human past |
Jericho | one of the earliest known Neolithic communities, this city in the West Bank between what are now Israel and Jordan |
Nineveh | capital of the Persian Empire |
Babylon | city and trade center built near the Euphrates River |
province | political districts |
Persian Gulf | body of water that separates Iran from the peninsula of Arabia |
Euphrates River | river that flows from Turkey through Syria and Iraq |
Tigris River | river that flows from Turkey to Iraq |
domesticate | to tame animals and plants for human use |
astronomer | person who studies stars, planets, and other heavenly bodies |
Catal Huyuk | a Neolithic community in present-day Turkey |
caravans | group of traveling merchants and animals |
Hanging Gardens | terraced gardens in Babylon built by Nebuchadnezzar for his wife |
Nebuchadnezzar | Chaldean king who controlled all of Mesopotamia |