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APWORLD CH03

AB
Code of HammurabiA series of laws publicized at the order of King Hammurabi of Babylon (d. 1750 B.C.E.). Not actually a code, but a number of laws that proclaim the king’s commitment to social order.
cradle of civilizationCommonly used term for southern Mesopotamia (in present-day Iraq).
cuneiformWedge-shaped writing in the form of symbols incised into clay tablets; used in Mesopotamia from around 3100 B.C.E. to the beginning of the Common Era.
Egypt "The Gift of the Nile"Egypt is often known as “the gift of the Nile” because the region would not have been able to support a significant human population without the Nile’s annual inundation, which provided rich silt deposits and made agriculture possible.
Epic of GilgameshThe most famous extant literary work from ancient Mesopotamia, it tells the story of one man’s quest for immortality.
HarappaA major city of the Indus Valley civilization; flourished around 2000 B.C.E. (pron. hah- RAHP-uh)
HatshepsutAncient Egypt’s most famous queen; reigned 1472–1457 B.C.E. ( pron. hat-shep-soot)
HebrewsA smaller early civilization whose development of a monotheistic faith that provided the foundation of modern Judaism, Christianity, and Islam assured them a significant place in world history.
hieroglyphsAncient Egyptian writing system; literally, “sacred carvings”—so named because the Greeks saw them prominently displayed in Egyptian temples.
HittitesAn Indo-European civilization established in Anatolia in the eighteenth century B.C.E.
HyksosA pastoral group of unknown ethnicity that invaded Egypt and ruled in the north from 1650 to 1535 B.C.E. Their dominance was based on their use of horses, chariots, and bronze technology. ( pron. HICK-sose)
Indus Valleyhome of a major civilization that emerged in what is now Pakistan during the third millennium B.C.E., in the valleys of the Indus and Saraswati rivers, noted for the uniformity of its elaborately planned cities over a large territory
Mandate of HeavenThe ideological underpinning of Chinese emperors, this was the belief that a ruler held authority by command of divine force as long as he ruled morally and benevolently.
MesopotamiaThe “land between the rivers” Tigris and Euphrates, in what is now Iraq.
Minoan civilizationAn advanced civilization that developed on the island of Crete around 2500 B.C.E.
Mohenjo DaroA major city of the Indus Valley civilization; flourished around 2000 B.C.E. ( pron. moehen- joe DAHR-oh)
Norte Chico/CaralNorte Chico is a region along the central coast of Peru, home of a civilization that developed in the period 3000–1800 B.C.E. Caral was the largest of some twenty-five urban centers that emerged in the area at that time.
NubiaA civilization to the south of Egypt in the Nile Valley, noted for development of an alphabetic writing system and a major ironworking industry by 500 B.C.E.
Olmec civilizationAn early civilization that developed along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico around 1200 B.C.E.
oracle bonesIn Chinese civilization, animal bones that were heated and the cracks then interpreted as prophecies. The prophecies were written on the bone and provide our earliest written sources for ancient China.
patriarchyLiterally “rule of the father”; a social system of male dominance.
pharaohA king of Egypt. The term literally means “the palace” and only came into use in the New Kingdom, but it is generally employed in reference to all ancient Egyptian rulers.
PhoeniciansA civilization in the area of present-day Lebanon, creators of the first alphabetic writing system.
pyramidMonumental tomb for an Egyptian pharaoh; mostly built during the Old Kingdom (2663–2195 B.C.E.). Pyramids are also found in Meroë to the south of Egypt.
quipuA series of knotted cords, used for accounting and perhaps as a form of writing in the Norte Chico civilization.
rise of the stateA process of centralization that took place in the First Civilizations, growing out of the greater complexity of urban life in recognition of the need for coordination, regulation, adjudication, and military leadership.
salinizationThe buildup of minerals in soil, decreasing its fertility; can be caused by long-term irrigation.
SanxingduiAn ancient city of China that developed independently from the Shang dynasty. ( pron. sahnshing- dwee)
Shang dynastyPeriod of Chinese history from 1766 to 1122 B.C.E. ( pron. shahng)
Son of HeavenTitle of the ruler of China, first known from the Zhou dynasty. It acknowledges the ruler’s position as intermediary between heaven and earth.
TeotihuacánThe largest city of ancient Mesoamerica; flourished around 500 C.E. (pron. teh-o-tee-WAH-kahn)
UrukThe largest city of ancient Mesopotamia. ( pron. OOH-rook)
Xia dynastyA legendary series of monarchs of early China, traditionally dated to 2200–1766 B.C.E. ( pron. shah)
Zhou dynastyPeriod of Chinese history from 1122 to 256 B.C.E. ( pron. joe)
zigguratA Mesopotamian stepped pyramid. Unlike an Egyptian pyramid, a ziggurat was a solid structure of baked brick, an artificial hill at the summit of which stood a temple.


Community School of Naples

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