CHW3M Mesopotamian Art and Sciences February 23 rd, 2015.
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CHW3MMesopotamian Art and Sciences
February 23rd, 2015
MESOPOTAMIAN ARTS: WRITING
Cuneiform was one of the __________ forms of writing and was based on _________ signs
It first appeared in Sumer about 3000 BCE and probably developed because of the need to keep _______ records in ______ and ___________
Henry Rawlinson deciphered the cuneiform writings by __________ it to the old Persian text. He spent 12 years deciphering the text before he could begin ___________ it
Before he learned how to read cuneiform, historians didn’t know that ancient _______ had ever existed – pretty significant discovery!
CUNEIFORM
Historians knew about the ancient Babylonians and Assyrians, from the _______ and other sources, and they knew that cuneiform tablets were the record left by these peoples – later, they learned of an earlier civilization that _________ all the others
People wrote cuneiform on _______ or _______tablets, inscribing the picture signs
Rather than scratching the notations into mud, scribes would jab the tablet with the end of a reed cut in the _______ of a large __________
The word cuneiform comes from the Latin word cuneus, meaning ________
Once wedge-marks were made, tablet was baked like a brick
SUMERIAN CUNEIFORM
The earliest Sumerian cuneiform _________ were picture symbols or pictograms that represented concrete objects such as an ____ or _______
At first, they were written in __________, read downwards, _______ to _______
As time evolved, the scribes ________ the symbols 90 degrees to make them easier to _______
Eventually symbols came to represent _______, not just objects
Symbols representing ideas are called ideograms
They also abandoned the writing practice from right to left because it tended to __________
WRITING CONT’D In Mesopotamian times the scribes were responsible
for _______ and __________ Early scribes were ________, later they became their
own professional group – greatly respected by ______ classes
Rulers depended on them to record ______ Common people needed them to write ______ and
______ for them Scribes (because of their education & social standing)
rose to positions of _______ government service In Sumer, they oversaw government operations such
as the ___________ and __________ of irrigation works Cuneiform spread through to the Babylonians &
Assyrians – very helpful for ___________
MESOPOTAMIAN LITERATURE
Narrative _______ or epics, they preserved their ancient ________ and passed on _________ teachings, accounts of _________, and stories of their _________
One of the oldest pieces of literature is the Epic of Gilgamesh The epic is the story of the heroic Sumerian King
Gilgamesh, who ruled around 2600 BCE (most likely not recorded until long after its creation)
He was both ________ and ________, considered to be 2/3 god, 1/3 man, in this epic he is seen as brutal & quick to forget the feelings of others (he had a wall to protect the city – however people had to work hard to construct it)
MESOPOTAMIAN ART & SCULPTURE
Sculpture was an important part of life in Mesopotamia
Almost everyone owned a small ________ of one of the gods made of terra-cotta, gypsum, _______, or copper
Nearly all of the statues depict a figure standing quietly with hands clasped in ________
Larger carvings were done for the ________ Mosaics were often used to tell a story A famous mosaic is the ‘Standard of Ur’ A _________ is a symbol of power or authority of
the _______ (like today’s flag to represent a king or country)
ART & SCULPTURE CONT’D: STANDARD OF UR
ART & SCULPTURE CONT’D
The Standard of Ur consists of 2 ________, inlaid with mother of pearl, mussel shells and lapis lazuli – one side depicts scenes of ______, the other depicts scenes from a ________/victory
Mosaics of battle show soldiers bringing _________ of war back to their king, riding in four-wheeled chariots – earliest ________ we have of the use of the ________
Relief carvings on buildings were an important art form in Babylonia and Assyria Depicted mythical ________ or _________, or they
portrayed an important ________
THE SCIENCES – THE WHEEL
Mesopotamia’s most important technological ________ was the ________ – invented by the Sumerians (we can only speculate how happened)
The _______ had monumental impact! By 3250 BCE the Sumerians built wheeled
wagons and chariots to replace their _______ With Ox’s pulling wagons/chariots, farmers
transported three to four times the weight in _______/produce
Wheel had more applications _________ (easier to pull water from wells) Potter’s _______ (marked beginning of fine
pottery)
THE SCIENCES – METALLURGY
Sumerians are credited with the technological advanced that led to the Bronze Age (3000 BCE), but may also have originated in eastern _______
Before Bronze Age, copper had been used in western Asia (early as 8000 BCE)
Copper is a soft _______ and used for creating jewellery, but it’s _______ for making weapons or tools
Most tools were made of _______ during this time
Originally it was hammered to ________ its shape
Later, someone discovered how to ______ and cast copper by pouring it into moulds
METALLURGY CONT’D Bronze is an alloy composed of ________ and ______ It’s superior to copper because it’s harder, more
________, and provides a sharper cutting edge (probably created by accident)
Bronze was an __________ metal to produce, but easier to cast than copper because it had a ________ melting point
Bronze took over from ________ as the chief material for tool-making, later replaced by _______
Iron Age began about 1200 BCE, the Assyrians were the first people in Mesopotamia to use it (introduced first in the Middle East)
When ore was poured into moulds, it became _______ iron, when it was reheated, beaten (wrought), and ________, it became wrought iron - stronger
THE SCIENCES – MATHEMATICS
The Sumerians could count in 10’s and 100’s, but they preferred to use _____ as their arithmetical unit
___________ was very important to the Sumerian’s political and economic systems Used math to build the _______ To keep accurate _______ and ______ records Tabulate ________ owed to the state
The mathematical system is a _________Our current 360 degree circle, 60 minute
hour, and 60 second minute came from the Sumerians!
THE SCIENCES - TIME Mesopotamians believed that the _______ controlled
the forces of ___________ They named various groups of stars, gave them
special _________ and used them to predict the ______ The _______ that zodiac use today developed from
this practice Astronomers studying the stars worked out a _______
calendar of 12 months Divided their year into ______ seasons, emesh
(_______) and enten (_________) Their lunar year contained only _____ days, which is
short 33.75 days short of the solar year – the king would decide when to add the extra month every 3 years – he relied on ___________
TIME CONT’D
Of all of the Mesopotamian peoples, the Chaldeans took the ________ interest in the movements of ________ bodies
They believed they needed a more accurate _________ to better plan agricultural operations more effectively
The Chaldeans were convinced that events on _______ were a reflection of events in the _______
They relied on ______ for determining direction (land or sea)
IN CONCLUSION… The people of Mesopotamia developed a magnificent
and thriving civilization, despite the environmental __________ (they controlled the forces of nature)
The first known form of _________ was developed in Sumer (recorded business transactions, farm yields, laws, myths, and legends)
Sumerian cuneiform writing evolved and remain the standard form for ___________ of years
Laws and law codes were created to ________ human behaviour
Mesopotamia developed a need for ____________ Finally, they made innovations in the fields of
architecture and art, their invention of the _______, and extended use of the _______
SUMERIAN CUNEIFORM DEVELOPMENT OF CUNEIFORM WRITING PG.54
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