Cradle of civilization

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    Mesopotamia and Egypt were the two earliest civilizations in the Near East. In the Mesopotamia, the earliest religion was Sumer and it was from 4000-2900 B.C.E. This religion and the politics from the Sumer went hand and hand, it was a theocracy. Other civilizations followed the ways of the Sumerian beliefs, but some didn’t not last but for a short period of time and were not successful. The word Mesopotamia means land between rivers, which it’s true because it falls between the Tigris River…

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    Like most civilizations, Mesopotamia changed in a way that helped the people thrive. After analyzing Tom Standage’s novel, A History of the World in Six Glasses, you can begin to understand the changes. All throughout history, civilizations change; but, there are many traditions that never change. In Mesopotamia, beer became a vital source of everyday life. It played an important role in the economy of Mesopotamia and while these new developments were important, many traditions never changed.…

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    is determined by the latitude a geographic location is at. If a civilization has a crop that has a limited amount of labor to harvest less people would have…

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    unequal due to geography. Where a civilization is in the world affects what they grow, domesticated animals, minerals and ability to make steel, and exposure to germs and disease. Geography location affects what crops are being grown and developed in a civilization by their climate. If poeple are living in a place where there is a climate to grow wheat and barley then the they didn’t have to farm all the time but instead build structures and improve the civilization. Wheat and barley is a…

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    Mesopotamia and egypt are different but are mostly two side of the same coin.They both were intelligent nations that were advanced for the their time and great wonders , however there were some difference if you looked at the details , but in the end they were more or less cut from the same cloth. First ruled by kings as independent city states, later, Mesopotamia would be ruled as empires. Strong kings or pharaohs and bureaucratic governments continued a period of continuity and Mesopotamia…

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    The rich, fertile soil of the Middle East led early civilizations to settle, domesticate plants and animals, and thrive. The Fertile Crescent between the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers known as Mesopotamia (now modern Iraq, and extending north into Syria and Turkey) was the home of the world’s first urban culture, the Sumerians, 6,000 years ago. The Sumerians’ Egyptian rivals took advantage of the annual flooding of the Nile for their regular harvest, later exporting a large portion of their…

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    Geography of the Fertile Crescent also known to the Greeks as Mesopotamia played a crucial role in the development of civilization in the region. The mountains provided water to the low lands to irrigate crop and the peoples of the region learned to domesticate animals for farming. As the Mesopotamians learned to use the land agriculture became the central way of life. During the rule of Alexander the Great, the Hellenistic era brought an expansion of Greek language and ideals, and trade with…

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    The Mesopotamian Pantheon

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    No one will ever be absolutely sure what the first civilization on Earth was. As far as the human race knows, the first civilization was Mesopotamia. Mesopotamia was brought to civilization by the Sumerian race around 5000 B.C. Mesopotamians tended to live off the land and their animals, which they had domesticated from the wild. It is the cradle of civilization because of it’s developed writing style, also known as cuneiform. Mesopotamia was known for its knowledgeable people, such as Thales of…

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    Mesopotamia is known as the “cradle of civilization” because it was the birthplace of many diverse civilizations that arose later on. I agree that civilization originated there because the rise of complex urban centers became a foundation for political and economic stability. The abundance of food grown in the fertile crescent made it possible for large numbers of people to live together. Because of the population growth and a stable food source, more people began to specialize and trade their…

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    affect law and social justice would play in a civilization. The roles of individuals in their society, the influence of religion and social hierarchy can affect the enforcement of social justice and the basis of a society’s laws. Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, and Ancient India all had similarities and differences in their attitudes towards law and social justice. Mesopotamia, meaning the “land between the rivers”, was one of the earliest civilizations in the world. It was located between the…

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