Tigris-Euphrates River Valley Civilization (Mesopotamia)
Mesopotamia
"the land between the rivers"; an early civilization between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers
city-state
A city with political and economic control over the surrounding countryside
Phoenicia
A civilization in the area of present day Lebanon near Mesopotamia, creators of the first alphabetic writing system
cuneiform
A form of writing that uses groups of wedges and lines. It originated in Mesopotamia.
Middle East
A geographic region that includes a majority of Western Asia & Egypt; Modern day Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Palestine, & Egypt.
monarchy
A government ruled by a king or queen
Sumer
A group of ancient city-states in southern Mesopotamia; the earliest civilization in Mesopotamia.
silt
A mixture of fertile soil and tiny rocks that can make land ideal for farming
scribe
A person who writes
irrigation
A way of supplying water to an area of land using canals, dams, and waterwheels.
Babylon
An ancient city of Mesopotamia known for its wealth and luxury
Fertile Crescent
An area of land between the Tigris and the Euphrates River in the area of modern day Iraq (Mesopotamia) in the shape of an arc (crescent) that is good for agriculture.
Hammurabi's Code of Laws
Babylonian leader who created the first written code of 282 laws that dealt with almost every part of daily life
polytheism
Belief in more than one god
trade
Exchange of goods and services in a market.
Cradle of Civilization
Mesopotamia is called this because the earliest people and cultures were located here
surplus
More food than as needed by a person.
Tigris-Euphrates Rivers
Rivers that ran through Mesopotamia, between them, was an area known as the Fertile Crescent.
government
Someone or some people gain authority over others, laws are created.
social hierarchy
The division of the people in a society by rank or class.
pictograms
The earliest form of writing in which pictures represented word or ideas
ziggurats
temples built by Sumerians to honor the gods and goddesses they worshiped
architecture
the science of creating buildings and other human made structures
division (specialization) of labor
the type of arrangement in which each worker specializes in a particular task or job