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Summary Ancient Mesopotamia: The Birth of Writing and Urban Civilization

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This document details the emergence of the world's first urban civilization in Mesopotamia, explaining the environmental factors that supported agriculture, the necessity of writing for administrative records, and the development of specialized labor and long-distance trade

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Writing & city life M. Imp
1. What’s history?: the study of past based on facts & evidence which helps us to understand our roots
& connects past to present. To understand our roots & To learn from mistakes
2. Who’s Hammurabi? What do you mean by Hammurabi?
• Hammurabi was famous king of Babylon (in ancient Mesopotamia) around 1792 BCE
• He was a Babylonian king who made one of the first/earliest law codes, i.e. Hammurabi law code
to keep justice in his kingdom
• The law code contains laws about justice, punishments, trades, family & property
• The theme of the law code is “ an eye for an eye”
• An inscription shows him receiving a message from the sun god, with laws written in cuneiform
• Though strict, the code strengthened administration & made the upper class more responsible.
3. Who was Assurbanipal? Why and where did he established a library?
• Assurbanipal was the last ruler of Assyria.
• He is known for collecting many cuneiform writings & establishing an earliest library
• He established a library at his capital, Nineveh
• He collected 20000-30000 cuneiform writings and kept them as stacks
• He built a library to preserve/save & transfer the knowledge to future generation
4. Why were civilization on river banks: Fertile lands, Transportation, Agriculture , Water supply, rearing
animals & rivers have religious importance
5. Who were the kings of ancient Mesopotamian cities
• Uruk city (Sumerian) { 3200-1900} of Gilgamesh – for Gilgamesh, temples, Enmarker’s organized
trade, is in southern Mesopotamia
• Ur city (Sumerian) { 3000-1900 BCE} of Ur-Nammu is in southern meso. For bad city planning &
royal tombs
• Sumerian civilization/empire (3000-2000 BCE) of Gilgamesh- first known Mesopotamian
civilization, invented cuneiform script and earliest language is in southern Mesopotamia
• Mari city-state {2900-1750 BCE} Of Zimrillim- imp for trade & pastoral city, for palaces in western
Mesopotamia
• Akkadian civilization/empire {2300- 2150 BCE} of Sargon- I- for starting an earliest empire is in
central Mesopotamia
• Babylonian {1900-540 BCE} of Hammurabi- for Hammurabi law code is in southern Meso
• Assyrian /empire{1350-650 BCE} of Assurbanipal – for earliest library in northern
 SABAS= Sumerians Akkadian Babylonians Assyrians
6. Why Mesopotamian growth?
• Fertile land: located between 2 rivers- Tigris & Euphrates, hence support agriculture, resulting in
food surplus
• Trade’s growth: cities become trade hubs by trading goods, textiles, metals, etc
o Ziggurats’ construction:-
o They were centre for trade, work & religious activities, storage & records
o They employed people, kept records & organized resource/goods’ distribution
• Division of labour: division of labour create specialization in different works like pottery, textile
• Cuneiform writing: helped/improve city management & record kings’ deeds, trade & administration

, 7. What’re factors of urbanization?
• Division of labour: people did different jobs like family, trade
• Transportation: goods & people moved by boats & carts
• Keeping records: they write everything down
• Occupational change: people opted new jobs beside farming
• Social organization: society has classes like rulers, priests. Workers & slaves
• Storage facilities: goods were stored in big buildings
8. Write a note on cuneiform writing system?
• Cuneiform is derived from the Latin word “cuneous” & “forma” which means wedge & shaped,
which means wedge-shaped writing systems
• It’s the first writing systems/ is one of the first writing systems
• It was developed by the Sumerians in ,Mesopotamia around 3500 BCE
• The script was written on clay tablets by a reed pen marking wedge-shaped marks
• It was used to record trade, laws, goods, kings’ deeds, stories & daily life, etc’
• It was invented by Sumerians and later continued in Akkadian for over 2,000 years
9. Urbanisation in Southern Mesopotamia: Temples and Kings(Why Temples= houses, Villages
Relocation)
• From 5000 BCE, settlements began in southern Mesopotamia
• earliest cities grew around temples, trade, or as imperial cities.
• Early settlers built small brick temples for gods like Moon God of Ur or Inanna.
• Temples grew larger with rooms around courtyards;
• Gods were worshipped with grain, curd, and fish; they owned fields, fisheries, and herds.
• Temples processed produce, employed merchants, and kept written records of distributions.
• The temples managed work, employees & kept records of animals & goods
• The temple was used as storehouses
• People offer grain, curd, fish, etc to the temple to gods
• The temple was the centre for work, food, storage & records
• The god was the theoretical owner of everything
• It was used as shelters during warfare
• villages were periodically relocated in Mesopotamia Because rivers changed their course & Also
there were man-made problems like people living in the upstream of river could diver so much water
into their fields that the people living in downstream were left without water
• Successful war chiefs distributed loot, took prisoners, offered booty to gods, beautified temples, and
managed temple wealth.
• War captives and locals worked for temples or rulers, were paid in rations
• one temple needed 1,500 men for 10 hours a day over five years.
• People made baked clay cones for colourful temple mosaics, sculptures were made in imported
stone.
• Potter's wheel allowed mass production of pots, a technological landmark for urban economy.
• Temples built at higher elevation To show respect for gods & keeping god as the superior power,
people can see the temples from far away & It protects the temple safe from floods or dirt
10. Life in the city

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Subido en
12 de abril de 2026
Número de páginas
6
Escrito en
2025/2026
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RESUMEN

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