Humanities 1 # 1
Humanities 1 # 1
Humanities 1 # 1
LECTURE # 1
BY
SEPTEMBER 6, 2010
DISCOVERING PREHISTORY
According to scientists, our planet is about 4.5 billion years old but the near-human
or proto-humans creature (hominids) first appeared on the planet between ten and
five 5 million years ago, probably in eastern and southern Africa.
Scientists use many sources to learn about the past. Among the most important of
the sources are written records such as inscriptions, letters, diaries, and newspapers.
Scholars use the term prehistory to describe the long period before writing was
invented
To learn about prehistory, scholars use unwritten records such as buildings, pottery,
and bones
The Study of Prehistory
Anthropologists use artifacts and bone fragments to study the ways people
organize societies
Other scientists are also interested in prehistory. e.g., geologists often find
fossils, evidence of plant or animal life preserved in rock. Fossils show the
types of plants and animals that existed in a particular time.
Like detectives, archeologists piece together what they and other scientists
discover to form a picture of the past. As new evidence is uncovered, the
picture change
Stone Age Peoples
As a result, scholars use the term “Stone Age” to describe the prehistoric
period of time when people used simple stone tools.
Stone Age also describes a way of life in which people rely on such stone
tools.
The Stone Age is often divided into the Old Stone Age and the New Stone
Age.
The Old Age may have begun as early as 500,000 B.C.E. It lasted to about 10,
000 B.C.E.
The New Stone Age lasted from about 10,000 B.C.E. to about 3,500 B.C.E.
The Old Stone Age
Archaeologists have found remains and artifacts of Old stone Age people in many
parts of the world, including East Africa, China, Southeast Asia, Europe, the Middle
East, and the Americas
Based on their findings, scientists have begun to construct a picture of life in the Old
Stone Age
Old Stone Age people lived by fishing, hunting and gathering plants that grew wild.
They were nomads, people who moved in search of food. For example, they would
follow herds of animals. Or if wild berries and nuts became scarce in an area, they
would migrate to another area where food was plentiful.
A simple social structure developed during the Old Stone Age. Groups of related
families joined to form small hunting bands.
They built no permanent shelters. Instead, they camped in caves or slept under
structures made of branches and grass.
While some hunted, others stayed near the camp to gather wild food and
care for the young.
There is evidence that during the Old Stone Age people developed spoken
languages and learned how to control fire.
Fire provided light and warmth, protection against wild animals, and heat
for cooking food.
Old Stone Age people made simple tools such as hand axes and choppers.
The earliest tools were pieces of flint, a hard stone, chipped to produce a
sharp cutting edge.
Later, people made stone and bone tools for more specialized uses. These
tools included needles, skin scrapers, harpoons, fishhooks, arrowheads and
spear points.
Some scholars suggest that during the Old Stone Age people accepted
basic religious beliefs. For example, they think that cave paintings made by
prehistoric hunters had a religious meaning
Perhaps the hunters believed that drawing the animals could help them in
the hunt.
The date often used to indicate the end of the Old Stone Age, about 10,000
B.C.E. It also marks the end of the last ice age.
Scientists think the earth has experienced four ice ages over millions of
years.
During the last ice age, thick sheets of ice, called glaciers, spread out from
the polar regions.
In North America, glaciers stretched as far south as the middle of present
day U.S.A. Glaciers covered much of northern Europe and parts of Asia.
As a result, ocean levels dropped, and land areas today covered with water
were exposed.
A land bridge may have connected North America and Asia where the
Bering Sea is today.
Some scientists think that about 25,000 years ago people from Asia
followed herds of wild animals across the land bridge into North America.
When the glaciers melted, the level of the ocean rose. The land bridge
disappeared, and the people in North America were cut off from Asia.
The end of the last ice age caused dramatic changes in local climates
around the world
Deserts appeared where lush plants had grown, and warm weather
brought new plants to life in formerly frigid areas.
Between 10,000 B.C.E. and 3500 B.C.E. people in parts of the world
gradually stopped hunting and gathering food and became farmers.
They domesticated, or tamed, wild animals such as dogs, sheep, and goats
and began to grow grain and vegetables for food.
Scholars speculate that women were the farmers in many of these early
societies and that men hunted.
People grew crops that were suited to the local soil and climate. In the
Middle East and Africa, for example, they grew wheat, barley, and oats.
They grew rice and root crops such as yams in Asia. Beans, squash, and
maize, or corn, were grown in the Americas.
They built homes, and property became important. Even so, not everyone
abandoned the nomadic way of life
They made baskets for storing grain, nets for fishing, and fire hardened
pottery for cooking.
Towards the end of the New Stone Age, several new developments greatly
changed the way people lived. For example, farmers began to use animals such
as the ox to pull plows instead of pulling the plow themselves.
As a result, farmers could plow more land and reap larger harvests, which
supported growing population.
Other important developments included the invention of the wheel and the
sail and the use of metal.
In addition, people in the late Neolithic Age began to use metal as well as stone
for tools and weapons.
They first used copper. Then they discovered that copper combined with tin
formed a harder metal, called Bronze.
By 3000 B.C.E., each of these inventions was being used in some parts of the
world. However, they were not invented everywhere at the same time.
Most appeared first in the middle East. Some were not used in other places for
thousands of years.
People used the inventions of the New Stone Age to build more complex societies
called civilization
Emergence of Civilization
Early civilizations did not just appear over night. They gradually
developed in different parts of the world.
Simple farming settlements grew into large cities by the end of the
Neolithic Age, about 3500 B.C.E
The earliest cities appeared in four great river valleys. Cities may have
emerged as early as 6000 B.C.E. in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers in western Asia.
Other cities developed in the valleys of the Nile River in North Africa, the
Indus River in South Asia, and the Yellow River in East Asia.
When the rivers flooded, the water left deposited silt, a soil rich in
minerals, made the especially fertile.
Flood waters also brought needed moisture to the land, and people used
river water for irrigation during dry periods.
In addition, the rivers contained plentiful fish and attracted animals, two
additional sources of food.
Some early cities had as many as half a million residents. City dwellers
undertook major projects such as clearing new farmland and building vast
irrigation systems as well as constructing temples, palaces, and walls for
defense.
Like the people of the New Stone Age, city dwellers were polytheistic –
that is, they worshipped many gods.
They believed that gods and goddesses controlled the forces of nature. It
was, therefore, important to them to win the god’s favor in order to prevent
disaster.
Only priests knew the rituals to influence the gods. Thus they gained
enormous power.
Military rulers had clear responsibilities. They shared the priests’ task of
keeping the gods friendly, and were responsible for defending their cities
against enemies.
They acted as judges, made laws, and appointed officials to keep order.
They also supervised building and irrigation projects.
To support the temple and pay for vast construction projects, city dwellers
had to contribute a portion of their labor or their harvests to the
government.
The innovations in technology of the late New Stone Age were important
to city dwellers.
Bronze came into such widespread use for vessels, tools, and weapons that
historians have often called the period of early civilization the “Bronze
Age.”
Important social and economic changes also occurred during the Bronze
Age.
Because of the surplus, some people did not have to farm. Rather, they
could trade products or labor for the food they needed. For example, a potter
might trade a clay cooking vessel to a farmer for grain.
The system of exchanging one set of goods or services for another barter
economy.
Social Classes
At the top of the structure was the priest-king or king . Below the priest-
king or king was a class of priests and nobles.
Nobles generally based their power and wealth on owning large amounts
of land. Being a noble was hereditary – that is, the children of nobles were
also nobles.
Artisans and small traders ranked next, followed by the largest class, made
up of peasant farmers and workers.
At the bottom of the social structure were slaves. Slaves were men,
women, and children who had been taken captive in war or who were
enslaved to pay their debts.
In early civilizations, people generally could not move from one social
class to another.
Children usually learned a trade from their parents and so tended to stay in
the same occupation.
Keeping Records
A young man who mastered the difficult task of learning to read and write
was called a scribe.
Writing was more than keeping of records. It became the means of passing
the wisdom and learning of one generation on to the next.
Trade, warfare, and migration helped spread ideas and products from one
city to another and from one civilization to another.
For example, city dwellers along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers traded
with people in other parts of the Middle East for timber, metal, and stone.
Warfare sometimes destroyed elements of a civilization, but it also helped
spread ideas.
From this process, distinct patterns of culture developed that were passed on
to future generations. Culture is the customs, ideas, and ways of life of a
group of people.