Mesopotamia
Mesopotamia
Mesopotamia
Geography
Timeline
Religion
Writing
Art & Architecture
Geography
Mesopotamia is made up of different regions, each
with its own geography.
The geography of each area and the natural resources
found there affected the ways that people lived.
Modern Boundaries
The Tigris and Euphrates flow through modern Iraq. The Euphrates
also flows through much of Syria.
Timeline
2200 B.C. Agade Empire expands
and declines
2100 B.C. Ur becomes the capital of
a new empire
2000 B.C. Ur destroyed by Elamites
& Amorites
1500 B.C.
1200 B.C.
650 B.C.
550 B.C.
500 B.C.
Religion
The people of Mesopotamia believed that their
world was controlled by gods and goddesses,
demons and monsters.
There were hundreds of gods who were
responsible for everything in the world, from rivers
and trees to making bread and pottery.
Each city was protected by its own special god or
goddess and their family.
Large temples were built in the centre of the city for these
gods to live in.
Priests looked after the gods with special rituals.
There were also smaller temples throughout the city
where ordinary people could make offerings.
gods.
His symbol is the horned cap.
Mesopotamian myths tell the
story of how the earth was
separated from heaven at the
beginning of time.
In these myths, heaven
becomes Anu's home.
Anu controls shooting stars,
called 'kishru'.
Anu is also in charge of the
Bull of Heaven who can be
sent to earth to avenge the
gods.
Although Anu is an
important Mesopotamian
god, there are no known
pictures of him.
Lama
A goddess people prayed
to for their own personal
protection.
She appears as a woman
in a long, tiered skirt.
Lama is often shown on
cylinder seals leading
people into the presence of
important gods and
goddesses.
Ugallu-Demon
The Ugallu has a
human body with the
head of a lion and the
feet of a bird.
He is a demon who
protects people against
evil demons and
illnesses.
Writing
Over five thousand years ago, people living in
Mesopotamia developed a form of writing to record
and communicate different types of information.
The earliest writing was based on pictograms.
Pictograms were used to communicate basic
information about crops and taxes.
Over time, the need for writing changed and the
signs developed into a script we call cuneiform.
Over thousands of years, Mesopotamian scribes
recorded daily events, trade, astronomy, and
literature on clay tablets.
Cuneiform was used by people throughout the
ancient Near East to write several different
languages.
Seal-Signatures
Curriculum Tablets
This is known today as a
'curriculum tablet'.
It was used in
Mesopotamian schools to
teach pupils about the
different types of texts
written by scribes.
Reed Stylus
A reed stylus was the main
writing tool used by
Mesopotamian scribes.
Scribes created the wedge
shapes which made
cuneiform signs by pressing
the stylus into a clay or wax
surface.
Writing Board
Scribes sometimes used
cuneiform on writing boards.
These boards were made of
wood or ivory with a writing
surface covered with wax.
The wax could be melted
and reused.
This is an ivory writing
board from about 715 B.C. It
was found in a well at
Nimrud.
Mathematics
Archaeology
Large cities in arid regions
Multiple structures
Layered on top of one another
Tell-A heap of compacted bricks, pottery
and stones formed by remains from ancient
settlements.
http://www.learningsites.com/Brak/Tell-Brak_home.html
http://www.learningsites.com/Brak/Tell-Brak_home.html
Computer Reconstruction
http://www.learningsites.com/Brak/Tell-Brak_home.html
Palaces of Assyria
Assyrian palaces are some of the largest
and most important ancient buildings found
in Mesopotamia.
They demonstrate the wealth and
achievements of the Assyrian empire in the
first millennium B.C.
In the palace the king took care of the
business of the empire, received foreign
visitors and performed religious rituals.
Palaces were built to show the power of the
king as well as to inspire loyalty and fear in
ordinary people and visitors.
Nimrud
North Suite:
Some of these rooms were
used by the palace
administrators.
Nearly four hundred cuneiform
tablets were found here as well
as a set of weights.
There were workshops, a
bathroom and storage areas.
At the entrance there were
probably guardrooms as well as
storerooms for grain and oil.
Queens Palace
This area of the palace
was probably the royal
harem where the palace
women lived. Pieces of
ivory which had once
decorated furniture were
found in some of these
rooms.
Warfare
The Assyrian king,
Ashurnasirpal II, draws
back the string of his bow
and gets ready to shoot.
The king's bodyguard
stands next to him holding a
shield and a spear, ready to
defend him.
Two attendants stand
behind the king. One holds
a quiver full of arrows. The
other holds a parasol to
protect the king from sun or
rain.
PG 800
PG 800-A large pit was discovered which had been filled in with earth.
Ziggurats
Temples were originally built on platforms. During
the third millennium B.C., these were made higher
and bigger.
Eventually it was decided to build even higher
temples on platforms which were stepped.
These stepped towers we call ziggurats. By 2000
B.C. mud-brick ziggurats were being constructed
in many Sumerian cities. Later, ziggurats were
constructed in Babylonian and Assyrian cities.
No one knows for certain why ziggurats were built
or how they were used. They are part of temple
complexes, so they were probably connected with
religion.
Ziggurats
The Ziggurat of Ur
In the 1960's and 1970's, the first stage of the ziggurat was
reconstructed by the Iraqi Department of Antiquities. This
restoration was based upon the ideas of the teams who had
excavated over the past two hundred years.