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In other videos, we talk about how 10 to 15,000 years ago, you have the emergence of agriculture primarily around river valleys.
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And it's no surprise that agriculture first came about around river valleys.
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Because the rivers would flood, making the soil around them fertile.
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They would provide fresh water for crops and for the people who would live near them.
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Later on, the rivers could be useful for transporting things like crops.
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And so it's not surprising that our first significant civilizations also emerged where the first agriculture emerged.
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And our first civilizations we'll see in ancient Egypt along the Nile.
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We will see it in the Indus Valley along the Indus River.
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We'll see it in China along the Yellow and Yangtze Rivers.
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And we'll also see it in Mesopotamia along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers.
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And what we're gonna focus on in this video in particular is Mesopotamia.
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Now, the word Mesopotamia literally come from mesos—between and potamos.
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I'm probably not pronouncing it right, rivers.
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So it's the area between rivers is literally what Mesopotamia is referring to.
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And it's primarily modern day Iraq.
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Now the reason why this is particularly interesting and it's called the cradle of civilization, is not only is it one of or perhaps the first place that agriculture developed.
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It was at the crossroads of many other early civilizations.
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Notice it's right in between the Indus Valley civilization here, and then the ancient Egyptians.
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And other civilizations that were emerging in the area.
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And so it's not surprising that this was a geography that had significant developments in terms of technology, in terms of architecture, in terms of religion, in terms of writing.
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And the first civilization we believe that emerged in Mesopotamia are the Sumerians.
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And Sumeria and Sumerians, it's most associated with this region right over here of, let me circle it.
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This region right over here of southern Mesopotamia.
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And we currently think that this civilization started to emerge around 4000 BCE.
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You can see it on this timeline here in orange.
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And they developed things as basic as the wheel.
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The first wheel that was ever discovered was 3500 BCE in Sumeria.
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They're famous for their architectural structures.
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This is a picture here of a ziggurat, which was at the center of many of these Sumerian and as we'll see Mesopotamian cities.
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This would require an incredible amount of labor to produce.
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And at the top of these, they had temples to their Gods.
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And their Gods, they had a polytheistic religion, and their Gods took human form.
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Also amongst the Sumerians is where we think one of the first written languages developed.
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It wasn't the first.
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You also have the Egyptian hieroglyphics.
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And written language emerged amongst the Harappans and the Indus Valley civilization and amongst the Chinese.
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But it was one of the first languages.
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This right over here is an example of a cuneiform tablet.
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This is a cuneiform tablet written in the script.
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Cuneiform developed by these ancient Sumerians.
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Now, when you talk about Mesopotamia, you'll talk about Sumerians.
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But we'll also talk about other civilizations that emerge.
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In particular, let me write them all down.
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You have the Sumerians.
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You'll also hear something called Akkadian.
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And as we'll see, Akkadian is both a language and an empire that will emerge.
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In Mesopotamia over the roughly 3,000 years BCE, the two primary languages are Akkadian, which is considered a Semitic language.
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It's related to modern Semitic languages, like Arabic and Hebrew.
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And the reason why they're called Semitic is because they're spoken or they're reported to be spoken by the descendants of Shem, who was Noah's son, in the Hebrew bible.
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So, you have the language Akkadian, which is Semitic, and then you have the other language, which is Sumerian.
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And as we get into the third millennium BCE, the Sumerians start to have a lot of interaction with Akkadian speaking people.
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And Akkadian speaking people are initially associated primarily with northern Mesopotamia.
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And we believe the first empire, true empire, perhaps the first empire in the world emerged from Acadia.
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And it was called the Akkadian Empire.
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And if we scroll down over here, we can see how the Akkadian Empire spread.
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We believe that the town of Akkad, which the Akkadian Empire is named for, some place in this region right over here.
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And the first significant ruler who really spread that empire was Sargon, often referred to as Sargon the Great.
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And you can see, you can see that that would have been established around the middle of the 23rd, or actually the 24th century BCE.
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So around 2350, you have Sargon establishing what might be the first dynastic empire in the world, the Akkadian Empire.
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And he was able to take control of both northern and southern Mesopotamia.
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So even the Sumerians were under the control of the Akkadians.
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As we'll see over time, you have a lot of mixing between the Akkadian language, the Sumerian language.
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Akkadian gets written in the Cuneiform script.
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And starting at around this period, Sumerian starts to die as a spoken language.
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And Akkadian really becomes dominant.
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Now, the Akkadians rule for a little over 100 years, and then you have several other empires.
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It can get confusing.
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The way I have structured this timeline is this top line right over here is southern Mesopotamia.
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And this bottom line right over here is northern Mesopotamia.
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So this orange shows you where the Sumerians were reigning.
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Some people think that they might have been the first empire.
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This bottom line here, you can see the Akkadian speakers.
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But they were fragmented until you have Sargon the great establishing the Akkadian Empire.
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Now, you briefly then have a short-term neo-Sumerian empire.
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But the next significant empire that's often talked about when associated with Mesopotamia is the Babylonian Empire.
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So Babylon, the Babylonian Empire was centered at Babylon, right over here.
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And it really became a significant empire under the ruler Hammurabi.
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And Hammurabi is perhaps most known, you can see how he was able to spread the empire.
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The dark brown is what he had with this empire when he took rule.
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And the light brown is what he was able to spread it to.
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So once again, both north and south.
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And he's perhaps most famous for his famous code of Hammurabi, which is depicted here.
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And it wasn't the first written code, but it was one of the earliest.
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And you could view it as almost a proto-constitution.
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And it was based on things that the Sumerians had before.
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But they've even influenced things like biblical laws, things that come down to modern codes of law today.
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Now, after the Babylonians, the other significant empire that would have control over significant portions of Mesopotamia is the Assyrian Empire.
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And the Assyrian Empire is named for their, I guess you could say their home base, the town of Assur.
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You can see it in this map here, where we showed the Akkadian Empire.
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And both the Babylonians and the Assyrians were Akkadian speaking, so at this point now, and as we get into the later Assyrian period, we'll start to have Aramaic be a more significant language.
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Another Semitic language, but as you can see here, the Assyrian Empire at its peak controlled much of the modern day Middle East.
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Now, the Assyrian Empire would eventually collapse in the seventh century BCE.
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And it would be taken over by the Neobabylonian Empire.
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I have a map of that right over here, which also controlled much of the modern middle east.
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Probably the most famous ruler of the Neobabylonian Empire was Nebuchadnezzar II from the Hebrew bible famous for taking the early Jewish people captive.
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The famous Babylonian captivity.
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But eventually they would be overthrown.
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And they would be overthrown in the sixth century BCE by the Persians and Cyrus the Great.
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And that'll actually be the end of the Babylonian captivity according to biblical accounts.
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But the big picture is that Mesopotamia is called the cradle of civilization for a good reason.
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Not only do we have these technological and architectural advancements, their religion, their writing has influenced civilization since, for the last five, six, seven thousand years.
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Well, I'd say definitely the last 5,000 years.
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And a lot of these ideas that came out of Mesopotamia.
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Like written codes of law and the technologies and all the rest follow with us today.