Unit 1

  • Period: 100 to

    Unit 1

  • 221

    Warring States Period

    Warring States Period
    Occuring during the latter half of the Zhou dynasty, the Warring States Period is a time when the scale and intensity of warfare drastically increased in China. The battles raged on until only seven major states remained.
  • 221

    Zhou Dynasty

    Zhou Dynasty
    The Zhou were known for creating the Mandate of Heaven. Feng shui was also created during this period.
  • 350

    Moroë

    Moroë
    Capital of a kingdom in southern Nubia. While Meroë was capital, Nubia flourished; showing more independence from Egyptian and Sub-Saharan cultures.
  • 375

    Qin State

    Qin State
    The most innovative state during the Warring States Period. The warriors of Qin took a great risk by being the first state to take in the methods of the Legalists school of political theorists.
  • 400

    Daoism

    Daoism
    Daoism emphasizes living in harmony with the Dao. The Dao is the way or path of nature.
  • 500

    Confucianism

    Confucianism
    Created by a man named Confuscius in early China. Confucianism focuses on the order in an awareness of Tian and a respect of the gods, with emphasis on the importance of family.
  • 500

    Celtic Europe

    Celtic Europe
    The Celts were a group of people in Europe coming into history around 500 B.C.E. Conquests by the Roman Empire would later push the Celts to the western border of Europe along with England.
  • Jan 1, 700

    Mandate of Heaven

    Mandate of Heaven
    The Mandate of Heaven is religious and political ideology in which the eavens could grant or take away power to/from the ruler of China. The power could be taken away from the ruler and given to a new ruler if he did not conduct himself justly in the best interest of his people.
  • Jan 1, 1045

    Shang Period

    Shang Period
    Documents were wrote on oracle bones, which is how we known about the Shang Dynasty. The supreme god during the Shang Dynasty was Di, who controls the storms, and is also very distant from humans and cannot be reached directly. This dynasty was succeeded by the Zhou.
  • Jan 1, 1070

    Egypt- New Kingdom

    Egypt- New Kingdom
    The New Kingdom lasted for the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth dynasties. This period was Egypt's most prosperous time, and marked the peak of it's power. During this period Egypt gained it's greatest territorial extent.
  • Jan 1, 1100

    Nubia

    Nubia
    A region in southern Egypt/ northern Sudan that connected trade between Egypt and Sub-Saharan Africa. In 1750 B.C.E. the capital of Nubia named Kush was created. The Egyptians later invaded Nubia, destroying Kush and expanding their southern boundaries.
  • Jan 1, 1200

    Americas

    Americas
    The first Mesoamerican civilization was Olmec which civilized in 1200 B.C.E. The first South American civilization was Chavin which was created in 900 B.C.E. Llamas were a large part of South American life, used to transport goods easier and to be used for labor.
  • Egypt- Middle Kingdom

    Egypt- Middle Kingdom
    The Middle Kingdom lasted from the late eleventh dynasty to the fourteenth dynasty. The capital was moved to Thebes during this period.
  • Hammurabi

    Hammurabi
    Amorite ruler of Babylon from 1792 B.C.E. - 1750 B.C.E. Known for The Law Code of Hammurabi
  • Indus River Valley

    Indus River Valley
    A plain of more than 1 million acres located in modern day Pakistan.
  • Babylon

    Babylon
    The largest and most important city in Mesopotamia. Capital of the Amorite king Hammurabi.
  • Xin Dynasty

    Xin Dynasty
    Little is known about the Xia Dynasty besides that it was the first dynasty in early Chinese history. Documentation of Chinese history did not begin being recorded until the later Shang Period.
  • Egypt- Old Kingdom

    Egypt- Old Kingdom
    The Old Kingdom lasted from the third dynasty until the sixth dynasty. The capital was moved to Memphis during the third dynsaty. This period is known for its building of pyramids.
  • Hieroglyphics

    Hieroglyphics
    Hieroglyphics were a system of writing in which symbols were known as concepts or words. This writing form was used for official and monumental inscriptions in ancient Egypt.
  • Cuneiform

    Cuneiform
    A system of writing in which wedge-shaped symbols represented words or symbols. Cuneiform was first introduced in 3300 BCE in Mesopotamia.
  • Metallurgy

    Metallurgy
    The people of Meopotamia became good at metallurgy and began to make tools and weapons out of bronze. The metal ores had to be imported from Asia to make bronze. The first production of iron was in Anatolia in 1200 B.C.E. and was also used for tools and weapons.
  • Sumerians

    Sumerians
    The people who lived in Mesopotamia starting in 5000 BCE. Records of these people date back to 2900 BCE. They were taken over by the Semetics by 2000 BCE
  • Mesopotamia

    Mesopotamia
    A civilization situated between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The Mesopotamians were the first peoples to use irrigation systems to water crops and farmland. The Sumerian people lived in the south, while the Semetics lived to the north.