Transcript
Page 1: Planned Cities on the Indus

Planned Cities on the Indus

Chapter 2 section 3Page 42

Page 2: Planned Cities on the Indus

Review- chapter 2 section 2

• Which country is the Nile River located in?• Egypt• Which sea does the Nile river empty into?• The Mediterranean• What do Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt refer to?• elevation

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More review

• Who built the pyramids?• Peasants• Kings were also considered gods and

were called?• Pharaohs• How many days and months was the

Egyptian calendar based on?• 365 days, 12 months

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Geography of South Asia

• In India, another civilization developed around 2500 B.C.

• Don’t know much about it’s orgins, or why the civilization declined

• But do know that many characteristics of the Indian culture today can be traced to early civilization

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Geography of South Asia

• A large wall of mountains separate South Asia from rest of the continent

• Some geographers refer to this area (India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh) as a subcontinent

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• Fertile plain formed by 2 rivers- the Indus and the Ganges (GAN-jeez)

• 2 rivers and lands they water make up large area stretching 1500 miles across India called the Indus-Ganges Plain

• Southern part of India is a peninsula- thrusting into the Indian Ocean

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Monsoons

• Seasonal winds dominate India’s climate• October-May, winter monsoons blow dry

air from northeast across country• In June, winds shift, and spring monsoons

bring moisture from the ocean

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Indian Monsoons

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Flooding in India

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Environmental Challenges

• Indus River, like the Nile and Tigris, had yearly floods

• Spread deposits of rich soil over a wide area

• But the floods were unpredictable, and sometimes the Indus river changed its course

• Wet and dry seasons of monsoons posed problems

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The Problem with Rain

• If too much rain, floods swept away whole villages

• If too little rain, plants withered in the fields and people went hungry

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• Worlds tallest mountain to the north, and large desert provided natural barriers from invasion

• River allowed valley people to develop trade with different peoples, including the Mesopotamians

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Civilization Emerges on the Indus

• Indus valley larger area than Mesopotamia or Egypt

• Nobody is sure how settlement began in India, can’t decipher writing system, but there is evidence of agriculture and domesticated sheep and goats dating to 7000 B.C.

• By 3200 B.C. people were farming in villages along the Indus River

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Planned Cities

• 2500 B.C. people in Indus Valley were laying bricks for India’s first cities

• Found the ruins of more than 100 settlements along the Indus

• Laid out cities on a precise grid system• Featured a fortified area called citadel,

holding major buildings of a city• Had separate residential districts

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Toilets back then

• Early engineers created sophisticated plumbing and sewage systems

• See page 44

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Culture and Trade

• Social divisions not that great judging by uniform housing

• Clay and wooden toys suggest a comfortable society that could afford to produce non essential items

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Religion

• Religious artifacts reveal links to modern Hindu culture

• Religious figures found relate to: mother goddess fertility images worship of cattle representations of Shiva

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Indus Seals

• Stamps and seals made of carved stone were used by merchants to identify goods

• Shows us that Indus people conducted long distance trade

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Mysterious End• 1750 B.C. quality of buildings declined and cities

fell into decay• No one is sure why• Some historians think : *Indus River changed course and floods no longer fertilizing the field * people overused the land, overgrazed, over farmed, over cut, etc * Residents may have abandoned the city after a natural disaster or an attack

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End of Civilization


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