måndag 12 november 2012

Monday 12 November 2012

Monday 12 November 2012

Questions: Indus Valley


Why/why not can apply X's theory?

Was a there a leader or someone with higher post in the civilization?

Was there ever war or a major conflict that you know of?

How was art important to the Indus Valley population?

When was the Valley discovered (in modern times)?

What beliefs did they have?

What was their main source of food?

What primary sources (e.g. oracle bones/written records) have been used to study the Indus Valley?

Can you name three sources that you have used?


- Filippa

måndag 5 november 2012

Monday 6 November 2012

Monday 6 November 2012

Civilization project: Application of theories
I judged whether or not the theories could be applied:

  • Paul Wheatley - yes (cosmomagical city: revolves around a religious centre)
  • Lewis Mumford - partially (agrees with Wheatley's, but there was no warfare due to expanding cities and controversy because of religion)
  • Gerda Lerner - no (there is no evidence that women were superior to men or in any way worshipped or had higher status)
  • Karl Marx - partially (there was a class system, but no major conflict between the classes, the working class supported the elite as mentioned in a source)


I will present Paul Wheatley's and Lewis Mumford's theories:


Theories:

Paul Wheatley's cosmomagical theory

Wheatley's Cosmomagical city is the theory that mostly applies to the Huang He's Shang dynasty. The ancient capital has been identified as Shangqiu. The Shang city had a huge religious center where the king lived and worked with his family. The royal court along with high officials were also active in the centre. The centre was the political centre, but remained the centre of ancestral worship as well. 

The centre was the home to political hierarchy and contributed to the development of the complex economic and social system.

Even though there were many small polities, they all surrounded the capital and used it as its centre. 

The graves were of major importance to he dynasties of the Huang He civilization. Archaeologists have discovered  many of the Shang dynasty's graves in Shangqiu. In the graves there is evidence of more than one person in each grave. This is not interpreted as one grave for multiple people, but a grave for one person where humans were sacrificed for the dead person. Human sacrifice was common in the Shang dynasty and was part of their religious belief. This evidence contributes to the possibility to apply the Cosmomagical theory.

Lewis Mumford's theory

Mumfords theory agrees with Wheatley's since they both believe that a city revolved around a religious centre. However Mumford's theory says that many cities of different religions expanded to the extent that they grew together. The growing together resulted in warfare and conflict. There was no war between cities during the Shang dynasties rule, therefore Mumford's theory cannot be applied to the Shang dynasty's rule of the Huang He civilization.  



- Filippa

Monday 22 October 2012

Monday 22 October 2012

Civilization project:

Civilization: Huang He civilization of eastern China.
Group members: Me (Filippa), Malin, Philip H, Felicia and Viggo

Plan:
We will focus on one dynasty of the civilization: The Shang dynasty
We divide tasks evenly and complete them individually. Then we meet up and complete a powerpoint presentation and practice the presentation.
Monday 6 November: All individual tasks understood and started
Wednesday 14 November: All tasks completed. We put together the powerpoint and practice the entire presentation.

My main task:
Presenting a primary source and interpret it.


- Filippa

Monday 8 October 2012


Monday 8 October 2012 

Homework:
300 words on where Homo Sapiens come from:
I believe in the ‘Out of Africa Theory’ because the human ancestors originated from Africa and developed there. Early humans later migrated to other parts of the world, for example human ancestors moved to Europe and develop to Homo Sapiens Neanderthals in order to adjust to the chilly European climate, such as described in the power point presentation. All different parts of the world assisted in developing the Homo species in different ways, but the species evolved in Africa because the conditions were right there for survival. When they had developed more they moved around in Africa, but eventually they moved abroad. We think this is because the Homo species differed too much from the Australopithecus to live together. When the homo species were developed enough to be called Homo sapiens modern they retreated back to the place where they first evolved, South Africa, because the conditions were, as mentioned earlier, right there for development. 

Civilization:
Common elements discussion
Religion (pyramids, ziggurats, bath houses)
River (flood banks, fertile land around)
Writing (hieroglyphics, cuneiform)
Social hierarchy (pyramids, slaves, kings)
Agriculture (irrigation systems)
Exchange of goods (Mesopotamia network)
Civil loyalty
People thought of themselves to belong to somewhere e.g. the people in the civilizations felt they were part of a city rather than a tribe, shift from tirbe to city (citizens/nationality).
Innovative civilizations
Mesopotamis – Iraq
Nile – Egypt
Indus – India
Huang He – Eastern China
Mesoamerica – Mexico
Andes Mountains – West South America
Niger – America
All the first cities come from Mesopotamia; they are totally unique not copied whatsoever. Any other city not on the list is defused.


Theory and criticism:

Wheatley's:
The Cosmo-magical City:
Organized around a religious centre, even before urban civilizations people came together at the religious centre frequently. Important to mix genes from different tribes to get a clean genetic code.
Used magic: Predicted the future through rituals. This magi communicated with the ‘cosmos’ in other words the gods, hence the ‘Cosmo-magical’ name.
The religious centre controlled everything in the city (exercising control) administrative buildings around.

Mumford:
Criticisms of Urbanizations:
Urbanizations leads to continuous warfare, evidence e.g. wall around the city, weapons.
Two cities will overlap and go to war, fight about land.
Power and religion is a destructive mix. Religious war is the worst because it is irrational and can’t be resolved because opinions and beliefs will always disagree.
Enemies become inhuman to each other which leads to extreme and gruesome actions e.g. slaughtering of children and women.



Marx:
Urbanization leads the beginning of ‘class struggle’ and separation.
Marx was first an historian.
Society becomes split into different groups (if this is evident in a civilization Marx theory is correct but there must be evidence of competition between groups).


Lerner:
Female power
Urbanizations begins the subjugation (down fall) of women
Agrees with Mumford’s theory because when groups of people meet warfare is inevitable and men are stronger in warfare i.e. the men gain power because they are better fighter (and don't have to deal with pregnancy etc.).





- Filippa