Places/Peoples
Innovations
Terms
Figures
Eras
100

 The “Cradle of Civilization”. It refers to the area between the Tigris, Euphrates, and Nile Rivers.

The Fertile Crescent

100

A type of writing that uses symbols for words or objects. 

Pictographic Script

100

The ability to shape and mold metal.

Metallurgy

100

The man who started the Akkadian Empire

Sargon of Akkad/ Sargon the Great

100

A time before written history.

Prehistory

200

War with these people is a cause of Akkadian decline.

Elamites

Amorites

Gutians

200

A type of script that uses symbols representing sounds

Phonographic Script

200

A political system consisting of an independent city having sovereignty over contiguous territory.

A City- State

200

He extends the Akkadian Empire toward Egypt and is called "The Greatest of the Akkadian Kings"

Naram-Sin

200

The period consisting of three separate dynasties lasting from 2900–2350 B.C.

The Early Dynastic Period

300

The first peoples to settle Mesopotamia.

The Ubaid people
300

The first written language; the most commonly used script in Mesopotamia.

Cuneiform

300

A large tiered structure used for religious ceremonies. The most famous one was excavated in the City-State of Ur

A Ziggurat 

300

The second son of Sargon of Akkad

Manishtusu

300

The first multinational empire in recorded history.

The Akkadian Period

400

The man who excavated Ur

C. Leonard Woolley

400

The oldest surviving code of law.

The Code of Ur-Nammu

400

A way by which farmers can water their crops

Irrigation 

400

The first son of Sargon of Akkad

Rimush

400

These people settled between the Tigris and Euphrates from 4500 to 4000 B.C., coining the name for this period.  

The Ubaid Period

500

these peoples had the first ever postal system

The Akkadians

500

The development of farming on a large-scale .

Agriculture

500

The art or practice of garden cultivation and management.

Horticulture

500

This man wins the first war in written history.

Enmebaragesi of Kish

500

this period, extending from 4100-2900 B.C. is named after one of the city-states therein.

The Uruk Period

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