What's my name?
Key Places
Government and
Social Status
Surprise
100

A nickname for Mesopotamia. It was given this nickname due to the good farmland there.

The Fertile Crescent
100

The first civilization to develop. Located in Mesopotamia. The primary city-state was Ur

Sumer

100

Social structure is represented with this shape to show that there are less people at the top with more power & more people at the bottom with less power

A triangle (pyramid)

100

These people were ranked very high in Mesopotamian social hierarchy because they kept the gods happy. Gods controlled all aspects of Mesopotamian life.

Priests

200

The name for the wedge-shaped writing system in Mesopotamia. A stylus was used to press the shapes into clay tablets.

Cuneiform

200

The name for temples that Mesopotamians believed were home to the gods.

Ziggurat

200

The two groups at the top of the Sumerian social pyramid

The Kings (ensi) and priests

200

The belief in more than one god (as seen in Ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome and Mesopotamia)

Polytheism

300

The Mesopotamian king who had the world’s first written law codes carved into stone steles using the wedge shaped writing system known as cuneiform.

Hammurabi

300

The two rivers that surround the land known as Mesopotamia, the fertile crescent, and the cradle of civilization. The cities of Sumer and Babylon were also located between.

Tigris and Euphrates River

300

The lowest classes Mesopotamia & Egypt that had the most amounts of people with little power. They had jobs that involved physical labor anyone could do. 

The unskilled workers (farmers, slaves)

300

This is the acronym we used to order our lessons of study for Mesopotamia  

Geography

Religion

Achievements

Politics

Economy

Social Structure

400

This is the title used for Mesopotamian kings who were priests, judges, military leaders, law makers, and overseers of trade.

Ensi

400

The modern day region in which Mesopotamia could be found.

Middle East (Iraq)

400

The basis of social hierarchy. The thing that determined a person’s rank.

A person’s contribution to society (job, wealth)

400

This is how Mesopotamia's economy worked

Their economy was built on agriculture, surplus of crops. In addition, the surplus led to other non-agricultural jobs (scribes, skilled artists, craftsmen, merchants, artisans, etc.)