Geography
Early Civilization
The Culture
The Kingdoms
Culture II
100

Fertile land-area stretching from the Persian Gulf to the Nile River Valley

Fertile Crescent

100

The artificial application of water from one place to another

irrigation

100

Mesopotamia is an ancient Greek word that translates to:

The land between two rivers

100

Established by Sargon of Akkad

Akkadian Empire

100

The lowest level of ancient Mesopotamian society

slave class

200

A river that rhymes with Cyrus

Tigris

200

A Mesopotamian temple

ziggurat

200

One who was trained to write 

Scribe

200

Hammurabi's kingdom centered in the city of Babylon

Babylonian Empire

200

Wedge-shaped writing 

cuneiform

300

Babylon was located on the banks of this river

Euphrates

300

A barrier that people build across rivers or other bodies of water so they can store the water or move it to another location.

dam

300

The opposite of monotheism

polytheism

300

The empire of Nebuchadnezzar

Chaldean/Neo-Babylonian

300

Considered the oldest epic poem in human history

Epic of Gilgamesh

400

The climate of the Fertile Crescent

Dry and hot

400

An independent kingdom or state made up of a city and the surrounding lands it controls.

city-state

400

Most people in Mesopotamia worked in this field (no pun intended)

farming/agriculture

400

Largest of the empires of Mesopotamia

Assyrian Empire

400

Considered to be the oldest recorded law code in human history

Hammurabi's Code

500

Major body of water at the mouth of both the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers.

Persian Gulf

500

Rivers of the Fertile Crescent were important routes for:

trade

500

Each city-state had one of these patrons

gods/goddesses/deities

500

Region of southeastern Mesopotamia home to the earliest city-states

Sumer

500

Nebuchadnezzar built up his capital city which became well-known throughout the ancient world

Babylon