Chronological
Chronological
Chronological and Terms
Terms
Terms
100

Hammurabi

(4) 

(~1792–1750 BCE, Babylonian king, famous law code)

100

Ashurbanipal

(6) 

(~668–627 BCE, last great Assyrian king)

100

Neo-Babylonians

(9)

(626–539 BCE)

100

Colony

a country or area under the full or partial political control of another country, typically a distant one, and occupied by settlers from that country.

100

Navigation

Built ships and developed trade routes to use the North Star as a navigation guide.

200

Assyrians

(6)

(powerful empire, peaked ~900–609 BCE)

200

Persians

(12)

(Achaemenid Empire, ~550–330 BCE)

200

Babylonians

(5) 

(Old Babylonian Empire, ~1894–1595 BCE)

200

Stele

Tribute

a stone or wooden slab, generally taller than it is wide, erected in the ancient world as a monument. The surface of the stele often has text, ornamentation, or both. These may be inscribed, carved in relief, or painted.

A tax to the empire.

200

Seals

Carved in stone, clay and were used to identify an items owner

300

Darius I

(11)

(~522–486 BCE, expanded Persian Empire, built Persepolis)

300

Sargon of Akkad

(2)

(~2334–2279 BCE, founded the Akkadian Empire)

300

Irrigation

Water flowing between canals to water crops

300

City-State

Independent state that includes city in its surrounding territory.

300

Polytheism

Ziggurat

The belief in more than one god.

a rectangular stepped tower, sometimes surmounted by a temple. Ziggurats are first attested in the late 3rd millennium BC and probably inspired the biblical story of the Tower of Babel. Temples of worship that were pyramid shape.

400

Cyrus the Great

(10)

(~559–530 BCE, founder of Achaemenid Persian Empire, conquered Babylon in 539 BCE)

400

Nebuchadnezzar

(8)

(~605–562 BCE, greatest Neo-Babylonian king)

400

Cuneiform

Triangle shaped symbols/letters pressed on to wet clay. The worlds first form of writing.

400

Cavalry

Standing army

Military on horseback 

The Akkadian Empire, founded by Sargon of Akkad, is credited with forming the world's first standing professional army around 2300 BCE. This permanent, paid force replaced the earlier Sumerian practice of raising armies by conscripting all free male citizens. The Akkadian army developed specialized units, a structured command, and techniques like the phalanx, laying the foundation for later Mesopotamian military powers like the Assyrians and Babylonians.  

400

Currency

Barter

The currency of ancient Mesopotamia evolved from the barter of goods like barley to a standardized silver shekelas a unit of weight and value, which served as the primary form of money. Unlike modern currency, these shekels were not coins until much later, but were instead silver pieces, or ingots, that were officially weighed and sometimes sealed to certify their value.

Trading goods without money.

500

Sumer

(1) 

(earliest known civilization, ~4500–1900 BCE)

500

Akkadians

(3)

(Empire lasted ~2334–2154 BCE)

500

Hammurabi's Code

Code written in cuneiform in the middle of the city so everyone can see the walls. 300 laws that gave specific consequences for crime.

500

Fertile Crescent/Mesopotamia

Land between rivers (tigris and Euphrates)

500

Cultural Diffusion

Spreading of their culture traits to other areas via trade, migration and conquest.