Vocab
Sumer
Achievements
Religion
Geography
100

The reason(s) it is called the Fertile Crescent.

It has fertile soil and is shaped like a crescent.

100

The class of people at the bottom of Mesopotamian society.

Enslaved people.

100

Early Mesopotamians learned to control the flow of water into their fields by building dams and channels in a process called...

Irrigation

100

The belief that there are many gods.

Polytheism.

100

The names of the two rivers that brought fertile soil to the Fertile Crescent.

Tigris and Euphrates

200

An independent city and its surrounding land.

City-State

200

This ancient conquerer defeated all the other Sumerian city-states to create the world's first Empire.

Sargon the Great

200

An invention created for pottery and for attaching to other things to allow them to move faster and easier.

The Wheel

200

In Mesopotamia, the king also held this religious title.

Head Priest

200

The large body of saltwater that borders Mesopotamia to the west.

Mediterranean Sea

300

The written language of the ancient Mesopotamians.

Cuneiform

300

What the ancient Mesopotamians wrote on.

Clay Tablets

300

An invention attached to ships to help them move faster with the wind.

The Sail.

300

The reason humans created religion.

To explain the world around them.

300

The large body of water the borders Mesopotamia to the southeast.

Persian Gulf

400

Another word for deities.

Gods

400

An ancient code of law with harsh penalties for crimes, including the term "an eye for an eye."

The Code of Hammurabi

400

An invention created to help till fields faster so that planting crops would be easier.

The Plow

400

A large building in the center of every city-state, built to house the gods and used for religious ceremonies.

Ziggurat

400

The mountain range to the north of Mesopotamia.

Zagros Mountains

500
The practice of spreading one culture to another, even when the two locations are far apart.

Cultural Diffusion

500

The name of Hammurabi's empire, and the city-state he was from.

Babylon

500

The world's longest epic poem, written in ancient Mesopotamia.

The Epic of Gilgamesh

500

The name of the head god of Babylon.

Marduk

500

The body of water to the north of Mesopotamia that has water that has been tinted a darker color due to the soil in the area.

Black Sea