3 SEPT 2013 AGENDA PICK UP 8 BASIC CHARACTERISTIC SHEET. OPEN BOOKS
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3 SEPT 2013 AGENDA PICK UP 8 BASIC CHARACTERISTIC SHEET. OPEN BOOKS UP TO CH 1
Robert Strayer Ways of the World A Brief Global History with Sources First Edition CHAPTER 1 First Peoples: Populating the Planet To 10,000 B.C.E. Copyright 2011 by Bedford/St. Martin’s
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4 SEPT 2013 AGENDA GET INTO YOUR 2 GROUPS SAN OR CHUMASH CREATE A POSTER OF YOUR INFORMATION SPOKES PERSON WILL PRESENT REVIEW NOTES OF CH 1 GO OVER HANDBOOK
II. Out of Africa to the Ends of the Earth: First Migrations A. Homo sapiens emerged in eastern and southern Africa 250,000 years ago. 1. stayed there exclusively for about 150,000 years 2. Africa was home to the “human revolution,” in which culture became more important than biology in shaping human behavior 3. humans began to inhabit environments not touched by earlier hominids 4. technological innovation: use of stone and bone tools 5.hunting and fishing, not just scavenging 6. patterns of exchange 7. use of ornaments, perhaps planned burials 8. between 100,000-60,000 years ago: beginning of migrations out of Africa a.adapted to nearly every environment on earth b.much took place in the difficulties of the last Ice Age
B. Into Eurasia 1. humans started migrating into the Middle East around 51,000 years ago 2. the best evidence of early European settlement comes from southern France and northern Spain a. settlers in northern Europe were pushed southward into warmer areas around 20,000 years ago b. developed new hunting habits, new hunting technologies 3. the earliest Europeans left hundreds of cave paintings: depictions of animals and humans and abstract designs (maybe early form of writing) 4. development of new technologies in Ukraine and Russia a. needles, multilayered clothing, weaving, nets, baskets, pottery, etc. b. partially underground dwellings made from mammoth remains c. suggests semipermanent settlement d. creation of female figurines (“Venus figurines”); earliest dated at least 35,000 years ago
C. Into Australia 1. humans reached Australia about 60,000 years ago from Indonesia 2. very sparse settlement; estimated 300,000 people in 1788 3. development of some 250 languages 4. still completely a gathering and hunting economy when Europeans arrived in 1788 5.complex worldview: the Dreamtime a. stories, ceremonies, and art tell of ancestral beings b. everything in the natural order is an echo of ancient happenings c. current people are intimately related to places and events in past 6. major communication and exchange networks a. included stones, pigments, wood, pituri (psychoactive drug) b. also included songs, dances, stories, and rituals
D. Into the Americas 1. when settlement of the Americas began is still argued over (somewhere between 30,000 and 15,000 years ago) a. mode of migration (Bering Strait or by sea down west coast of North America) also still argued about b. how many migrations and how long they took also argued over c. evidence of humans in southern Chile by 12,500 years ago 2. Clovis: the first clearly defined and widespread culture of the Americas point a. name comes from the Clovis point, a kind of projectile b. flourished 12,000–11,000 years ago c. hunted large mammals (mammoths, bison) d. disappeared about 10,900 years ago, at the same time as the extinction of a number of large mammals 3. next stage: much greater cultural diversity, as people adapted to the end of the Ice Age in different ways
E. Into the Pacific 1. the last phase of the great human migration, started ca. 3,500 years ago 2. migration by water from the Bismarck and Solomon islands and the Philippines 3. very quick migration over very long distances 4. migrants spoke Austronesian languages (can be traced to southern China) 5. settled every habitable area of the Pacific basin within 2,500 years a. also settled the island of Madagascar b. made Austronesian the most widespread language family c. completed initial human settlement of the world ca. 900 c.e. with occupation of Aotearoa (New Zealand) 6.Pacific settlers a. took agriculture with them, unlike other migrations b. apparently followed a deliberate colonization plan c. created highly stratified societies or chiefdoms (e.g., Hawaii) d. massive environmental impact on previously uninhabited lands
III. WAYS WE ARE A. 1ST HUMAN SOCIETIES 1. societies were small, bands of 25–50 people 2. very low population density (because of available technology) a. very slow population growth b. perhaps 10,000 people in world 100,000 years ago c. grew to 500,000 by 30,000 years ago d. reached 6 million 10,000 years ago 3.Paleolithic bands were seasonally mobile or nomadic a. moved in regular patterns to exploit wild plants and animals b. since they moved around, they couldn’t accumulate goods 4. societies were highly egalitarian a. perhaps the most free people in human existence b. did not have specialists, so most people had the same skills c. relationships between women and men were far more equal than in later societies
5. James Cook described the gathering and hunting peoples of Australia as tranquil and socially equal 6. Paleolithic societies had clearly defined rules a. men hunted, women gathered b. clear rules about distribution of meat from a kill c. rules about incest and adultery
B. Economy and the Environment 1. gathering and hunting peoples used to be regarded as “primitive” and impoverished a. modern studies point out that they worked fewer hours b. wanted or needed little c. but life expectancy was low (35 years on average) 2. alteration of natural environments a. deliberately set fires to encourage growth of certain plants b. extinction of many large animals shortly after humans arrived c. gradual extinction of other hominids, like the Neanderthals (Europe) and Flores man (Indonesia)
C. The Realm of the Spirit 1. it is difficult to decipher the spiritual world of Paleolithic peoples a. lack of written sources b. art is subject to interpretation c. contemporary gathering and hunting peoples may not reflect ancient experience 2.Paleolithic peoples had a rich ceremonial life a. led by part-time shamans (people especially skilled at dealing with the spirit world) b. frequent use of psychoactive drugs to contact spirits 3. apparent variety of beliefs a. some societies were seemingly monotheistic b. others saw several levels of supernatural beings c. still others believed in an impersonal force running throughout the natural order d. Venus figurines make some scholars think that Paleolithic religion was strongly feminine, with a great goddess e. many peoples probably had a cyclical view of time
D.Settling Down the Great Transition 1. gradual change as populations grew, climates changed, and peoples interacted 2. collection of wild grains started in northeastern Africa around 16,000 years ago 3. last Ice Age ended 16,000–10,000 years ago a. followed by a “global warming” period b. richer and more diverse environment for human societies c. population rise d. beginnings of settlement 4.settlement led to societal change a. larger and more complex societies b. storage and accumulation of goods led to inequality 5. settling-down process occurred 12,000–4,000 years ago Middle East a. Jomon culture in Japan b. Scandinavia, Southeast Asia, North America, Middle East c. bows and arrows were invented independently in Europe, Africa, and 6.the process of settlement was a major turning point in history
IV. Comparing Paleolithic Societies The San of Southern Africa 1. northern fringe of the Kalahari Desert (present-day Angola, Namibia, Botswana) 2. 50,000–80,000 San still live in the region 3. part of the Khoisan language family, inhabited southern Africa at least 5,000 years peoples a. gathering and hunting way of life, with stone tools b. remarkable rock art, going back 26,000 years c. most of the Khoisan peoples were absorbed or displaced by Bantu-speaking 4. The San (Ju/’hoansi) still practiced their ancient life with few borrowings when anthropologists started studying them in the 1950s and 1960s a. use some twenty-eight tools, including digging stick, leather garment for carrying things, knife, spear, bow and poisoned arrows, ropes, and nets b. men hunt, women do most of gathering c. adequate diet d. short workweek, with even labor division between men and women e. uncertain and anxious life, dependent on nature
5. San society characterized by mobility, sharing, and equality a. basic unit is band of 10–30 people, connected to other bands b. many people claimed membership in more than one band c. frequent movement to new territory d. no formal leaders, priests, or craft specialists e. very complex social relations f. high value given to modesty, cooperation, equality g.“insulting the meat”: a hunter is expected to disparage his accomplishment h. complex system of unequal gift exchange 6.relative equality between the sexes a. free sex play between teenagers b. most marriages are monogamous c. frequent divorce among young couples 7. frequent conflict over distribution of meat; rivalries over women 8. belief system: dances” a. Creator god, Gao Na, is capricious b. lesser god, Gauwa, is destructive but sometimes assists humans c. gauwasi (spirits of dead ancestors) are most serious threat to human welfare d. evil influences can be counteracted with n/um, a spiritual potency that can be activated in “curing
The Chumash of Southern California 1. indicate a later Paleolithic stage than the San, with permanent villages 2. Chumash lived near present-day Santa Barbara, California a. richer environment than the San b. perhaps 20,000 when the Spaniards arrived in the sixteenth century c. Chumash created new society after 1150 c.e. in response to violence and food shortages 3. central technological innovation: the planked canoe (tomol) a. ability to make and own tomol led to social inequality b. stimulated trade between the coast and islands c. made deep-sea fishing possible 4. living conditions were more elaborate than the San a. round, permanent, substantial houses (for up to 70 people) b. a market economy, despite being gathering and hunting peoples c. beginning of class distinctions (e.g., bearskin capes, burials) d. emergence of a permanent, hereditary political elite 5.Chumash largely solved the problems of violence in the region
V. Reflections: The Uses of the Paleolithic A. The study of history is about those who tell it today, not just about the past. 1.views of the past reflect our own smugness or disillusionment 2. Paleolithic era is sometimes regarded as a golden age a.admired by feminists, environmentalists, antimaterialists 3. scholars have looked to the Paleolithic era in questioning explosive population and economic growth of recent past 4. gathering and hunting peoples of today have looked to Paleolithic era in an effort to maintain or recover their identities B. A basic question: “What have we lost in the mad rush to modernity?” C. Nobody can be completely detached when studying the past.
Q. What could an aboriginal viewer learn about nature from this painting? Lightning came from Namarrgon and therefore had divine origins. Humans are able to shape the weather through their interaction with Namarrgon; this is implied through the positioning of ceremonially dressed human figures below Namarrgon. A particularly observant student might also speculate that Barrginj, the wife of Namarrgon, may act as an intercessor for humans. Gods or spirits directly control weather and perhaps other phenomena.
A. B. C. D. E. PALIOLITHIC CLOVIS CULTURE SHAMANS AUSTRONESIAN VENUS FIGURINES 1. Language of people that grew out of Austrailia. 2. First known people in the Americas that used a pointed arrowhead or projectile 3. Old stone age because of the use of stone tools. 4. Holy men in any civilization. 5. Statue with strong female characteristics.
WHAT HAPPENED AROUND THESE TIME PERIODS 250,000 YEARS AGO 100,000 YEARS AGO 70,000 YEARS AGO 60,000 – 40,000 YEARS AGO 40,000 YEARS AGO 30,000 – 15,000 YEARS AGO 3,500 – 1,000 YEARS AGO 1,000 YEARS AGO
The earliest Homo sapiens emerged in Africa 250,000 years ago. The first human migration out of Africa occurred 100,000 years ago. Human entry into eastern Asia took place 70,000 years ago. Humans first reached Australia 60,000–40,000 years ago. Human entry into Europe occurred 40,000 years ago. Human entry into the Americas happened 30,000–15,000 years ago. Austronesian migration to the Pacific islands and Madagascar took place 3,500–1,000 years ago. Human entry into New Zealand happened around 1,000 years ago.