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History Standards for Grades 5-12
World History
Era
2
Early
Civilizations and the Emergence of Pastoral Peoples, 4000-1000 BCE
Standard 1 The major characteristics of civilization and
how civilizations emerged in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus
valley
Standard 2 How agrarian societies spread and new states
emerged in the third and second millennia BCE
Standard 3 The political, social, and cultural
consequences of population movements and militarization in Eurasia in the second millennium BCE
Standard 4 Major trends in Eurasia and Africa
from 4000 to 1000 BCE
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Overview
Giving Shape to World History
When farmers began to grow crops on
the irrigated floodplain of Mesopotamia in Southwest
Asia, they had no consciousness that they were embarking on
a radically new experiment in human organization. The nearly rainless but
abundantly watered valley of the lower Tigris and Euphrates
rivers was an environment capable of supporting far larger concentrations
of population and much greater cultural complexity than could the hill
country where agriculture first emerged. Shortly after 4000 BCE, a rich
culture and economy based on walled cities was appearing along the banks
of the two rivers. The rise of civilization in Mesopotamia marked the
beginning of 3,000 years of far-reaching transformations that affected
peoples across wide areas of Eurasia and Africa.
The
four standards in this era present a general chronological progression of
developments in world history from 4000 to 1000 BCE. Two major patterns
of change may be discerned that unite the developments of this
period.
Early Civilizations and the
Spread of Agricultural Societies: Societies exhibiting the major
characteristics of civilization spread widely during these millennia.
Four great floodplain civilizations appeared, first in Mesopotamia,
shortly after in the Nile valley, and from about 2500 BCE in the Indus valley. These three civilizations mutually
influenced one another and came to constitute a single region of
intercommunication and trade. The fourth civilization arose in the Yellow
River valley of northwestern China in the second
millennium BCE. As agriculture continued to spread, urban centers also
emerged on rain-watered lands, notably in Syria
and on the island
of Crete. Finally,
expanding agriculture and long-distance trade were the foundations of
increasingly complex societies in the Aegean Sea
basin and western Europe. During this same era, it must be remembered,
much of the world’s population lived in small farming communities
and hunted or foraged. These peoples were no less challenged than
city-dwellers to adapt continually and creatively to changing
environmental and social conditions.
Pastoral
Peoples and Population Movements: In this era pastoralism--the
practice of herding animals as a society’s primary source of
food--made it possible for larger communities than ever before to inhabit
the semi-arid steppes and deserts of Eurasia and Africa.
Consequently, pastoral peoples began play an important role in world
history. In the second millennium BCE migrations of pastoral folk
emanating from the steppes of Central Asia contributed to a quickening
pace of change across the entire region from Europe and the Mediterranean
basin to India.
Some societies became more highly militarized, new kingdoms appeared, and
languages of the Indo-European family became much more widely
spoken.
Why Study This Era?
v
This is the period when civilizations appeared,
shaping all subsequent eras of history. Students must consider the nature
of civilization as both a particular way of organizing society and a
historical phenomenon subject to transformation and collapse.
v
In this era many of the world’s most
fundamental inventions, discoveries, institutions, and techniques
appeared. All subsequent civilizations would be built on these
achievements.
v Early
civilizations were not self-contained but developed their distinctive
characteristics partly as a result of interactions with other peoples. In
this era students will learn about the deep roots of encounter and
exchange among societies.
v
The era introduces students to one of the most
enduring themes in history, the dynamic interplay, for good or ill,
between the agrarian civilizations and pastoral peoples of the great
grasslands.
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STANDARD 1
The major
characteristics of civilization and how civilizations emerged in
Mesopotamia, Egypt and the Indus
valley.
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Standard 1A
The student understands how Mesopotamia, Egypt,
and the Indus valley became centers of
dense population, urbanization, and cultural innovation in the fourth and
third millennia BCE.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Analyze
how the natural environments of the Tigris-Euphrates, Nile, and Indus valleys shaped the early development of
civilization. [Compare and
contrast differing sets of ideas]
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5-12
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Compare
the character of urban development in Mesopotamia,
Egypt, and the Indus valley, including the emergence of social
hierarchies and occupational specializations, as well as differences in
the tasks that urban women and men performed. [Compare and contrast differing values and institutions]
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5-12
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Compare
the forms of writing that developed in the three civilizations and how
written records shaped political, legal, religious, and cultural life. [Compare and contrast differing sets
of ideas, values, and institutions]
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7-12
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Compare
the development of religious and ethical belief systems in the three
civilizations and how they legitimized the political and social order. [Compare and contrast differing sets
of ideas]
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9-12
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Analyze
the character of government and military institutions in Egypt and Mesopotamia
and ways in which central authorities commanded the labor services and
tax payments of peasant farmers. [Consider
multiple perspectives]
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9-12
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Describe
architectural, artistic, literary, technological, and scientific achievements
of these civilizations and relate these achievements to economic and
social life. [Analyze
cause-and-effect relationships]
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Standard 1B
The student understands how
commercial and cultural interactions contributed to change in the
Tigris-Euphrates, Indus, and Nile regions.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Analyze
the importance of trade in Mesopotamian civilization of the fourth and
third millennia and describe the networks of commercial exchange that
connected various regions of Southwest Asia.
[Interrogate historical data]
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5-12
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Assess
the importance of commercial, cultural, and political connections between
Egypt and peoples of Nubia along the upper Nile.
[Identify issues and problems in
the past]
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7-12
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Trace
the network of trade routes connecting Egypt,
Mesopotamia, and the Indus valley in the
third millennium and assess the economic and cultural significance of
those commercial connections. [Analyze
cause-and-effect relationships]
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STANDARD 2
How agrarian
societies spread and new states emerged in the third and second millennia
BCE.
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Standard 2A
The student
understands how civilization emerged in northern China in the second millennium
BCE.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Explain
the fundamentals of bronze-making technology and assess the uses and significance
of bronze tools, weapons, and luxury goods in the third and second
millennia BCE. [Analyze
cause-and-effect relationships]
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5-12
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Compare
the climate and geography of the Huang He (Yellow River) valley with the
natural environments of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus
valley. [Clarify information on
the geographic setting]
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9-12
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Describe
royal government under the Shang Dynasty and the development of social
hierarchy, religious institutions, and writing. [Appreciate historical perspectives]
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5-12
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Infer
from archaeological or written evidence the character of early Chinese
urban societies and compare these centers with cities of Mesopotamia or
the Indus valley. [Formulate historical questions]
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9-12
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Assess
the part that Chinese peasants played in sustaining the wealth and power
of the Shang political centers. [Consider
multiple perspectives]
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Standard 2B
The student understands how new centers of agrarian society
arose in the third and second millennia BCE.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Describe
the relationship between the development of plow technology and the emergence
of new agrarian societies in Southwest Asia, the Mediterranean basin, and
temperate Europe. [Analyze cause-and-effect relationships]
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7-12
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Analyze
how an urban civilization emerged on Crete
and evaluate its cultural achievements. [Marshal evidence of antecedent circumstances]
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9-12
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Explain
the development of commercial communities in such Mediterranean cities as
Byblos and Ugarit
and analyze the cultural significance of expanding commercial exchange
among peoples of Southwest Asia, Egypt,
and the Aegean Sea. [Reconstruct patterns of historical
succession and duration]
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5-12
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Infer
from the evidence of megalithic stone building at Stonehenge and other
centers the emergence of complex agrarian societies in temperate Europe. [Draw
upon visual sources]
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9-12
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Analyze
evidence for the growth of agricultural societies in tropical West Africa
and Southeast Asia in the second
millennium BCE. [Interrogate
historical data]
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STANDARD 3
The political, social,
and cultural consequences of population movements and
militarization in Eurasia in the second millennium BCE.
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Standard 3A
The student understands how population movements from
western and Central Asia affected peoples of India,
Southwest Asia, and the Mediterranean
region.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Define
pastoralism as a specialized way of life and explain how the climate and
geography of Central Asia were linked to
the rise of pastoral societies on the steppes. [Analyze multiple causation]
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7-12
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Identify
the probable geographic homeland of speakers of early Indo-European
languages and trace the spread of Indo-European languages from north of
the Black and Caspian seas to other parts of Eurasia.
[Reconstruct patterns of
historical succession and duration]
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5-12
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Explain
the concept of kinship as the basis of social organization among pastoral
peoples and compare the structure of kinship-based societies with that of
agrarian states. [Compare and
contrast differing behaviors and institutions]
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9-12
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Describe
major characteristics of economy, social relations, and political authority
among pastoral peoples and analyze why women tended to experience greater
social equality with men in pastoral communities than in agrarian
societies of Eurasia. [Identify issues and problems in the past]
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Standard 3B
The student understands the social and cultural effects
that militarization and the emergence of new kingdoms had on peoples of
Southwest Asia and Egypt
in the second millennium BCE.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Analyze
ways in which chariot transport and warfare affected Southwest Asian
societies. [Analyze
cause-and-effect relationships]
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7-12
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Analyze
the origins of the Hittite people and their empire in Anatolia
and assess Hittite political and cultural achievements. [Marshal evidence of antecedent
circumstances]
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7-12
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Describe
the spread of Egyptian power into Nubia
and Southwest Asia under the New Kingdom
and assess the factors that made Egyptian expansion possible. [Analyze multiple causation]
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9-12
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Explain
the religious ideas of Akhenaton (Amenhotep IV) and assess the viewpoint
that Atonism was an early form of monotheism. [Interrogate historical data]
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Standard 3C
The student understands how urban society expanded in the
Aegean region in the era of Mycenaean dominance.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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5-12
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Describe
the political and social organization of the Mycenaean Greeks as revealed
in the archaeological and written record. [Interrogate historical data]
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7-12
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Assess
the cultural influences of Egypt, Minoan Crete, and
Southwest Asian civilizations on the Mycenaeans. [Analyze cause-and-effect relationships]
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9-12
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Analyze
the impact of Mycenaean expansion and city-building on commerce and
political life in the eastern Mediterranean.
[Analyze cause-and-effect
relationships]
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Standard 3D
The student understands the development of new cultural
patterns in northern India
in the second millennium BCE.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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7-12
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Infer
from geographical and archaeological information why Indo-Aryan-speaking
groups moved from Central Asia into India beginning in the second
millennium. [Draw upon visual
sources]
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5-12
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Analyze
possible causes of the decline and collapse of Indus
valley civilization. [Hypothesize
the influence of the past]
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9-12
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Assess
the early political, social, and cultural impact of Indo-Aryan movements
on peoples of North India. [Analyze cause-and-effect
relationships]
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STANDARD 4
Major trends in
Eurasia and Africa from 4000 to 1000
BCE.
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Standard 4A
The student understands major
trends in Eurasia and Africa from 4000 to
1000 BCE.
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Grade Level
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Therefore, the student is able
to
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7-12
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Explain
the various criteria that have been used to define
“civilization” and the fundamental differences between
civilizations and other forms of social organization, notably
hunter-gatherer bands, Neolithic agricultural societies, and pastoral
nomadic societies. [Consider
multiple perspectives]
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5-12
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Identify
areas of Eurasia and Africa where cities
and dense farming populations appeared between 4000 and 1000 BCE and
analyze connections between the spread of agriculture and the
acceleration of world population growth. [Analyze cause-and-effect relationships]
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7-12
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Compare
conditions under which civilizations developed in Southwest Asia, the
Nile valley, India, China, and the Eastern
Mediterranean and analyze ways in which the emergence of
civilizations represented a decisive transformation in human history. [Draw comparisons across eras and
regions]
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7-12
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Explain
why geographic, environmental and economic conditions favored hunter-gatherer,
pastoral, and small-scale agricultural ways of life rather than urban
civilization in many parts of the world. [Utilize mathematical and quantitative data]
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7-12
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Describe
fundamental inventions, discoveries, techniques, and institutions that
appeared during this period and assess the significance of bronze
technology for economic, cultural, and political life. [Interrogate historical data]
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9-12
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Analyze
connections between the cultural achievements of early civilizations and the
development of state authority, aristocratic power, taxation systems, and
institutions of coerced labor, including slavery. [Analyze cause-and-effect relationships]
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5-12
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Describe
how new ideas, products, techniques, and institutions spread from one
region to another and analyze conditions under which peoples assimilated
or rejected new things or adapted them to prevailing cultural traditions.
[Analyze the importance of ideas]
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7-12
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Define
“patriarchal society” and analyze ways in which the legal and
customary position of aristocratic, urban, or peasant women may have
changed in early civilizations. [Employ
quantitative analyses]
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9-12
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Analyze
the role of pastoral peoples in the history of Eurasia and Africa up to 1000 BCE and explain why relations
between herding and agrarian societies tended to involve both conflict
and mutual dependence. [Draw
comparisons across eras and regions]
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NEXT: Era
3: Early Civilizations and the Emergence of Pastoral Peoples, 4000-1000 BCE
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