Early Societies in the Americans and Oceania - CHAPTER 6: TRADITIONS AND ENCOUNTERS 6TH EDITION - AP World History
ORIGINS OF MESOAMERICAN SOCIETIES
- Migration across Bering land bridge
- Probably 13,000 BCE, perhaps earlier
- By sea from Asia
- Speculated during cool period of Earth, there was probably ice that connected Siberia/Northeastern Russia to Alaska
- By 9,500 BCE, reached the southernmost part of South America
- Hunter-gatherer societies
- Evolve into agricultural societies
OLMECS (1,200-100 BCE)
- Known as "the rubber people"
- Ceremonial centers
- Ruling class lived:
- San Lorenzo, La Venta, Tres Zapotes
- Go on specific dates to celebrate holidays
- Trading/market
- Olmec heads
- Height loft, weight = 20 tons
- Transported by dragging, rolling on logs
- 1,000 workers per head
AGRICULTURE/HERDING
- Staple: maize
- Smaller, harder version of corn
- Herding: turkeys, barkless dogs
- No draft animals (ex. birds)
- No development of wheeled vehicles
- Transportation done by human motor power
OLMEC SOCIETY
- Probably authoritarian in nature
- One leader with absolute authority, treated like a god
- Large class of conscripted laborers to construct ceremonial sites
- Able to do other jobs, not slaves
- Also tombs for rulers, temples, pyramids, drainage system
MYSTERIOUS DECLINE OF THE OLMECS
- Ceremonial centers destroyed
- No evidence of war
- No other society involved
- Revolution? or Civil war?
MAYA (300 BCE - 900 CE)
- Huge cities discovered in 19th century
- Terrace farming
- Steps in hillside to allow flat O grade/tilt to the land so the water can sit
- Maize
- Cotton
- Cacao beans
- Used for chocolate/currency
- Major ceremonial center At Tikal
MAYA WARFARE
- Warfare for purposes of capturing enemy soldiers
- Ritual sacrifices for enemies
- Enslavement
- Small kingdoms engage in constant conflict until Chichen Hza begins to absorb captives
- Had choice to either convert to religion or die
- Some chose death being loyal warriors
- Center of empire develops
MAYAN RITUAL CALENDAR
- Complex math
- Calendar of 365.242 days (17 seconds off)
- Solar calendar = 365 days, ritual calendar 260 days
- Tan concurrently with each other
- Management of calendar lends authority to priesthood
- timing of auspicious moments of agriculture
MAYA LANGUAGE/RELIGION
- Ideographs/Syllable ABC
- Most writings destroyed by Spanish conquerors
- Deciphering work began in 1760s
- Popoluuh: Maya creation myth
- Believed that there were two people: she who has borne children, he who has begotten sons that grow through the use of maize/water to make their body, with the maize forming the skin and flesh while the water is the blood
- Agricultural cycle maintained in exchange for honors/sacrifices
- Bloodletting rituals
- Human sacrifices followed after removal of fingers, piercing to allow blood flow
MAYA BALL GAME
- Ritual game
- Use their feet, similar to soccer
- High ranking captives, POW (Prisoners of War) as contestants
- Execution of losers immediately follows after match
- Bloodletting rituals for the gods
- Use hardened, heated rubber ball
CITY OF TEOTIHUACAN
- Highlands of Mexico
- Lakes in area of high elevation
- Village of Teotihuacan, 500 BCE, expands to become massive city
- Important ceremonial center
- Extensive trade network, influenced surrounding areas
- Begins to decline c. 650 CE, sacked in middle of 8th century, massive library destroyed
- Made it difficult to understand what their values were/what they believed in
- Books weren't there as it either did not exist or it burnt with the city
ANDEAN SOCIETY
- Migration into South America, ca. 1,200 BCE
- Climate improves ca. 8,000 BCE
- Largely independent from Mesopotamia
- Highly individualized due to geography
CHAVIN CULT
- New religion in central Andes, 900-1,500 BCE
- Little known about particulars of the religion
- Intricate stone carvings --> focused on art
- May have arisen when maize became an important crop
- Andean society became increasingly complex
MOCHICA STATE
- Valley of the Moche River
- Dominated Northern Peru 300-700 CE
- Little known about them
- Paintings survive
- No writing
- Evidence of labor specialization
- One of many states in region, none able to consolidate into empire
OCEANIA (1,500 BCE-700 CE)
- Prehistoric land bridges, lower seas permit migration
- Outrigger canoes for open sea travel
- Larger canoes that have a stabilizing arm on the sides
- Early hunter-gatherer societies in Australia
- Early agriculture in New Guinea
LAPITA PEOPLE
- Found throughout Pacific Islands
- Agriculture, animal herding
- Political organization based on chiefdoms
- Trade over open ocean declines 500 BCE
- Greater independence of settlements
- Were lead by the chief of that local area/village