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Test your basic knowledge |
Pre-History
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
history
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Urban Revolution
V. Gordon Childe
Nagada
Preceramic
Neolithic (Egypt)
2. 2600-1900 BC -several large - planned cities on artificial mounds (Harappa and Mohenjo Daro) - urban planning -citadels - grain storage facilities - markets - baths - etc. - local writing system - lack of monumental architecture typically associated
Mississippian
Neolithic (Indus Valley)
Mature Harappan
Middle Horizon
3. 4200-4000 BC -rich cemetery - copper metallurgy - metal not utilitarian -a sumptuary good -used within a social (prestige) context.
Varna
Pristine (primary) state
Late Harappan
Beaker people
4. Urbanized (rise of cities - settlement hierarchies) -Agri. Subsistence (irrigation common) -Craft Special. (full time - non food producing artisans) -Market Econ. (goods exchanged for profits - full time merchants) -Patron-Client relationships (elite
Second Intermediate Period
Characteristics of state level societies
Uruk
Akkadian and Babylonian periods
5. 1000 BC -evidence of shared religious ideologies. trade network. AD 250-900 -emergence of numerous. small competing centers. Sites of Palenque and Tikal. AD 900 -Maya collapse in the south and shift north to the Yucatan.
New Kingdom
Mayan Lowlands and Highlands
Mature Harappan
Mississippian
6. Warfare and Circumscription
Robert Carneiro
Akkadian and Babylonian periods
Neolithic (Egypt)
Middle Kingdom
7. 5000-3500 BC- Located in arid delta of tigris and euphrates - hierarchical settlements - larger communities (2500-4000 people) ceremonial centers around temples. Communities linked through trade networks. More complex irrigation systems. Site of Erid
Ubaid
Uruk
Pre-Dynastic Kingdoms
Pristine (primary) state
8. Hydraulic hypothesis
Karl Wittfogel
Ubaid
Mississippian
Battle Axe (Kurgan)
9. 3000 BC -edge of steppe -cord marked pottery - megalithic tombs - single family dwellings replace long-houses - chariots - copper axes (no surprise considering the name).
Merimbda
Pre-Dynastic Kingdoms
Battle Axe (Kurgan)
Late Intermediate
10. Complex - state-level society- collection of specialized institutions that maintain stratification.
Nagada
Late Intermediate
Formative
Civilization
11. 3000-1800 BC -site of La Paloma -transition from hunters and gatherers to sedentary society. Site of Rio Seco -monumental architecture - social differentiation through house sizes.
Iron Age
Beaker people
Preceramic
Old Kingdom
12. 1800-900 BC -inland villages - beginning of irrigation agriculture. public architecture. U-shaped platform mounds. Site of El Paraiso -probably ceremonial centers. fine textiles.
Early Horizon
Early Horizon
Poverty Point
Initial Period
13. 3200-2600 BC -trade between lowland farmers and craft-producers in Indus Valley - villages located in the floodplain. Fortified towns with flood control. Site of Kot Diji.
Mississippian
Hassuna
Pre-Dynastic Kingdoms
Early Indus
14. 5200 BC -Fayum depression - small farming villages - domesticated sheep and goats - flint sickles and weapons - baskets.
Badari
Neolithic (Egypt)
Varna
Karl Wittfogel
15. AD 1000-1476 - numerous - small competing kingdoms. Chimu -AD 1000-1476 - based in the Moche Valley - elaborate irrigation system -linked valleys - expansive roadways - site of Chan Chan.
Hassuna
Late Intermediate
Secondary State
Formative
16. 2500 BC in Czech Republic -early part-time specialists -use of a smelting kin. Gradual accumulation of changes - 2200 BC -plow agriculture - increased clearing of forests - increasing populations and social complexity - 1300 BC -many local centers us
Bronze Age
Hassuna
Mississippian
Early Indus
17. 1000-200 BC -growing trade in exotic goods - increasingly elaborate burials.
Characteristics of state level societies
Late Intermediate
Iron Age
Early Woodland Period
18. 4200-4000 BC -rich cemetery - copper metallurgy - metal not utilitarian -a sumptuary good -used within a social (prestige) context.
Varna
Halafian
Initial Period
Middle Woodland Period
19. AD 800-1500 -European contact -maize based agriculture - still hunting/gathering - but dependent on agriculture - large - fortified settlements - ceremonial centers such as Cahokia and Etowah.
Preceramic
Old Kingdom
Mississippian
Beaker people
20. First unified political group in region with centralized political authority - consolidation of several river valleys - intricate ceramics - sumptuary goods - large temple complex.
Middle Woodland Period
Hassuna
Moche State
Second Intermediate Period
21. 4500-3000 BC -reliance upon ocean resources. Examine Moseley's Maritime Hypothesis.
Robert Carneiro
Battle Axe (Kurgan)
Neolithic (Indus Valley)
Maritime villages
22. 3000 BC -edge of steppe -cord marked pottery - megalithic tombs - single family dwellings replace long-houses - chariots - copper axes (no surprise considering the name).
Early Horizon
Initial Period
Battle Axe (Kurgan)
Ubaid
23. AD 400-800 -initial adoption of maize agriculture.
Nagada
Stratification
Late Woodland
Beaker people
24. AD 800-1500 -European contact -maize based agriculture - still hunting/gathering - but dependent on agriculture - large - fortified settlements - ceremonial centers such as Cahokia and Etowah.
Karl Wittfogel
Second Intermediate Period
Moche State
Mississippian
25. 4500-3000 BC -reliance upon ocean resources. Examine Moseley's Maritime Hypothesis.
Maadi
William Rathje
Pre-Dynastic Kingdoms
Maritime villages
26. These are indigenous states -meaning they developed without influence from other states. Examples include Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley
Late Harappan
Pristine (primary) state
Valley of Oaxaca
Basin of Mexico
27. Where members of the same sex and age status do not have the same access to capital resources.
Badari
Stratification
Basin of Mexico
Secondary State
28. 1530-1070 BC -imperial dynasty - Valley of the Kings.
Moche State
Iron Age
New Kingdom
Stratification
29. 1600-600 BC -Miss. floodplain -still hunters and gatherers - large earthworks and population - long-distance trade.
Varna
Poverty Point
V. Gordon Childe
Civilization
30. Contemporary with Merimbda -mud brick architecture - emmer wheat and barley - elaborate ceremonial burials.
Badari
Mayan Lowlands and Highlands
Beaker people
Initial Period
31. 5500-4400 BC- middle tigris river valley- wheat - barley - and linseed - floodwater irrigation.
Late Woodland
Nagada
Samarra
V. Gordon Childe
32. 200 BC -AD 400 -widespread trade networks - development of the Hopewell Interaction Sphere.
Stratification
Karl Wittfogel
Ubaid
Middle Woodland Period
33. Role of priesthood
Religion
Olmec
Bronze Age
Mayan Lowlands and Highlands
34. Decision making hierarchies
William Rathje
Early Indus
Nagada
Johnson
35. 6000-5250 BC- northern tigris river valley- dry farming - pottery common
Stratification
Hassuna
Akkadian and Babylonian periods
V. Gordon Childe
36. AD 1476-1532- Inca -super state unifying highlands and lowlands - gradually added territory - massive architecture - split inheritance -pass position - but not wealth. Use of corvee labor - expansive roads - quipu. Sites of Cuzco and Machu Picchu
Uruk
Neolithic (Egypt)
Late Horizon
Mature Harappan
37. Trade and Exchange
Basin of Mexico
William Rathje
Hassuna
Mature Harappan
38. 1400 BC -early farming. 650-300 BC -emergence of the state. Use of irrigation agriculture. Several competing regional centers including Cuicuilco and Teotihuacan -buffer zone between Cuicuilco and Teotihuacan. Cuicuilco buried by a volcano in 150 BC.
Bronze Age
Basin of Mexico
Beaker people
Karl Wittfogel
39. Complex - state-level society- collection of specialized institutions that maintain stratification.
New Kingdom
Civilization
Formative
Early Indus
40. 5200 BC -Fayum depression - small farming villages - domesticated sheep and goats - flint sickles and weapons - baskets.
Second Intermediate Period
Neolithic (Egypt)
Johnson
Iron Age
41. 5500-4400 BC- middle tigris river valley- wheat - barley - and linseed - floodwater irrigation.
Valley of Oaxaca
Samarra
Merimbda
New Kingdom
42. 3500-3100 BC -first cities and city-states such as Eridu - Ur - and Uruk - increasing social stratification and complexity - rapid population growth - role of temple (ziggurat) for ceremonial - bureaucratic - and redistribution centers - use of cunei
Middle Woodland Period
Neolithic (Indus Valley)
Maadi
Uruk
43. 4800-4400 BC -24 ha village - semi-regular plan - storage units - domesticated dogs - pigs - and cattle.
First Intermediate Period
Merimbda
Late Harappan
Valley of Oaxaca
44. 1900-1500 BC -cities abandoned with environmental changes including flooding and changes in river channels away from the existing populations. Site of Rojdi.
Late Harappan
Sumerian
Badari
Uruk
45. 700 BC -AD 800 -Ohio Valley -mix of hunting/gathering and agriculture - known for trade - burials mounds - and ceremonial elaboration.
Olmec
Halafian
Varna
Adena Complex
46. Hyksos invasion 1635-1517 BC
Battle Axe (Kurgan)
Second Intermediate Period
Uruk
Maadi
47. 3050-2134 BC -united under Narmer (look at Narmer Palette) - use of pyramids to legitimize authority - highly centralized government - priest/god/pharaoh - corvee labor. Royal tombs at Saqqara. Djoser and Imphotep.
Mayan Lowlands and Highlands
Civilization
Late Woodland
Old Kingdom
48. 2134-1941 BC -shift to local power
Ubaid
Merimbda
Preceramic
First Intermediate Period
49. 2000-1350 BC -eventually consolidated under rule of Babylon - codification of law by Hammurabi in 2790 BC. Beginning to use Bronze. Standardized farm implements and weaponry.
Akkadian and Babylonian periods
Badari
Maadi
Merimbda
50. 700 BC -AD 800 -Ohio Valley -mix of hunting/gathering and agriculture - known for trade - burials mounds - and ceremonial elaboration.
Badari
New Kingdom
Basin of Mexico
Adena Complex