| Term | Definition |
| artisan | someone who crafts an object from raw materials |
| bas-relief | sculpture in which the carvings project slightly from the background |
| bronze age | roughly from 3000-1000 BCE when bronze replaced stone as the material for tools |
| city state | a city and possibly the surrounding agricultural area that is also an independent political unit |
| civilization | when human society has advanced to share elements of government, architecture, ideas etc. |
| cuneiform | wedge shaped writing/the "first" writing done with a stylus on a damp clay tablet and preserved through drying in the sun |
| cylinder seals | small cylinders decorated with distinctive images. These were rolled on damp clay to leave a rectangular impression to "seal" a deal in business/equivalent to a signature today |
| deify | to declare someone a god |
| dynasty | when rule of a country or empire passes down through the family from one generation to the next |
| empire | several lands joined together under the rule of one ruler, who could be called an emperor |
| gilgamesh | the epic story of the king, Gilgamesh, who searched for immortality/a Sumerian legend. This is believed to be the first story. |
| hegemony | dominance or control (ex. When a powerful country has influence over a region) |
| irrigation | supplying water to agricultural land by artificial means |
| monarch | a ruler who is a king or queen |
| polytheism | the worship of many gods |
| royal standard of ur | an artifact from the Royal Graves of Ur. It contained pictures that are very informative to scholars |
| scribe | someone who writes/usually a revered position in ancient society |
| semitic | an adjective used to describe a group of people whose language could be traced back to the same root. |
| stele | A monument, vertical in style, small or large, that contained writing or pictures to commemorate or record something |
| surplus | food/goods produced that are extra (not needed for survival) and available to barter/sell |
| theocracy | a government under the control of religious leaders |
| usurp | to take over a position without any legal right |
| votive statues | small devotional statues that Sumerians left in the ziggurat to appease their gods |
| epic | poems/stories that tell the deeds of great heroes. |
| ziggurat | A temple in Mesopotamia. It had a distinctive shape and was used to store commodities and goods that were given as offerings. People worked and lived there. |