| Term | Definition |
|
irrigation |
the use of connected ditches, canals, dams, and dikes to move water to dry areas. |
|
Sargon |
warrior who found the Akkadian Empire and so became the first ruler of an empire in the Fertile Crescent |
|
scribe |
a person who writes |
|
cuneiform |
an ancient wedge-shaped script used in Mesopotamia and Persia |
|
Moses |
phrophet and lawgiver who, according to the Bible, led the Israelites out of Egyptian captivity and received the Ten Commandments |
|
Phoenicians |
of or relating to ancient Phoenicia or its people, language, or culture |
|
ziggurat |
a huge mud-brick temple built by the ancient Sumerians |
|
monarchy |
the system of government in which a king or queen rules |
|
Mesopotamia |
an ancient land in southwestern Asia; located between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers |
|
dikes |
an embankment of earth and rock built to prevent floods |
|
Tigris |
a river in southwestern Asia; begins in eastern Turkey and joins the Euphrates river |
|
Euphrates |
a river that begins in Turkey, flows through Syria and Iraq, and empties into the Persian Gulf |
|
agriculture |
the domestication of plants and animals |
|
surplus |
an extra supply |
|
city-states |
a city and its surrounding farmlands, with its own leaders and government |
|
labor |
productive activity, esp. for the sake of economic gain |
|
cultural diffusion |
the spread of ideas from one place to others |