AP Art History - Ancient Mesopotamia

An overview of 4 ancient Mesopotamian civilizations and their affiliated AP artworks:
Sumer
~White Temple and Ziggurat
~Statues of Votive Figures
~The Standard of Ur
Babylonia
~The Stele of Hammurabi
Assyria
~Lamassu
Persia
~Apadana (Audience Hall) of Darius and Xerxes

Пікірлер: 9

  • @reasat32154
    @reasat321543 жыл бұрын

    I know this was meant for High school AP students, but I'm a college student and this was a great review!! Thank you for uploading!!!

  • @ChairZomg
    @ChairZomg Жыл бұрын

    just started watching this series for fun! really interesting and well researched, thank you for your hard work!

  • @majestyofthesea
    @majestyofthesea Жыл бұрын

    You really did an amazing job. i appreciate your work, thank you for sharing these wonderful informations with us. I really needed it for my homework

  • @sbtgog1
    @sbtgog110 ай бұрын

    I am an older online student at a university in NC. It is completely disappointing and frustrating to be thrown to a computer program and just told to read a bland art history book with no instructor interaction. I have been scrambling to try to figure out all the vocabulary and intense look at new cultures. Thank you for being willing to really teach in a way I can understand and remember. I feel like the educator I got in my art history class really just turns on instruction to autopilot and I get nothing from it. You are a blessing!

  • @CelesteAmparoPfau
    @CelesteAmparoPfau10 ай бұрын

    thank you for putting this resource together. I really appreciate it!

  • @janicesoares6345
    @janicesoares63453 жыл бұрын

    i love you so much you saved my grade thank you

  • @user-wl8pv5ru5l
    @user-wl8pv5ru5l Жыл бұрын

    Wonderful 🎉🎉❤❤❤❤

  • @prof.dr.4224
    @prof.dr.42243 жыл бұрын

    The original people of Assyria were not Semitic. Before 4000 BC, Southern Babylon was the original home of the Sumerians from India and Northern Babylon originally came from central Asia. The modern name Mesopotamia came from the original Madhya Vedi, according to the Historians History of the World (Vol 1 and 2, 1902). One of the most famous Kings of Babylon was Asur Bani Pal, a pure Sanskrit name. Both Hittite and Mitranis used to speak the Indo-European language. Their gods were Vedic gods. HR Hall, curator of the British Museum wrote (Hall, 1939), “The ethnic type of the Sumerians so strongly marked in their statues and relief was as different from those of the races which surround them as was their language from those of the Semites; they were decidedly Indian in type. The face type of the average Indian of today is no doubt much the same as that of his race ancestors thousands of years ago. And it is by no means improbable that the Sumerians were an Indian race. It was in the Indian home, perhaps the Indus valley; we suppose for them, that their culture developed. There their writings may have invented and progressed from purely pictorial to simplified and abbreviated from which afterward in Babylonia took on its peculiar cuneiform appearance owing to its being written with a square-ended stylus on soft-clay. There is little doubt that India must have been one of the earliest centers of human civilization and it seems natural to suppose that the strange un-Semitic people who came from the East to civilize the West were of Indian origin, especially when we see with our eyes how very Indian the Sumerians were in type”. There was a linguistic and ethnic resemblance between the Sumerians and the Dravidians, people from South India. Both Rig Veda and Mahabharata mentioned the Deva-Asura war, which lasted 32 years in which Devas, the Aryans of North India, driven other tribes. In both Harappa and Babylon, an unknown script was discovered, demonstrating a close connection between the Indus valley and Babylon. Woolley in Ur found a similar seal with a very early cuneiform inscription (Woolley, 1929). Indus culture is older than Sumerian and Egyptian culture (Hall, 1939, 1928). References: Hall, H. R., 1939, A Season’s Work at Ur, Al-Ubaid, Abu Shahrain (Eridu) and Elsewhere: Being An Unofficial Account of the British Museum Archaeological Mission to Babylonia, London: Methuen Hall, H.R., 1928, The Discoveries at Ur and seniority of Sumerian Civilization, Antiquity, 2, 5, pp 56- 98; Williams, H.S., 1902, Historians History of the World, Edinburgh: Morrison & Gibbs Woolley, C., 1929, Ur of the Chaldees, London: Ernest Benn ( This is quoted from our forthcoming book, Ethics, Morality and Business, to be published by Palgrave-Macmillan.

  • @user-gl4dy6dk9z

    @user-gl4dy6dk9z

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂😂😂😂😂