Answers For [Recent Tests- VOL] - The world’s first cities

Answers and detail explain for [Recent Tests- VOL] - The world’s first cities

Answer Table

1. TRUE
2. NOT GIVEN
3. TRUE
4. FALSE
5. TRUE
6. NOT GIVEN
7. surplus
8. pyramids
9. storerooms
10. staff
11. banks
12. clay
13. fires

Explain

[Recent Tests- VOL] - The world’s first cities

The creation of Mesopotamian cities

The inhabitants of Mesopotamia - which now forms part of eastern Syria, southeastern Turkey and Iraq – lived for thousands of years on individual farms, and in small, isolated communities, working relentlessly just to meet their basic needs. But then, about 6,000 years ago something remarkable happened. The people left the security of their family homes and villages and came together with others to create something far more complex and difficult: the world’s first city, called Uruk.

1There is not much left now of Uruk, which is about 250 kilometres south of Iraq’s capital Baghdad, but enough does remain to show that this initial experiment in urban living was extraordinarily successful. At its height, around 5,000 years ago, Uruk was home to more than 40,000 people. The outlines of the city walls indicate an enclosed area of about 600 hectares.

The archaeological record of Uruk reveals the intensive building and rebuilding which went on for four or five centuries after the city’s initial establishment. 2In that period the people of Uruk built a dozen or so large public buildings. 3They would carefully level what had stood before, and then build another structure on top, often trying out a different building material or an innovative technique. They seemed to be searching for ways in which architecture could express the revolutionary new social structures that had come into being there.

Soon Uruk was not the only Mesopotamian city. People all across the flat plains of southern Mesopotamia were enjoying many of the benefits of city life. 4By about 4,500 years ago, 80 per cent of the Mesopotamian population lived in cities over 40 hectares in size, with populations of between 15,000 and 30,000 people. The emergence of these thriving communities, made up mostly of individuals and groups with no blood ties, was unprecedented in human history. Why did these extraordinary advances happen?

Reasons for the creation of cities in Mesopotamia

Smaller communities in Mesopotamia sometimes decided to come together to make it easier to defend themselves from their enemies. But the underlying reason for the creation of cities can be found in the harshness of this particular environment. The area was a place of extremes, where narrow strips of fertile river valleys were bounded by thousands of kilometres of desert and unproductive wastelands. As the small amount of rainfall in the region was incapable of sustaining anything but very limited agriculture, it was only through sophisticated irrigation that isolated fields of land were kept fertile. 5The Tigris and the Euphrates rivers provided water for irrigation, and were also the basis of a communications system that led to the spread of new concepts in farming.

Such a region, then, may not have grown to prosperity by war or conquest – it could work together. The structure of a farming society based on irrigation was one in which the farmer’s skills and labour were crucial. To make the best use of their environment, these farmers had to come together to build the systems of dams, channels and canals to manage water. These projects needed specific skills and labour from outside the farmer’s family, and this established more firmly the patterns of dependence that are at the heart of civilisation.

Changes in the organisation of farming

6-7The intensive farming that came about in Mesopotamia was more efficient and productive and therefore generated a surplus of food, allowing crops in years of good harvests to be stored as protection against future less successful years. It also allowed more land for the production of a wider range of crops. It created a world where there was a need for traders and for skilled craftsmen: in short, it was the beginning of industry and consumerism. The concept of specialisation emerged within the population – with increasing numbers of soldiers, builders, musicians, doctors, fortune tellers – all supported directly or indirectly by agriculture. At the same time, this increased the control that powerful institutions, gradually emerging in the early cities, had over the urban population. Although large numbers of people were freed from the struggle of subsistence farming, they were now totally dependent on the institutions that employed them for their daily sustenance.

The role of the temples

The earliest and most powerful of these institutions was centred on the religious temple. 8-9Ever more temple structures were erected in the form of massive pyramids which had enormous storerooms for the output from the farming estates. 10Over time, the temples acquired these farms for themselves, and appointed a large number of staff to administer them and to deal with the storage of produce. The temples’ greatest advantage was that each citizen was expected to give up some time to work for the temples. This meant that temples could easily store huge amounts of agricultural produce which could be used to buy yet more land. 11In addition, the revenues generated allowed the temples to serve as primitive kinds of banks making loans to people in difficult economic times.

The emergence of writing

We know a surprising amount about these times thanks to the development of an important new technology: writing. 12In Mesopotamia basic records were inscribed in wet clay, unlike the fragile papyrus used in ancient Egypt and Greece. These first writings were largely lists of people and things, simple bookkeeping. But within several hundred years, writing systems had become more advanced capable of recording concepts as well as lists. 13The clay tablets used for writing were tough, and the fires that often burnt down the archives where they were stored usually merely baked them for future generations.

Questions 1-6

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage 1?

In boxes 1–6 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE – if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE – if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN – if there is no information on this

1
Some physical evidence of Uruk still exists in Iraq.

Correct answer: TRUE

2
The people of Uruk lived in large apartment buildings.

Correct answer: NOT GIVEN

3
Builders in Uruk frequently experimented with new construction methods.

Correct answer: TRUE

4
Urban settlements were unusual in Mesopotamia 4,500 years ago.

Correct answer: FALSE

5
The Tigris and the Euphrates rivers were important for the interchange of ideas.

Correct answer: TRUE

6
When there were food shortages, farmers relied mainly on the help of their relatives.

Correct answer: NOT GIVEN

Questions 7-13

Complete the notes below. Choose ONE WORD ONLY from the passage for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 7–13 on your answer sheet.

Early changes in Mesopotamia

Changes in organisation of farming
Improved agricultural methods led to:

  • a food 7 (surplus) being used as insurance

  • a wider range of crops being grown

  • the development of industry and consumerism

  • increased specialisation amongst workers

  • greater control by institutions

Temples

  • were built in the shape of large 8 (pyramids)

  • had large 9 (storerooms) where produce was kept

  • many needed 10 (staff) to manage the farms

  • acted as 11 (banks) in hard economic periods

The development of writing

  • people wrote on surfaces made of 12 (clay)

  • written records remained undamaged after 13 (fires) destroyed the archives they were kept in

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