3rd millennium BC

{{short description|Millennium between 3000 BC to 2001 BC}}

{{Millenniumbox|-3}}

File:3rd millennium BC montage.jpg|thumb|400x400px|From top left clockwise: Pyramid of Djoser; Khufu; Great Pyramid of Giza, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World; Cuneiform, a contract for the sale of a field and a house; Enheduana, a high priestess and one of the earliest known authors in history; Gudea (Background: Standard of Ur).

rect 34 26 474 319 Pyramid of Djoser

rect 541 58 802 271 Khufu

rect 825 28 1264 297 Great Pyramid of Giza

rect 79 352 401 656 Cuneiform

rect 572 309 770 665 Enheduana

rect 920 320 1157 676 Gudea

rect 1 1 1279 719 Standard of Ur

The 3rd millennium BC spanned the years 3000 to 2001 BC. This period of time corresponds to the Early to Middle Bronze Age, characterized by the early empires in the Ancient Near East. In Ancient Egypt, the Early Dynastic Period is followed by the Old Kingdom. In Mesopotamia, the Early Dynastic Period is followed by the Akkadian Empire. In what is now Northwest India and Pakistan, the Indus Valley civilization developed a state society.

World population growth relaxed after the burst due to the Neolithic Revolution.

World population was largely stable, at roughly 60 million, with a slow overall growth rate at roughly 0.03% p.a.Jean-Noël Biraben, "Essai sur l'évolution du nombre des hommes", Population 34-1 (1979), 13–25, estimates 40 million at 5000 BC and 100 million at 1600 BC, for an average growth rate of 0.027% p.a. over the Chalcolithic to Middle Bronze Age.

Overview

{{Bronze Age}}

The Bronze Age began in the Ancient Near East roughly between 3000 BC and 2500 BC. The previous millennium had seen the emergence of advanced, urbanized civilizations, new bronze metallurgy extending the productivity of agricultural work, and highly developed ways of communication in the form of writing. In the 3rd millennium BC, the growth of these riches, both intellectually and physically, became a source of contention on a political stage, and rulers sought the accumulation of more wealth and more power. Along with this came the first appearances of monumental architecture, imperialism, organized absolutism and internal revolution.

The civilizations of Sumer and Akkad in Mesopotamia became a collection of volatile city-states in which warfare was common. Uninterrupted conflicts drained all available resources, energies and populations. In this millennium, larger empires succeeded the last, and conquerors grew in stature until the great Sargon of Akkad pushed his empire to the whole of Mesopotamia and beyond. It would not be surpassed in size until Assyrian times 1,500 years later.

In the Old Kingdom of Egypt, the Egyptian pyramids were constructed and would remain the tallest and largest human constructions for thousands of years. Also in Egypt, pharaohs began to posture themselves as living gods made of an essence different from that of other human beings. In Europe, which was still largely neolithic during the same period, the builders of megaliths were constructing giant monuments of their own. In the Near East and the Occident during the 3rd millennium BC, limits were being pushed by architects and rulers.

Towards the close of the millennium, Egypt became the stage of the first popular revolution recorded in history. After lengthy wars, the Sumerians recognized the benefits of unification into a stable form of national government and became a relatively peaceful, well-organized, complex technocratic state called the 3rd Dynasty of Ur. This dynasty was later to become involved with a wave of nomadic invaders known as the Amorites, who were to play a major role in the region during the following centuries.

Cultures

File:Snake Goddess - Heraklion Achaeological Museum retouched.jpg

;Near East

{{see|Early Bronze Age}}

;Europe

{{see|Neolithic Europe}}

  • c. 3200 BC: Cycladic culture in Aegean islands of Greece.
  • c. 3200 BC3100 BC: Helladic culture in mainland Greece.{{cite web|title=The Bronze Age on the Greek Mainland: Early Bronze Age – Early Helladic I|year=1999–2000|location=Athens|publisher=Foundation of the Hellenic World|url=http://www.fhw.gr/chronos/02/mainland/en/eh/intro/eb1/index.html}}
  • c. 3200 BC2800 BC: Ozieri culture.
  • Founding of Europe's oldest civilization, the Minoan Civilization in 3000 BC.
  • Corded Ware culture (also Battle-axe culture, or Single Grave culture).{{Cite journal |last1=Papac |first1=Luka |last2=Ernée |first2=Michal |last3=Dobeš |first3=Miroslav |last4=Langová |first4=Michaela |last5=Rohrlach |first5=Adam B. |last6=Aron |first6=Franziska |last7=Neumann |first7=Gunnar U. |last8=Spyrou |first8=Maria A. |last9=Rohland |first9=Nadin |last10=Velemínský |first10=Petr |last11=Kuna |first11=Martin |display-authors=1 |date=2021 |title=Dynamic changes in genomic and social structures in third millennium BC central Europe |journal=Science Advances |language=en |volume=7 |issue=35 |pages=eabi6941 |doi=10.1126/sciadv.abi6941 |pmid=34433570 |issn=2375-2548 |pmc=8386934 |bibcode=2021SciA....7.6941P }}
  • Late Maikop culture.
  • Late Vinca culture.
  • Globular Amphora culture.
  • Early Beaker culture.{{cite news |title=Genetic Study Reveals Bohemia's Dynamic Prehistory |url=https://www.archaeology.org/news/9963-210830-bohemia-genome-migration |work=Archaeology |publisher=Archaeological Institute of America |date=30 August 2021}}
  • Yamnaya culture, Catacomb culture, likely loci of Indo-European Satemization.{{Cite journal|last1=Haak |first1=Wolfgang |last2=Lazaridis |first2=Iosif |last3=Patterson |first3=Nick |last4=Rohland |first4=Nadin |last5=Mallick |first5=Swapan |last6=Llamas |first6=Bastien |last7=Brandt |first7=Guido |last8=Nordenfelt |first8=Susanne |last9=Harney |first9=Eadaoin |last10=Stewardson |first10=Kristin |last11=Fu |first11=Qiaomei |date=11 June 2015 |title=Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in Europe |journal=Nature |volume=522 |issue=7555 |pages=207–211 |doi=10.1038/nature14317 |issn=0028-0836 |pmc=5048219 |pmid=25731166 |bibcode=2015Natur.522..207H |arxiv=1502.02783}}
  • The Sintashta-Petrovka-Arkaim culture emerges from the Catacomb culture from about 2200 BC, likely locus of Proto-Indo-Iranian.
  • Butmir culture.
  • Late Funnelbeaker culture.
  • Baden culture.
  • Gaudo culture.

;South Asia

;East and Southeast Asia

;Americas

;Sub-Saharan Africa

Events

File:Los Millares recreacion cuadro.jpg, with its walls.]]

Certain 4th millennium BC events were precursors to the 3rd millennium BC:

  • {{Circa|3700}}-1800 BC: Caral-Supe flourished between the fourth and second millennia BC, with the formation of the first city generally dated to around 3500 BC, at Huaricanga, in the Fortaleza area. It is from 3100 BC onward that large-scale human settlement and communal construction become clearly apparent, which lasted until a period of decline around 1800 BC.
  • {{Circa|3500 BC}}-3000 BC Huaricanga is the earliest city of the Norte Chico civilization, called Caral or Caral-Supe in Peru and Spanish language sources. "It existed around 3500 BC and was the oldest city in the Americas and one of the earliest cities in the world." It is located in the arid Fortaleza Valley on Peru's north central coast and is 14 mi (23 km) inland from the Pacific Ocean. The site covers a total area of 100 hectares, and is the largest Late Archaic construction in the Norte Chico region. The three earthwork mounds on the large site are believed to be remains of pyramidal-shaped structures. Two standing stones, known as huancas, also survive. Excavation in 2007 revealed a structure believed to be a temple, of a design similar to, but predating, the Mito architectural tradition seen in the Peruvian highlands. In addition, later research in the Fortaleza and Pativilca valleys has found evidence of maize cultivation, as well as fourteen other domesticated species of fruits and vegetables. This suggests that agriculture may have been more important to the development of Caral-Supe civilization than previously thought, as it was for other independent civilizations of the world, such as Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, and India.
  • c. 3700 BC: Lothal: Indus Valley trade-port city in India.
  • c. 3650 BC3000 BC: Minoan culture appeared on Crete.
  • c. 3200 BC/3100 BC: Helladic culture and Cycladic culture both emerge in Greece.

File:P1150890 Louvre stèle de victoire Akkad AO2678 rwk.jpg king Rimush]]

The 3rd millennium BC included the following key events:

File:Marble seated harp player MET DP256380.jpg, made by the Cycladic culture sometime in the 28th century BC.]]

Inventions, discoveries, introductions

File:The Great Pyramid of Giza.jpg, Kheops.]]

File:MedicineWheel.jpg, Wyoming, United States.]]

  • The oldest documented evidence of the practice of meditation are wall arts in the Mohenjodaro and Harappa.
  • Stepwell: Earliest clear evidence of the origins of the stepwell is found in the Indus Valley civilisation's archaeological site at Mohenjodaro in Pakistan.
  • Toilet platforms above drains, in the proximity of wells, are found in several houses of the cities of Mohenjodaro and Harappa.
  • Pottery develops in Americas (30th century BC).
  • c. 3000 BC: Potter's wheel appears in Mesopotamia.
  • 2900 BC2400 BC: Sumerians invent phonogram (linguistics).
  • 2650 BC: Reservoirs, script, metals and pottery used in the city of Dholavira in Indus Valley civilization.
  • {{Circa|2300 BC}}: Metals are used in Northern Europe.
  • Chinese record a comet.
  • Building of the Great Pyramid of Giza (26th century BC).
  • Sails used on ships (20th century BC).
  • First ziggurats built in Sumer.
  • Near East civilizations enter Bronze Age around 3000 BC.
  • Oldest known medicine wheel constructed in the Americas.
  • First Copper (~2500 BC) and then Bronze (~2000 BC) and other types of metallurgy are introduced to Ireland.
  • The kunga was first bred in Ancient Syria and Mesopotamia by hybridizing captured now-extinct Syrian wild ass males with domestic donkey females between 2600 and 2000 BCE. It later fell out of favor when both domestic horses and their donkey hybrids, mules, arrived in the ancient Near East at the end of the millennium.
  • Domestication of the horse with the coming of Indo-Europeans in central Eurasia.
  • The chariot emerges in Eurasian Steppe just before 2000 BC.
  • The camel (dromedary) domesticated (though widespread use took until mid-to-late 2nd millennium BC).{{cite book|first=Chris|last=Scarre|title=Smithsonian Timelines of the Ancient World|year=1993|isbn=978-1-56458-305-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yy3VngEACAAJ|page=176|publisher=Smithsonian Institution |quote=Both the dromedary (the one-humped camel of Arabia) and the Bactrian camel (the two-humped camel of Central Asia) had been domesticated since before 2000 BC.}}{{cite book|last=Bulliet|first=Richard W.|title=The Camel and the Wheel|series=Morningside Book Series|location=New York|publisher=Columbia University Press|year=1990|orig-year=1975|page=183|isbn=978-0-231-07235-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vnf74PlZ7Z8C|quote=As has already been mentioned, this type of utilization [camels pulling wagons] goes back to the earliest known period of two-humped camel domestication in the third millennium BC.}}
  • Indoor plumbing and sewage in the Indus Valley civilization.{{Cite web|last=Khan|first=Saifullah|title=Chapter 2 Sanitation and wastewater technologies in Harappa/Indus valley civilization (ca. 2600-1900 BC|url=https://www.academia.edu/5937322|language=en}}File:Ur chariot.jpg, from the Sumerian city-state of Ur, {{Circa|2600 BC}}]]
  • Sumerian medicine discovers the healing qualities of mineral springs.{{Cite book|last=Johnston|first=Douglas M.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=99H_tpN_iVkC&dq=sumerian+mineral+springs&pg=PA147|title=The Historical Foundations of World Order: The Tower and the Arena|date=2008|publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers|isbn=978-90-04-16167-2|language=en}}
  • Weaving loom known in Europe.{{Cite web|title=Loom {{!}} weaving|url=https://www.britannica.com/technology/loom|access-date=2021-01-20|website=Encyclopedia Britannica|language=en}}
  • Ornamental buttons—made from seashell—were used in the Indus Valley civilisation for ornamental purposes by 2000 BCE.
  • Sumerian numerical system based on multiples of 6 and 12.{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Egyptians begin use of papyrus.{{Cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/pyma/hd_pyma.htm|title=Papyrus-Making in Egypt|last=Capua|website=www.metmuseum.org|access-date=2019-10-05}}
  • Austronesian peoples have developed lateen sail, and the out-rigger as well as extensive development of celestial navigation systems.{{citation needed|date=October 2018}}
  • Oldest known evidence of the inhalation of cannabis smoke, as indicated by charred cannabis seeds found in a ritual brazier at a burial site in present-day Romania.{{cite book|last=Rudgley|first=Richard|author-link=Richard Rudgley|year=2000|orig-year=1999|title=Lost Civilisations of the Stone Age|location=New York|publisher=Touchstone (Simon and Schuster)|page=138|isbn=978-0-684-85580-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vhSHn-B89A0C}}

Cultural landmarks

File:Stonehenge2007 07 30.jpg

Centuries

References

{{Reflist}}

{{Millennia}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2019}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:3rd Millennium Bc}}

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