The Influence of Geography and the Environment On the Development of Early Civilization

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Geography and the environment play a monumental role in the establishment and success of a nearly every civilization. For example, rivers bring water and allow for agricultural development, while mountains or deserts provide for protection and create a barrier. Many things, such as the aforementioned deserts and mountains, can offer both positive and negative influences on the society in question. The climate and amount of rainfall is directly related to the success or failure of crop growing, and thus related to the amount of time spent on simply surviving. Civilizations that are able to spend less time on subsistence farming are able to redirect that energy towards the establishment of arts, culture, religion, and science. Where a civilization is located will always play a crucial role in the success – or failure – of the society.

The first example of this is also the first example of what we recognize as a civilized community. These cities, including Ur, Eridu, and Uruk, were founded along the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, in what is now known as the Middle East (specifically, the modern-day country of Iraq). The land on either side of these rivers was the only place where agriculture could survive in this harsh climate, thus making it the only feasible place where people could survive. In fact, cities themselves were founded when people bound together in the only places where they had any chance of survival. However, the open and flat land of this area also made it easy to maneuver armies and dictate conquest; as a result of this, these early cities were often engaged in conflict with themselves and the people around them. Much of their income and resources were directed towards the development of weapons and the training, h...

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... protection of the desert not been available to them, all the time spent on establishing their elaborate and complex society would have been spent scraping an existence from the land of the desert, and Egypt, as we know it, would not exist.

In conclusion, it is easy to how civilizations are shaped by the geography and environment of the land around them. For some, such as Egypt and Ur, it pervades all aspects of life, while for others it can merely act as an influence. The amount of time left for artistic, scientific, and religious specialization in a civilization is directly connected to the success or failure of agriculture in that area, as well as whether there is a need to develop a strong military. Since the dawn of mankind, all cities and civilizations must find a way to work with or around the geography of the land where they are located.

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