History, asked by oliviaserva, 6 months ago

Step:1 How the kings were elected around 600BCE?
Step:2 How the leaders are elected present day?
Step:3 Imagine how the leaders will be elected in future generations.

Step:4 Think and compare and contrast on a chart paper/ppt about the above-mentioned questions in 3 separate columns - PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE.
Paste or draw, use your creativity and imagination to the best to showcase the three scenarios.

Answers

Answered by emilydafirst
4

Answer:

Today, almost every city has a supermarket with a wide variety of available foods. We take for granted the fact that people have different types of jobs and that governments exist. But, reliable food sources, specialized work, and governments did not exist for most of human history! They are the products of historical processes that began with the first civilizations several thousand years ago.

A civilization is a complex society that creates agricultural surpluses, allowing for specialized labor, social hierarchy, and the establishment of cities. Developments such as writing, complex religious systems, monumental architecture, and centralized political power have been suggested as identifying markers of civilization, as well. When we see these changes occur, we should stop and ask, “Did people institute these practices because they were beneficial, or were they forced on them?” Historians debate this very question, trying to determine whether civilization was a bottom-up or top-down development.^1

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start superscript, 1, end superscript Most likely, it was a bit of both.^2

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Some people think civilization is an advanced stage in the progression of human cultural evolution. But, when historians or anthropologists use the term civilization, they mean a society has many different, interconnected parts. So, rather than thinking about different forms of social organization as completely separate models, it’s helpful to think in terms of a spectrum of complexity. On one end, we have hunter-forager societies—which have little complexity—and on the other end, we have civilizations—which are highly complex. In between lie a wide variety of social structures of varying types and levels of complexity.

Explanation:

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