sumer and akad
The answer for A+ would be all of them
Early Andean religion provided the foundation for Inca culture.
The first civilizations rose in an area called the Fertile Crescent. They were city-states who often fought for territory and control of the Euphrates and Tigris rivers. They mostly lived in an area called Sumer, the southern part of Mesopotamia. This was an area that soon became where the great civilizations of Babylonia and Assyria rose.
The first law ever to be written was first believed to be the Code of Hammurabi but there was later discovered an earlier text which revealed a code written by a Sumerian King named Ur-Nammu who predates Hammurabi by three centuries. While the code of Hammurabi is flawed by it's notion of divine right to rule, it does bring to law important understandings about false accusations, property rights, theft and entering into contracts.
No, 356 BCE is earlier.
Both the Chimú and Inca civilizations were indigenous South American civilizations that thrived in the Andean region. They both had highly organized societies with complex political systems and advanced engineering techniques, such as the construction of elaborate irrigation systems. Additionally, both civilizations practiced agriculture as a primary means of sustenance and had distinct art styles that reflected their cultural beliefs and practices.
he did not not conquer other civilizations
Social classes
The answer for A+ would be all of them
Taiwan
All answers are correct (A+)
The earlier ones were absorbed by the incoming Greeks.
In the central and southern Greek peninsula after earlier beginnings in Crete.
The first civilizations were characterized by the development of urban centers, organized governments, social hierarchies, complex economies, and writing systems. These advancements allowed for the creation of more complex and centralized societies with specialized divisions of labor and increased trade and communication.
Early Andean religion provided the foundation for Inca culture.
earlier civilisations, of course.
A:In spite of earlier attributions, the psalms are now known to have been compiled during a period of more than two hundred years, during and after the Babylonian Exile, although some contain material from earlier centuries. In the case of Psalm 120, we see references to the author, in anguish and woe, living in the land of Mesech and Kedar. Second Isaiah, who wrote during the Babylonian Exile, mentions an Arabic tribe of 'Kedar', confirming that this psalm was written during the Babylonian Exile, in the sixth century BCE.