World History

KS2

HI-KS2-D003

Studying the achievements of ancient civilisations including Ancient Egypt, Sumer, the Indus Valley and Shang Dynasty; Ancient Greece; and one non-European society that contrasts with British history.

National Curriculum context

World history at KS2 gives pupils knowledge and understanding of some of the great civilisations of the ancient world beyond Europe. The curriculum requires study of the earliest civilisations (with choice from Ancient Sumer, Indus Valley, Ancient Egypt, or Shang Dynasty China), Ancient Greece (as a foundational civilisation for Western culture), and a non-European society that offers significant contrast with British history - with examples given as early Islamic civilisation centred on Baghdad around 900 AD, Mayan civilisation around 900 AD, and the kingdom of Benin from around 900 to 1300 AD. These requirements ensure that pupils encounter world history from diverse geographic and cultural perspectives, challenging any narrowly Eurocentric view of significant history. Studying these civilisations also develops pupils' understanding of the long-range development of human society, technology and culture.

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Concepts

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Clusters

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Prerequisites

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With difficulty levels

Guided Materials: 1

Lesson Clusters

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Investigate the achievements and legacies of ancient civilisations

practice Curated

Single concept domain; ancient civilisations (Egypt, Sumer, Indus Valley, Shang China) are studied as KS2 world history content — pupils examine how early societies organised themselves and what they left behind, developing comparative thinking across cultures.

1 concepts Systems and System Models

Teaching Suggestions (8)

Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.

Ancient Egypt

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

Ancient Egypt is the most widely taught ancient civilisation in English primary schools because it offers spectacular visual evidence (pyramids, tomb paintings, mummies), a rich written record (hieroglyphs, papyri) and famous figures (Tutankhamun, Cleopatra). The Nile provides an outstanding case study for how geography shapes civilisation.

Period: c.3100 BC - 30 BC
Tutankhamun Cleopatra Hatshepsut Howard Carter
Chronology Cause and Consequence Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: The Rosetta Stone, Tutankhamun's Tomb and Death Mask, Egyptian Book of the Dead
Ancient Greek Pottery

Ancient Greece

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

Ancient Greece is statutory (not a choice) because of the scale of its influence on Western civilisation. The inclusion of enslaved people and women's exclusion from democracy provides essential context for critical analysis. The Athens/Sparta comparison is ideal for developing the disciplinary concept of similarity and difference.

Period: c.800 BC - 146 BC
Pericles Alexander the Great Socrates Aristotle Leonidas
Cause and Consequence Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: The Parthenon (and Elgin Marbles), Ancient Greek Pottery (Black-Figure and Red-Figure)
Myths and Legends: Greek Myths Ancient Greek Pottery

Ancient Sumer

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

Ancient Sumer is the world's first literate civilisation and offers a unique opportunity to study the origins of writing, cities, law and governance. The cuneiform tablets provide unusually direct evidence of daily life. Studying Sumer develops understanding of what 'civilisation' means as a concept.

Period: c.4500 BC - 1900 BC
Gilgamesh Hammurabi
Cause and Consequence Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: Cuneiform Tablets from Sumer, The Standard of Ur, Stele of Hammurabi's Code
Traditional Tales: Myths from Around the World

Benin (West Africa)

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

The Kingdom of Benin offers a powerful corrective to narratives that present Africa as historically lacking complex civilisation. The Benin Bronzes are among the finest examples of metal casting in the world and serve as both art and historical source. The contemporary repatriation debate connects historical study to present-day questions of justice.

Period: c.900 CE - 1300 CE
Oba Ewuare Oba Esigie
Cause and Consequence Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: Benin Bronzes
Trade, Economic Geography and Fairtrade Discussion and Debate: Should Animals Be Kept in Zoos? Barbara Hepworth Sculpture

Early Islamic Civilisation

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

Early Islamic civilisation offers a powerful counter-narrative to Eurocentric views of the 'Dark Ages': while Western Europe experienced fragmentation after Rome's fall, Baghdad was the world's leading centre of scholarship. The topic develops understanding of how knowledge transfers across cultures.

Period: c.600 CE - 1200 CE
Muhammad Harun al-Rashid Al-Khwarizmi Ibn Sina (Avicenna)
Cause and Consequence Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: Arabic Scientific and Medical Manuscripts, Astrolabes from the Islamic World
Trade, Economic Geography and Fairtrade William Morris Pattern Design

Mayan Civilisation

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

The Mayan civilisation offers a genuinely different perspective on human achievement: a complex literate society that developed independently of Old World civilisations. The contrast with Anglo-Saxon England at the same period (c.900 CE) is striking and pedagogically powerful.

Period: c.2000 BC - 1500 AD (depth focus c.900 CE)
K'inich Janaab Pakal (Pakal the Great) Lady Six Sky
Cause and Consequence Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Americas Regional Study

The Indus Valley Civilisation

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

The Indus Valley is one of the most mysterious ancient civilisations because its writing system remains undeciphered, making it an outstanding vehicle for teaching about the limits and possibilities of archaeological evidence. The sophisticated urban planning challenges assumptions about 'primitive' ancient peoples.

Period: c.3300 BC - 1300 BC
Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: Mohenjo-daro Archaeological Remains, Indus Valley Seals

The Shang Dynasty

History Study Topic Study
Pedagogical rationale

The Shang Dynasty offers outstanding source material in the form of oracle bones, which combine evidence of early writing, religious beliefs and political decision-making in a single source type. The sophisticated bronze casting technology challenges assumptions about ancient civilisations.

Period: c.1600 BC - 1046 BC
King Tang Fu Hao King Wu of Zhou
Similarity and Difference Significance Evidence and Interpretation
Sources: Shang Dynasty Oracle Bones, Tomb of Fu Hao

Concepts (1)

Ancient Civilisations

knowledge Guided Materials

HI-KS2-C004

The earliest civilisations - Ancient Sumer, the Indus Valley, Ancient Egypt and the Shang Dynasty of Ancient China - represent the first complex, literate human societies, emerging between approximately 3500 and 1200 BC in different parts of the world. They share characteristic features including writing systems, monumental architecture, complex religious and political hierarchies, specialised crafts and trade networks. Studying these civilisations develops pupils' understanding of how human societies developed from prehistoric hunter-gatherer communities to complex, literate, urban civilisations, and provides global perspective on the origins of human achievement.

Teaching guidance

Provide an overview of where and when the earliest civilisations appeared before conducting a depth study of one. Use maps to show that civilisations emerged independently in different parts of the world. Study the key features of the chosen civilisation in depth: its geography, political system, religious beliefs, achievements and daily life. Use artefacts, images of archaeological sites and translations of primary sources where available. Connect to pupils' general chronological framework: how long ago was this civilisation? What was happening in Britain at the same time?

Vocabulary: civilisation, ancient, Bronze Age, settlement, city-state, pharaoh, hierarchy, irrigation, agriculture, trade, writing, archaeology, artefact, empire, legacy
Common misconceptions

Pupils often think ancient civilisations were primitive or unsophisticated. Studying their technological, artistic and intellectual achievements challenges this. The concept of civilisation can carry value judgements; it is important to discuss what the term means without implying that non-urban societies are inferior. Pupils may not connect ancient civilisations to the present; discussing legacies (alphabet, legal codes, mathematics, architecture) makes the connection explicit.

Difficulty levels

Entry

Recalling key facts about an ancient civilisation studied in class: where it was, when it existed, and one distinctive feature.

Example task

Tell me three facts about Ancient Egypt.

Model response: Ancient Egypt was in Africa along the River Nile. It existed thousands of years ago. The Egyptians built pyramids as tombs for their pharaohs.

Developing

Describing key features of an ancient civilisation including its achievements, social structure or daily life, using specific details from study.

Example task

Describe the achievements of Ancient Egypt. What did the Egyptians create or discover that was impressive?

Model response: The Egyptians built enormous pyramids using precise mathematics. They invented hieroglyphic writing and wrote on papyrus. They developed a calendar based on the Nile's flooding, mummified their dead, and created beautiful art and jewellery.

Expected

Explaining how the geography, resources and environment of a region shaped the civilisation that developed there, using specific evidence.

Example task

How did the River Nile shape Ancient Egyptian civilisation?

Model response: The Nile flooded every year, depositing fertile soil that allowed farming in an otherwise desert landscape. This meant people could settle permanently and grow surplus food, which allowed specialisation — some people could become builders, priests or scribes instead of farmers. The river also provided transport and water for drinking and irrigation. Without the Nile, Egyptian civilisation could not have developed as it did.

Greater Depth

Comparing two ancient civilisations, identifying similarities and differences in their development, and considering why different civilisations developed different solutions to similar problems.

Example task

Both Ancient Egypt and the Indus Valley civilisation developed near rivers. Compare how each civilisation used its river environment.

Model response: Both civilisations depended on river flooding for agriculture and used rivers for transport and trade. However, the Indus Valley civilisation developed sophisticated drainage and sewage systems in its cities, while Egypt focused more on irrigation canals. Egypt's civilisation was more centralised under pharaohs, while the Indus Valley cities seem to have been more independently governed. Both found solutions to the same problem — how to use river water — but their solutions reflected different priorities.

Delivery rationale

History interpretive concept — source analysis and perspective-taking require curated materials and facilitated discussion.