History of the Ancient World: A Global Perspective

History of the Ancient World: A Global Perspective « Series from 2011

Series from 2011

Broadcast info
Genres: Special Interest

While most of us never stop to think about it, ancient civilizations are with us in almost everything we do. The ancient world has influenced our customs, religious beliefs, laws, governments, architecture, and art.

Examine the ancient world's greatest civilizations and how they affect our world today.

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Cities, Civilizations, and Sources

Learn about the different kind of approach you will take in these explorations of the ancient world and hear a story that perfectly illustrates the risks inherent in letting one's own cultural biases and limited perspective overly influence the interpretation of archaeological discoveries.

From Out of the Mesopotamian Mud

This civilization reveals a theme that will appear again and again. Grasp the critical role of geography and resources in shaping not only Mesopotamia's method of subsistence, but also its religion, structures, empire, and means of leaving its written record.

Cultures of the Ancient Near East

The lack of geographical barriers made it difficult for even the most powerful cities to retain their power. See how a succession of empires rose and fell, leaving behind legacies ranging from the use of intimidation in warfare to seafaring, astrology, mathematics, and a systematic legal code.

Ancient Egypt: The Gift of the Nile

Your introduction to Egypt reveals a civilization irrevocably shaped by geography. You learn how the Nile's predictable annual flooding of its banks, though creating a fertile strip amounting to only 3% of Egypt, permitted civilization to thrive in what was otherwise an uninhabitable desert.

Pharaohs, Tombs, and Gods

Discover how Egyptian views of death and tombs changed with the kingdom's occupation by - and eventual expulsion of - the Hyksos, including an examination of how the stark differences between the Egyptian and Mesopotamian environments may have influenced their visions of the afterlife.

The Lost Civilization of the Indus Valley

Your exploration of a once-lost civilization introduces a key theme - the enormous problems faced by modern historians and archaeologists in interpreting an ancient civilization through physical evidence alone, with no written documents to bring that evidence to life.

The Vedic Age of Ancient India

Mystery Cultures of Early Greece

Homer and Indian Poetry

Athens and Experiments in Democracy

Hoplite Warfare and Sparta

Civilization Dawns in China: Shang and Zhou

Confucius and the Greek Philosophers

Mystics, Buddhists, and Zoroastrians

Persians and Greeks

Greek Art and Architecture

Greek Tragedy and the Sophists

The Peloponnesian War and the Trial of Socrates

Philip of Macedon: Architect of Empire

Alexander the Great Goes East

Unifiers of India: Chandragupta and Asoka

Shi Huangdi: First Emperor of China

Earliest Historians of Greece and China

The Hellenistic World

The Great Empire of the Han Dynasty