Origins of Great Ancient Civilizations

by Kenneth W. Harl

Streaming video, 2005

Status

Available

Call number

930

Collections

Publication

Great Courses (2005), 6 hours, 12 lectures, 104 pages

Description

History. Nonfiction. HTML: Locales like Mesopotamia or the Indus Valley, peoples like the Hittites or Assyrians, or rulers like Sargon, Hammurabi, and Darius are part of a long-dead antiquity, so shrouded with dust that we might be tempted to skip over them entirely, preferring to race forward along history's timeline in search of the riches we know will be found in our studies of Greece and Rome. But, according to Professor Harl, these civilizations, "act as the cultural basis for many of the civilizations that will emerge on the Eurasian landmass and will dictate the destinies of many of the people living today on the globe." These remote, ancient civilizations stand behind the traditions of Greece, so it is critical to understand these great societies in order to better understand those that would come later - including our own. These 12 fast-paced lectures cover many civilizations that may only receive a few lines of cursory discussion in the average Western civilization textbook. Beginning in the Bronze Age and the emergence of urban-based literate civilizations, the story continues through the demise of Persia's great empire at the hands of the Greeks. Along the way, you'll examine advances such as the invention and evolution of writing, the development of vast empires dependent not only on military might but on laws and administration, the growth of trade, and the contributions of the Hebrews to the religious and ethical future of Western civilization. History lovers will appreciate this course for its deep insights and its rock-solid foundation for deeper exploration..… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Local notes

[1] Cradles of civilization [2] First cities of Sumer [3] Mesopotamian kings and scribes [4] Hammurabi's Babylon [5] Egypt in the pyramid age [6] The Middle Kingdom [7] Imperial Egypt [8] New peoples of the Bronze Age [9] The collapse of the Bronze Age [10] From Hebrews to Jews [11] Imperial Assyria [12] The Persian Empire

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