000448883 000__ 04663cgm\a2200457Ia\4500 000448883 001__ 448883 000448883 005__ 20210513154929.0 000448883 007__ vd\cvaizu 000448883 008__ 091223s2009\\\\vau\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\vleng\d 000448883 020__ $$a9781598035438 000448883 020__ $$a1598035436 000448883 02852 $$a3310$$bTeaching Company 000448883 02842 $$aPD3310-01$$bTeaching Company 000448883 02842 $$aPD3310-02$$bTeaching Company 000448883 02842 $$aPD3310-03$$bTeaching Company 000448883 02842 $$aPD3310-04$$bTeaching Company 000448883 035__ $$a(OCoLC)ocn493391668 000448883 035__ $$a448883 000448883 040__ $$aUNA$$cUNA$$dVP@ 000448883 049__ $$aISEA 000448883 050_4 $$aDF214$$b.W67 2009 000448883 1001_ $$aWorthington, Ian. 000448883 24514 $$aThe long shadow of the ancient Greek world$$h[videorecording] /$$cIan Worthington. 000448883 260__ $$aChantilly, VA :$$bTeaching Co. ;$$cc2009. 000448883 300__ $$a8 videodiscs (1440 min.) :$$bsd., col. ;$$c4 3/4 in. +$$e1 course guidebook (iv, 190 p. ; 19 cm.) 000448883 4901_ $$aThe great courses. Ancient & medieval history 000448883 500__ $$a48 lectures (30 min. each) on eight discs. 000448883 500__ $$aCourse guidebook includes lecture outlines and notes, a timeline, glossary, biographical notes, and bibliography 000448883 500__ $$a"Course No. 3310." 000448883 5050_ $$aPt. 1. Disc 1. Lecture 1. Three mainstays of ancient Greece -- Lecture 2. The 8th-century Renaissance -- Lecture 3. Politics and tyranny in Greece -- Lecture 4. The exercise of political power in Athens -- Lecture 5. Dracon of Athens and the birth of Greek law -- Lecture 6. Solon of Athens : social and economic reforms -- Disc 2. Lecture 7. Solon, democracy, and law -- Lecture 8. From anarchy to tyranny in Athens -- Lecture 9. Pisistratus, tyrant of Athens -- Lecture 10. Tyranny overthrown: the sons of Pisistratus -- Lecture 11. Democracy restored: Cleisthenes of Athens -- Lecture 12. Cleisthenes, the real father of democracy? -- 000448883 5050_ $$aPt. 2. Disc 3. Lecture 13. Sparta, the odd-man-out state in Greece -- Lecture 14. Death or glory : Spartan military education -- Lecture 15. "Come back carrying your shield or on it" -- Lecture 16. From Sparta to Persia -- Lecture 17. Marathon : end of the first Persian invasion -- Lecture 18. Thermopylae and the 300 Spartans -- Disc 4. Lecture 19. Greece triumphs : the end of the Persian Wars -- Lecture 20. From the archaic to the classical period -- Lecture 21. The Delian League : origins and first steps -- Lecture 22. From Delian League to Athenian Empire -- Lecture 23. Ephialtes, founder of radical democracy -- Lecture 24. Rhetoric : a new path to political power -- 000448883 5050_ $$aPt. 3. Disc 5. Lecture 25. Democracy and political speech : then and now -- Lecture 26. The causes of the Peloponnesian War -- Lecture 27. The war's early years and the great plague -- Lecture 28. Athenian successes and a temporary peace -- Lecture 29. War resumes : the Athenian disaster in Sicily -- Lecture 30. Democracy fails : Oligarchy in Athens -- Disc 6. Lecture 31. Final battles : Sparta's triumph over Athens -- Lecture 32. Why Athens lost : the impact on Greece -- Lecture 33. The household in the polis -- Lecture 34. Athenian law and society -- Lecture 35. Historical development of the legal code -- Lecture 36. The judicial machinery of the legal system -- 000448883 5050_ $$aPt. 4. Disc 7. Lecture 37. Types of cases, sycophants and pretrial -- Lecture 38. Going to trial in ancient Athens -- Lecture 39. Macedonia, north of Mount Olympus -- Lecture 40. Philip II : "Greatest of the kings of Europe" -- Lecture 41. Philip II and Macedonian imperialism -- Lecture 42. Greece conquered : the end of Greek autonomy -- Disc 8. Lecture 43. Philip's assassination and legacy -- Lecture 44. Alexander the Great: youth, early kingship -- Lecture 45. Alexander as general -- Lecture 46. Alexander as king -- Lecture 47. Alexander as man : and god? -- Lecture 48. Beyond the classical : the Greeks and us. 000448883 5110_ $$aLecturer, Ian Worthington, Professor of History, University of Missouri, Columbia. 000448883 520__ $$a"This course is taught chronologically, covering Greek history in the Archaic and Classical periods, from 750 B.C.E. to the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C.E. However, it is not the "usual" type of civilization course that tries to cover everything. Instead, by using history and society as a backdrop, it focuses on three major aspects that are as much a mainstay of our tradition as that of the Greeks: democracy, law, and imperialism."--Course guidebook (p. 1). 000448883 538__ $$aDVD. 000448883 651_0 $$aGreece$$xHistory$$yTo 146 B.C. 000448883 651_0 $$aGreece$$xCivilization$$yTo 146 B.C. 000448883 651_0 $$aGreece$$xAntiquities. 000448883 7102_ $$aTeaching Company. 000448883 830_0 $$aGreat courses (DVD).$$pAncient & medieval history. 000448883 85201 $$bdvd$$hDF214$$i.W67$$i2009 000448883 86631 $$apt.1-pt.4 000448883 86731 $$aSuppl. 000448883 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:448883$$pGLOBAL_SET 000448883 980__ $$aBIB 000448883 980__ $$aDVD