Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans foundations of Western Civilization
(2003)

Nonfiction

Audiobook CD

Call Numbers:
CD/909.098/SHUTT,T

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
Audiobooks CD/909.098/SHUTT,T Available

Details

PUBLISHED
Prince Frederick, Md. : Recorded Books, [2003]
℗2003
DESCRIPTION

7 audio discs (14 hr.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in. + 1 course guide (128 pages ; 22 cm)

ISBN/ISSN
1402544847 UC007
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

"14 lectures"--On cover

Lecture 1. Overview and backgrounds: Ancient cultures -- Lecture 2. The Hebrew Bible: Overview and Genesis -- Lecture 3. The Hebrew Bible: Exodus, David, the Prophets and Job -- Lecture 4. Homer and The Iliad -- Lecture 5. Homer: The Odyssey and the Birth of Tragedy -- Lecture 6. The Birth of Tragedy: Aeschylus and the Greek Drama -- Lecture 7. Herodotus and Thucydides: Historians and Hellenism -- Lecture 8. Socrates and Plato -- Lecture 9. Plato and Aristotle -- Lecture 10. Virgil and Rome -- Lecture 11. Virgil and Ovid -- Lecture 12. The Christian Bible: The Gospels -- Lecture 13. The Christian Bible: The Diaspora and St. Paul -- Lecture 14. Plotinus, St. Augustine: The End of Antiquity and the Medieval Synthesis

This course examines the foundations of Western Civilization in antiquity. Shutt looks at the culture of the ancient Hebrews, Greeks, and Romans, as well as how these cultures interacted with each other. He pays most of his attention to events taking place and ideas coming to birth in the Mediterranean basin, the fundamental homeland, or cultural hearth of Western Civilization from about 1200 BCE, before the Common Era, to about 600 CE: that is to say, from about the time of the events memorialized as the Trojan War and the Exodus to the end of Antiquity

Spoken compact disc

Additional Titles