The origin of civilization
(2010)

Nonfiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : The Great Courses, 2010
Made available through hoopla
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (1440 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9781682764237 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) MWT12398329, 1682764230 (sound recording : hoopla Audio Book) 12398329
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Lecturer: Scott MacEachern

What defines a civilization? How did the first states emerge? How were the world's ancient states similar and different? Answer these and other dramatic questions with this grand 48-lecture course that reveals how human beings around the world transitioned from small farming communities to the impressive cultural and political systems that would alter the course of history. Taking a gripping archaeological and historical approach to formative states such as the ancient Egyptians, the Chinese, and the Maya, Professor MacEachern completes your understanding of the history of civilization by exploring it at its earliest stages. Unlike traditional surveys of ancient civilizations, which tend to focus only on the glorious achievements of these cultures, you'll look at those first all-important steps that the world's first civilizations would take on the road to glory. You'll investigate places such as Mesopotamia, where agriculture laid the foundation for groundbreaking experiments in social and political development in places like Uruk and Sumer;?the eastern Mediterranean, where expanding maritime trade during the Bronze Age increasingly knit the different societies of these islands into a web of political and economic relationships; and Mesoamerica, where the indigenous states in and around what are now Mexico, Honduras, and Nicaragua reveal the full flowering of Olmec and Maya civilization. You'll also take an engaging look at what archaeologists have learned from some of the world's oldest and most intriguing sites. In the end, these lectures will leave you awestruck at the diverse ways that ancient people crafted complex systems - systems whose broad strokes remain with us even today. All Lectures: 1. Ancient States and Civilizations 2. The History of Archaeological Research 3. Studying the Origins of States 4. Archaeological Interpretation - ßatalh̲yپk 5. Stepping Stones to Civilization 6. Trajectories of Cultural Development 7. When Is a State a State? 8. A Complex Neolithic - Halafian and Samarran 9. Hierarchy and Urbanism - 'Ubaid Mesopotamia 10. The Uruk World System 11. Sumer and Afterward 12. Civilization and Pastoralism in Mesopotamia 13. The Development of Writing in Mesopotamia 14. The Gift of the Nile 15. The Egyptian Predynastic Period 16. The Unification of Upper and Lower Egypt 17. Divinity and Display in Dynastic Egypt 18. Why So Different? Mesopotamia and the Nile 19. Borders and Territories of Ancient States 20. The Levantine Copper and Early Bronze Ages 21. Hierarchy and Society in the Aegean 22. Early Minoan and Mycenaean Civilizations 23. Palace and Countryside on Crete 24. How Things Fall Apart - The Greek Dark Ages 25. First Farmers in the Indus Valley 26. Cities along the Indus 27. Seeing What We Expect - Power and Display 28. Sedentism and Agriculture in Early China 29. State Formation in Ancient China 30. Origins of the Chinese Writing System 31. From Human Sacrifice to the Tao of Politics 32. Spread of States in Mainland Southeast Asia 33. Axumite Civilization in Ethiopia 34. Inland Niger Delta - Hierarchy and Heterarchy 35. Lake Chad Basin - Settlement and Complexity 36. Great Zimbabwe and Its Successors 37. Sedentism and Agriculture in Mesoamerica 38. The Olmec of Lowland Mexico 39. Teotihuacǹ - The First American City 40.Beginnings of States in Lowland Mesoamerica 41. The Great Maya City-States 42.Epigraphy - Changing Views of the Maya 43. Was There a Maya Collapse? 44. Adaptations in Pacific South America 45. Pyramids and Precocity in Coastal Peru 46. Andean Civilization - Chav̕n to Chim{250} 47. The Florescence of the Inka Empire 48. Ancient States - Unity and Diversity?

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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