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The Western Tradition
The Western Tradition

Season 1

January 1, 1989

52 Episodes

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Episodes

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E1

The Dawn of History

January 1, 1989

The origins of the human race are traced from anthropoid ancestors to the agricultural revolution.

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E2

The Ancient Egyptians

January 1, 1989

Egyptian irrigation created one of the first great civilizations.

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E3

Mesopotamia

January 1, 1989

Settlements in the Fertile Crescent gave rise to the great river civilizations of the Middle East.

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E4

From Bronze to Iron

January 1, 1989

Metals revolutionized tools, as well as societies, in the empires of Assyria, Persia, and Neo-Babylonia.

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E5

The Rise of Greek Civilization

January 1, 1989

Democracy and philosophy arose from Greek cities at the edge of the civilized world.

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E6

Greek Thought

January 1, 1989

Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle laid the foundation of Western intellectual thought.

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E7

Alexander the Great

January 1, 1989

Alexander's conquests quadrupled the size of the world known to the Greeks.

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E8

The Hellenistic Age

January 1, 1989

Hellenistic kingdoms extended Greek culture throughout the Mediterranean.

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E9

The Rise of Rome

January 1, 1989

Through its army, Rome built an empire that shaped the West.

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E10

The Roman Empire

January 1, 1989

Rome's civil engineering contributed as much to the empire as did its weapons.

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E11

Early Christianity

January 1, 1989

Christianity spread despite contempt and persecution from Rome.

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E12

The Rise of the Church

January 1, 1989

The old heresy became the Roman empire's official religion under the Emperor Constantine.

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E13

The Decline of Rome

January 1, 1989

While enemies slashed at Rome's borders, civil war and economic collapse destroyed the empire from within.

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E14

The Fall of Rome

January 1, 1989

Despite the success of emperors such as Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius, Rome fell victim to barbarian invasions.

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E15

The Byzantine Empire

January 1, 1989

From Constantinople, the Byzantine Empire carried on the traditions of Greece and Rome.

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E16

The Fall of Byzantium

January 1, 1989

Nearly a thousand years after Rome's fall, Constantinople was conquered by the forces of Islam.

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E17

The Dark Ages

January 1, 1989

Barbarian kingdoms took possession of the fragments of the Roman Empire.

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E18

The Age of Charlemagne

January 1, 1989

Charlemagne revived hopes for a new empire in Western Europe.

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E19

The Middle Ages

January 1, 1989

Amid invasion and civil disorder, a military aristocracy dominated the kingdoms of Europe.

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E20

The Feudal Order

January 1, 1989

Bishop, knight, and peasant exemplified some of the social divisions of the year 1000 A.D.

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E21

Common Life in the Middle Ages

January 1, 1989

Famine, disease, and short life expectancies were the conditions that shaped medieval beliefs.

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E22

Cities and Cathedrals of the Middle Ages

January 1, 1989

The great churches embodied the material and spiritual ambitions of the age.

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E23

The Late Middle Ages

January 1, 1989

Two hundred years of war and plague debilitated Europe.

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E24

The National Monarchies

January 1, 1989

A new urban middle class emerged, while dynastic marriages established centralized monarchies.

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E25

Renaissance & the Age of Discovery

January 1, 1989

Renaissance humanists made man "the measure of all things." Europe was possessed by a new passion for knowledge.

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E26

Renaissance & the New World

January 1, 1989

The discovery of America challenged Europe.

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E27

The Reformation

January 1, 1989

Voiced by Martin Luther, Protestantism shattered the unity of the Catholic Church.

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E28

The Rise of the Middle Class

January 1, 1989

As the cities grew, new middle-class mores had an impact on religious life.

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E29

The Wars of Religion

January 1, 1989

For more than a century, the quarrels of Protestants and Catholics tore Europe apart.

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E30

The Rise of the Trading Cities

January 1, 1989

Amid religious wars, a few cities learned that tolerance increased their prosperity.

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E31

The Age of Absolutism

January 1, 1989

Exhausted by war and civil strife, many Europeans exchanged earlier liberties and anarchies for greater peace.

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E32

Absolutism and the Social Contract

January 1, 1989

Arguments about the legitimate source of political power centered on divine right versus natural law.

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E33

The Enlightened Despots

January 1, 1989

Monarchs considered reforms in order to create more efficient societies, but not at the expense of their own power.

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E34

The Enlightenment

January 1, 1989

Intellectual theories about the nature of man and his potential came to the fore.

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E35

The Enlightenment and Society

January 1, 1989

Scientists and social reformers battled for universal human rights during a peaceful and prosperous period.

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E36

The Modern Philosophers

January 1, 1989

Freedom of thought and expression opened new vistas explored by French, English, and American thinkers.

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E37

The American Revolution

January 1, 1989

The British colonists created a society that tested Enlightenment ideas and resisted restrictions imposed by England.

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E38

The American Republic

January 1, 1989

A new republic, the compromise of radicals and conservatives, was founded on universal freedoms.

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E39

The Death of the Old Regime

January 1, 1989

In France the old order collapsed under revolutionaries' attacks and the monarchy's own weakness.

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E40

The French Revolution

January 1, 1989

Liberty, equality, and fraternity skidded into a reign of Terror.

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E41

The Industrial Revolution

January 1, 1989

Technology and mass production reduced famine and ushered in higher standards of living.

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E42

The Industrial World

January 1, 1989

A consumer revolution was fueled by coal, public transportation, and new city services.

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E43

Revolution and Romantics

January 1, 1989

Leaders in the arts, literature, and political theory argued for social justice and national liberation.

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E44

The Age of the Nation-States

January 1, 1989

The great powers cooperated to quell internal revolts, yet competed to acquire colonies.

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E45

A New Public

January 1, 1989

Public education and mass communications created a new political life and leisure time.

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E46

Fin de Siècle

January 1, 1989

Everyday life of the working class was transformed by leisure, prompting the birth of an elite avant-garde movement.

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E47

The First World War and the Rise of Fascism

January 1, 1989

Old empires crumbled during World War I to be replaced by right-wing dictatorships in Italy, Spain, and Germany.

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E48

The Second World War

January 1, 1989

World War II was a war of new tactics and strategies. Civilian populations became targets as the Nazi holocaust exterminated millions of people.

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E49

The Cold War

January 1, 1989

The U.S. and Soviet Union dominated Europe and confronted each other in Korea.

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E50

Europe and the Third World

January 1, 1989

Burdened with the legacy of colonial imperialism, the Third World rushed development to catch up with its Western counterparts.

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E51

The Technological Revolution

January 1, 1989

Keeping up with the ever-increasing pace of change became the standard of the day.

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E52

Toward the Future

January 1, 1989

Modern medicine, atomic energy, computers, and new concepts of time, energy, and matter all have an important effect on life in the 20th century.