The Great Courses
  • 1-800-832-2412
  • Help & Customer Service
  • About Us
  • Shopping Cart
  • Recently Viewed
    • History of the English Language, 2nd Edition

    • Books That Have Made History: Books That Can Change Your Life

    • Great Masters: Mahler—His Life and Music

  • My Account
  • Home
  • Courses
  • Professors
  • WHERE TO START: RECOMENDATIONS

New & Featured

  • Special Sale - 70% Off
  • New Releases
  • Best Sellers
  • Special Set Offers
  • Courses to Start With

Courses by Topic

  • Science & Mathematics
    • Math
    • Astronomy
    • Physics
    • Biology
    • Earth Science
    • History of Science
    • Social Science
    • Other
    • Special Sets
  • History
    • Classical World
    • American History
    • Other Modern History
    • Other Ancient History
    • Medieval History
    • Renaissance & Early Modern
    • Civilization & Culture
    • Special Sets
  • Fine Arts & Music
    • Art History
    • Music
    • Special Sets
  • Religion & Theology
    • Christianity
    • Judaism
    • General
    • Special Sets
  • Philosophy & Intellectual History
    • Ancient Philosophy
    • Medieval & Religious Philosophy
    • Modern Philosophy
    • Understanding the Mind
    • Intellectual History
    • Special Sets
  • Literature & English Language
    • English Literature
    • Other Literature
    • Linguistics
    • Special Sets
  • Business & Economics
  • Better Living
  • Professional
  • High School
  • View All Courses

Find a Course

Learn More About The Great Courses

  • What are The Great Courses?
  • About Our Sales
  • Lifetime Guarantee
  • Not sure where to start?
"I've never made a secret of the fact that I consider the products from [The Great Courses] to be the best value in college-level education today."

—H. McFarland, Midwest Book Review


More Testimonials

Newsletter Sign-Up

Be notified of special promotions and new releases (privacy policy)

Ancient Greek Civilization

Taught By Professor Jeremy McInerney, Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley,
University of Pennsylvania

Course No. 323

Course Formats

Choose a Format: which format should I buy?
24 lectures, 30 minutes/lecture
close
This course works well in any format. The DVD version comes illustrated with 300 maps, photographs, portraits, and on-screen graphics to aid your learning.
close
This course works well in any format. The DVD version comes illustrated with 300 maps, photographs, portraits, and on-screen graphics to aid your learning.
close
This course works well in any format. The DVD version comes illustrated with 300 maps, photographs, portraits, and on-screen graphics to aid your learning.
DVD $254.95
Audio CD $179.95
Audio Download $129.95
FAQ for Downloads | Test Formats
Choose a format above
Added to Your Cart close
  • Ancient Greek Civilization sale

Ancient Greek Civilization

: $ | Qty: 1

checkout your cart
View cart - Continue Shopping

Recommended based on your selection

  • Nutrition Made Clear sale

Nutrition Made Clear

Save up to $275
Ancient Greek Civilization

"This course is a delight and a challenge, Now I am compelled to re-read Homer and to do further reading in the period."

—Mary Scott, San Diego, CA




Course Lecture Titles

24 Lectures
30 minutes / lecture

    1. Greece and the Western World
    Why do we feel such a strong affinity with the ancient Greeks? When and how did the West begin to venerate the Golden Age of Athens under Pericles?
  1. Greece and the Western World (info)
  2. 2. Minoan Crete
    Bronze Age Crete has been dubbed a "palatial society" whose magnificent buildings housed a complex, hierarchical world. But this world remains shrouded in mystery.
  3. Minoan Crete (info)
  4. 3. Schliemann and Mycenae
    Inspired by Homer's poems, Heinrich Schliemann uncovered the elite warrior culture of Mycenae, "rich in gold." The relationship of this culture to that of Bronze Age Crete has long been a subject of intense scholarly debate.
  5. Schliemann and Mycenae (info)
  6. 4. The Long Twilight
    Civilization in Bronze Age Crete and Mycenae declined rapidly after 1200 B.C.E. Archaeologists have long argued about the cause: Was it natural disaster, military invasion, internal strife, or some combination of these?
  7. The Long Twilight (info)
  8. 5. The Age of Heroes
    During the ancient "Dark Ages," the predominant unit of Hellenic society was a tribal or clan-based group known as the oikos (household). Poets such as Homer created an imaginative world that provided society a heroic, aristocratic ethos.
  9. The Age of Heroes (info)
  10. 6. From Sicily to Syria—The Growth of Trade and Colonization
    Greek colonies were established as near as the Mediterranean and as far away as Ukraine. While the causes of Hellenic colonization are complex, its results were important. Trade filled Greek coffers. Intellectual imports, such as written language and artistic motifs, arrived as well.
  11. From Sicily to Syria—The Growth of Trade and Colonization (info)
  12. 7. Delphi and Olympia
    The preclassical institutions of the Olympic Games and the sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi were crucial elements in fixing Greek identity.
  13. Delphi and Olympia (info)
  14. 8. The Spartans
    Conflict, tension, and civil unrest were endemic in most Greek city-states from the 8th century B.C.E. onward. Sparta, however, formed a notable exception. How did it avoid civic violence?
  15. The Spartans (info)
  16. 9. Revolution
    Solon, the "father of the Athenian constitution," was elected to forestall factional strife. He attempted to formalize rights and privileges based on wealth rather than birth, and did away with debt-bondage. He laid the groundwork for the rule of law in Athens.
  17. Revolution (info)
  18. 10. Tyranny
    Contrary to our modern definition of tyranny, the Greek word originally meant the seizing of power by an ambitious man. The tyranny of Peisistratus and his sons kept the peace in Athens and nurtured its prosperity for more than 50 years.
  19. Tyranny (info)
  20. 11. The Origins of Democracy
    Cleisthenes recognized that the common Athenian was a more potent political force than any aristocrat, and used this knowledge to take control of an Athens newly freed from the Peisistratid tyranny. Under his rule, the Athenians established the elements of democratic governance.
  21. The Origins of Democracy (info)
  22. 12. Beyond Greece—The Persian Empire
    The epic confrontation between Greece and Persia changed Greek history forever. In this lecture, the Persian Empire is examined and, as far as possible, without the bias of Greek sources. The portrait that emerges is of a complex and sophisticated society.
  23. Beyond Greece—The Persian Empire (info)
  24. 13. The Persian Wars
    The Persian Wars, 490–479 B.C.E, were probably of more consequence to the Greeks than to the Persians. From these confrontations the Greeks articulated their idea of eleutheria (freedom), which is still embedded in Western culture. What was freedom as the Greeks conceived it?
  25. The Persian Wars (info)
  26. 14. The Athenian Empire
    An alliance of Aegean city-states, the Delian League was formed in the aftermath of the Persian Wars while Athens enjoyed great prestige. The Golden Age of Pericles was the age of imperial Athens, during which time the Parthenon, Propylaia, and Erectheion were completed.
  27. The Athenian Empire (info)
  28. 15. The Art of Democracy
    Athenian democracy was a remarkable achievement. Although participation was restricted to adult male citizens, the assembly, council, courts, and magistracies guaranteed a broad basis for sharing power.
  29. The Art of Democracy (info)
  30. 16. Sacrifice and Greek Religion
    Greek spiritual life rested on a fluid cosmology in which faith was personal while religion was a public affair that revolved around a communal sacrifice. These sacrifices were organized as festivals, leading us to ask: Which ranked first in importance, performance or belief?
  31. Sacrifice and Greek Religion (info)
  32. 17. Theater and the Competition of Art
    Familiar as Greek plays seem to us, their roots lie in the more foreign realm of ancient religious festivals. The power of drama was seen as connecting the community with the divine. Therefore, the straightforward structure of most Greek dramas should not blind us to their powerful emotional role and content.
  33. Theater and the Competition of Art (info)
  34. 18. Sex and Gender
    Ancient Greek attitudes toward sex and gender differed markedly from our own. Activity and forcefulness characterized the masculine ideal. Women, on the other hand, were thought to need the protection of their family and society.
  35. Sex and Gender (info)
  36. 19. The Peloponnesian War, Part I
    The Peloponnesian War, 431–404 B.C.E., was a contest between Athens and Sparta, the two most powerful states in Greece. Thucydides, an Athenian general, wrote his observations and attempted to analyze scientifically the causes of the war. His account remains important not only because it is remarkably detailed, but because Thucydides saw the gap between societal ideals and the realities of power.
  37. The Peloponnesian War, Part I (info)
  38. 20. The Peloponnesian War, Part II
    Thucydides wanted to teach his audience fundamental truths about history rather than entertain people with war stories. To him, human events followed a pattern. He writes with great restraint but stunning depth and power.
  39. The Peloponnesian War, Part II (info)
  40. 21. Socrates on Trial
    The philosophic traditions of Ionian inquiry and sophistic pedagogy met in the career of Socrates, who concentrated almost exclusively on moral philosophy. Plato immortalized his trial and execution in the "Apology," "Crito," and "Phaedo." Was Socrates a martyr, as Plato and many others have held, or is there another explanation for his fate?
  41. Socrates on Trial (info)
  42. 22. Slavery and Freedom
    Slaves were ubiquitous in classical Greece; even the poorest citizens owned slaves because the amount of time needed for participation in democratic government meant that the eleutheros, the free man, needed to have others do his domestic tasks. How did the Greeks reconcile the ideal of democracy with the practice of slavery?
  43. Slavery and Freedom (info)
  44. 23. Athens in Decline?
    The history of Greece during the 4th century B.C.E. is divided between the early decades when important developments were made in many areas, and the later decades, during which Greece came under the domination of the Macedonian kings. Plato's Academy and Aristotle's Lyceum changed philosophy forever, and writers such as Xenophon and Menander produced enduring prose and drama.
  45. Athens in Decline? (info)
  46. 24. Philip, Alexander, and Greece in Transition
    Once Philip II had conquered Greece, he used the dream of a Panhellenic crusade to unite the Greeks and conquer the Persian Empire. Philip's son, Alexander the Great, went a long way toward realizing this dream when he led Greco-Macedonian armies in the conquest of Persia and extended the Greek "empire of influence" across Asia as far as the northern marches of the Indian subcontinent.
  47. Philip, Alexander, and Greece in Transition (info)

Why do the ancient Greeks occupy such a prominent place in conceptions of Western culture and identity? What about them made generations of influential scholars and writers view Hellenic culture as the uniquely essential starting point for understanding the art and reflection that define the West? Does this view tell the whole story?

The Ancestors of Us All

Clearly, the Greeks are a source of much that we esteem in our own culture: democracy, philosophy, tragedy, epic and lyric poetry, history-writing, our aesthetic sensibilities and ideals of athletic competition, and more. Blazoned above the portal of Apollo's temple at Delphi were the words, "Know thyself." For us, this injunction to self-awareness also commands knowledge of the Greeks.

With Professor Jeremy McInerney as your teacher, you'll come away with fresh knowledge on one of humanity's most golden ages. A native Australian, Professor McInerney is Associate Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He also serves on the Managing Committee of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. He has excavated Greek sites in Israel, at Corinth, and on Crete.

Our customers are very enthusiastic about Professor McInerney. "The quality of the course is so high, I hate to see it end," writes one. Another says, "Professor McInerney's lectures are among the finest I have ever heard. He is articulate, thoughtful, and engaging. I learned more from this course than from any book I have read on the subject."

Our Mediterranean Origins

Spanning roughly 1,000 years, from 1500–400 B.C.E., this course covers the Late Bronze Age to the time of Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander the Great in the late 4th century B.C.E. Professor McInerney traces the complex web of links between our present and its Mediterranean origins. With him, you explore ancient Greek civilization in the light shed by the newest and best research and criticism. The course expands understanding of history, literature, art, philosophy, religion, and more.

The lectures pay special attention to the two crucial centuries from 600–400 B.C.E.—the era of the Persian and Peloponnesian wars and of classical Athens as described in the histories of Herodotus and Thucydides and the philosophic dialogues of Plato.

Magnificent Minoan Crete and Mycenae

The first 12 lectures introduce you to Greek civilization from its earliest discernible beginnings up to the Persian War. In them, you learn to see ancient Greece split in two: a period of magnificent achievement that plunged to darkness, and a second flowering of that civilization that is the foundation of our own.

Minoan civilization on the island of Crete and Mycenaen civilization on the mainland were the two great Greek civilizations of the Bronze Age. They left behind magnificent ruins, art, and artifacts, but no written histories. In Lectures 1–8 you:

  • Explore these extraordinarily advanced cultures
  • Learn why their collapse around 1200 B.C.E. puzzles scholars to this day
  • Hear the full story of Heinrich Schliemann, who found Mycenae by following clues in Homer's poems
  • Review the finding made only in the 1950s that showed us that Mycenae was, in fact, Greek
  • See how a new and distinct Archaic culture—one that revered Homer's epics—arose in the Age of Heroes after the collapse of Crete and Mycenae
  • Discover how much the Greeks gained from their contacts with other ancient societies (the alphabet, among other things, came from the Semitic peoples of Syria and the Eastern Mediterranean)
  • Understand how Spartan warrior culture was forced on the Spartans because they enslaved a nearby region
  • Explore the causes and effects of Greek colonization from France to the Ukraine
  • See how a uniquely "Greek" identity was based in part on the Oracle at Delphi and the Olympic Games; non-Greeks were not admitted to either.

The first section of the course examines the origins of democracy, which grew out of authoritarian government. And you see here how much of our freedom we owe to Cleisthenes, who created the democratic government under which Athens flourished for two centuries—and how he ingeniously designed it to undermine established power and allegiance.

The Persians, the Peloponnesian War, and the Arrival of the Macedonians

The course's second 12 lectures include the compelling histories of the Persian War (490–479 B.C.E.) and the Peloponnesian War (431–404 B.C.E.).

First united by their common enemy in Persia, Professor McInerney explains how much the Persian War came to define the Greeks—and us. The notion of freedom they developed in response to Persian power is one we inherit. After the Persian War, the Greeks developed their sense of identity as the antagonists of the Eastern world, a tension to which the West has been heir ever since.

After the defeat of the Persians, Athens rose to hegemony over the Greek world. You see how the Athenians' trade and power were developed and imposed on the Mediterranean. And you learn some surprising facts about this Golden Age:

  • Greek tragedy began as a religious ritual to purge the audience of "uncivilized" emotions.
  • Greek art was often an intensely and explicitly competitive enterprise.
  • Athenian culture depended heavily on slavery. Professor McInerney addresses the charge that Athens only prospered because it had slaves under its heel.

Two lectures are devoted to the clash between Athens and Sparta in the Peloponnesian War. Socrates served as a soldier in that struggle.

After Athens was defeated, its philosophers rose to their full achievement in the work and lives of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, reinforcing the old axiom that defeat is the greatest muse for political philosophy. Professor McInerney delivers a provocative interpretation of the trial of Socrates.

In its postwar "decline," Athens defined the contours of philosophy and science for more than 1,000 years and produced great drama, art, and literature.

Toward the end of the 4th century B.C.E., Macedonian kings dominated Greece. Philip and his son, Alexander (who was tutored by Aristotle), created a Pan-Hellenic culture again to unite the Greeks against their common enemy—Persia.

In short decades, Greek power would extend from Egypt to the Hindu Kush.

Differences and Affinities

Just as the divide between East and West still exists, so does one separating our world from that of the ancients. We must remember that the Hellenic world had many values, beliefs, and mores at odds with our own. In ancient Greece:

  • Slavery was common
  • Women suffered complete exclusion from public life
  • Homosexuality was an accepted aristocratic practice in Athens, Sparta, and other city-states.

As Professor McInerney shows, such differences do not imply that the culture of ancient Greece holds no meaning for us. Rather, it should spur us to deepen our engagement with the Greeks, for their differences can teach us as much as our affinities with them.

Should I Buy Audio or Video?

This course works well in any format. The DVD version comes illustrated with 300 maps, photographs, portraits, and on-screen graphics to aid your learning.

Back to top


Save up to $0 when you buy Ancient Greek Civilization with History of Ancient Rome
Ancient Greek Civilization & Ancient Greek Civilization(Set)
Learn more about this special set
DVD $774.90
Audio CD $539.90
Choose a format above
  • Contact Us|
  • Privacy Policy|
  • Site Map|
  • Request a Catalog

© This site and content copyright 2010. The Teaching Company, LLC. Site contents are also protected by
other copyrights and trademarks. All rights reserved.


ABOUT SSL CERTIFICATES