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Üyelik tarihi: Sep 2006
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Rome and the Barbarians - The Great Courses Ancient & Medieval History (Audiobook + G
![]() Kenneth W. Harl, "Rome and the Barbarians - The Great Courses Ancient & Medieval History (Audiobook + Guidebook)" The Teaching Company | 2004 | ISBN: 1565859014 | 18 Hours 24 Minutes | mp3 + PDF | 253 MB 6 lectures on 18 Audio CDs, 3 course Guidebooks The history of the Romans and the "barbarians" they encountered as their mighty legions advanced the frontiers of Classical civilization has in large part been written as a story of warfare and conquest. But to tell the story on only that level leaves many questions unanswered, not only about the Romans but about the barbarians, as well. Who were the Celts, Goths, Huns, Persians, and so many others met by the Romans as they marched to the north and east? And what made them barbarians in the eyes of Rome? What were the political, military, and social institutions that made Rome so stable, allowing its power to be wielded against these different cultures for almost three centuries? What role did those institutions themselves play in assimilating barbarian peoples, first as provincials and often as players in a vast process of Romanization? What Is a Barbarian? Explore the Basis of Western European CivilizationRome and the Barbarians tells the story of the complex relationships between each of these native peoples and their Roman conquerors as they intermarried, exchanged ideas and mores, and, in the ensuing provincial Roman cultures, formed the basis of Western European civilization. As you examine the interaction between Rome and the barbarians from 300 B.C. to A.D. 600, you learn that the definition of barbarian was, effectively, the "next group not under Roman control." And you see how that definition was always changing, as former barbarians became assimilated into the Roman world, becoming provincials and, often, eventually Romanized themselves. In leading you through this 900-year period, Tulane University’s Professor Kenneth W. Harl organizes the course around two major themes: The makeup of Roman society, politics, and military organization, particularly from the standpoint of how those institutions enabled the Romans not only to conquer those peoples, but integrate them The role played by the most recent of Rome’s barbarian foes—especially the Germans and the Persians—in bringing down the Roman Empire, including the question of what gave them the military or political edge to accomplish this. Throughout these lectures, and the introduction of each new barbarian culture, Professor Harl emphasizes three crucial aspects of Rome’s relationships to them: The ability of the Romans to adapt and build pragmatically on existing structures of the barbarian world, using what worked, and not simply imposing a "Roman way" The ways the Romans looked on these barbarians not only as outsiders, but also as potential allies and provincials What barbarian societies were like at the time of Roman contact and conquest, and how, through assimilation, they contributed to the successful establishment of Roman provinces. Course Lecture Titles 1. Greek and Roman Views of Barbarians2. The Roman Republic3. Roman Society4. The Roman Way of War5. Celtic Europe and the Mediterranean World6. The Conquest of Cisalpine Gaul7. Romans and Carthaginians in Spain8. The Roman Conquest of Spain9. The Genesis of Roman Spain10. Jugurtha and the Nomadic Threat11. Marius and the Northern Barbarians12. Rome's Rivals in the East13. The Price of Empire—The Roman Revolution14. Julius Caesar and the Conquest of Gaul15. Early Germanic Europe16. The Nomads of Eastern Europe17. Arsacid Parthia18. The Augustan Principate and Imperialism19. The Roman Imperial Army20. The Varian Disaster21. The Roman Conquest of Britain22. Civil War and Rebellion23. Flavian Frontiers and the Dacians24. Trajan, the Dacians, and the Parthians25. Romanization of the Provinces26. Commerce Beyond the Imperial Frontiers27. Frontier Settlement and Assimilation28. From Germanic Tribes to Confederations29. Goths and the Crisis of the Third Century30. Eastern Rivals—Sassanid Persia31. Rome and the Barbarians in the Fourth Century32. From Foes to Federates33. Imperial Crisis and Decline34. Attila and the Huns35. Justinian and the Barbarians36. Birth of the Barbarian Medieval West
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