7:25
Olympian Gods of Ancient Greek Mythology
Olympian Gods of Ancient Greek Mythology
A video I really like explaining about the Olympian GODS in Greek Mythology. I did not make the video, but I DID create and embed the subtitles for your convenience. Enjoy.
6:40
Ancient Greek - Practice in Pronunciation Exercise 1
Ancient Greek - Practice in Pronunciation Exercise 1
Practice Ancient Greek Writing and Pronunciation with Dionisos. PROCEDURE A. Practice pronouncing the greek words. B. Listen and imitate Dionisos accent Γ.Copy the greek words onto a piece of papyr. Δ.Write the English transliteration of each greek word. E.Try to give an English derivative for each greek word. Z. Pause the video if necessary ΛEΞIKON = Vocabulary AΞIΩMA = [a-KSHI-o-ma] = axiom ΛIOΣ = [BI-osh] = life ΓPAMMA = [GRA-ma] = letter ΔEPMA = [DER-ma] = derm EMBΛHMA = [EM-ble-ma] = emblem
4:44
Sex in Ancient Greece
Sex in Ancient Greece
The History Channel is surprisingly accurate about Ancient Greek Sexuality
4:33
Ancient Greece Video
Ancient Greece Video
I made this as extra credit for my History class. Yes. I am THAT MUCH of a nerd. Edit- This video gave me just enough extra points to be exempt from the big, horrible, end of unit test! Yes! And people told me video skills would never help me in the real world! Ha ha! Update- I love the fact that teachers are showing this to their classes. I've gotten a good number of messages about that kind of thing. Although... I'm not entirely certain what educational value this video has... it is an interesting thought to me that students in random parts of the country are watching this in school. It makes me feel special; like... an anonymous lesson-plan contributor to curriculums everywhere! (My god, I'm such a nerd....)
33:03
1. Introduction
1. Introduction
Introduction to Ancient Greek History (CLCV 205) Professor Donald Kagan explains why people should study the ancient Greeks. He argues that the Greeks are worthy of our study not only because of their vast achievements and contributions to Western civilization (such as in the fields of science, law, and politics) but also because they offer a unique perspective on humanity. To the Greeks, man was both simultaneously capable of the greatest achievements and the worst crimes; he was both great and important, but also mortal and fallible. He was a tragic figure, powerful but limited. Therefore, by studying the Greeks, one gains insight into a tension that has gripped and shaped the West and the rest of the world through its influence. In short, to study the Greeks is to study the nature of human experience. 00:00 - Chapter 1. Ancient Greece as the Foundation of Western Civilization 13:06 - Chapter 2. The Judeo Christian Tradition 24:50 - Chapter 3. Problems Posed by the Western Tradition Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: open.yale.edu This course was recorded in Fall 2007.
5:53
Ancient Greece Interesting Facts Part 1, Hot Facts Teacher Jessica
Ancient Greece Interesting Facts Part 1, Hot Facts Teacher Jessica
Ancient Greece Interesting Facts Part 1, Hot Facts Teacher Jessica Join Jessica for some interesting facts about ancient Greece civilization. Did the Greeks invent the first computer? What was life like in ancient Greece? Did the Greeks figure out that the world was actually round? And who discovered that dolphins are actual mammals? This video was produced by Psychetruth www.youtube.com www.myspace.com Music By Jimmy Gelhaar www.jimmyg.us http youtube.com Copyright 2010 Target Public Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
9:54
Athens vs Sparta, Sokratis and ancient Greece part 1 HQ
Athens vs Sparta, Sokratis and ancient Greece part 1 HQ
Ελληνικοί υπότιτλοι ancient civilization ATHENS and Sparta were both Greek cities and their people spoke a common language. In every other respect they were different. Athens rose high from the plain. It was a city exposed to the fresh breezes from the sea, willing to look at the world with the eyes of a happy child. Sparta, on the other hand, was built at the bottom of a deep valley, and used the surrounding mountains as a barrier against foreign thought. Athens was a city of busy trade. Sparta was an armed camp where people were soldiers for the sake of being soldiers. The people of Athens loved to sit in the sun and discuss poetry or listen to the wise words of a philosopher. The Spartans, on the other hand, never wrote a single line that was considered literature, but they knew how to fight, they liked to fight, and they sacrificed all human emotions to their ideal of military preparedness.
4:13
Ancient Greek Music, Macedonia is Greek
Ancient Greek Music, Macedonia is Greek
Greek ancient song, and images from Greece. Subscribe me:)
6:47
ANCIENT GREEK INNOVATIONS
ANCIENT GREEK INNOVATIONS
The Ancient Greek civilization flourished 2500 years ago on the shores of the Ionian and Aegean Sea. Although its population never exceeded 2 million, ancient Greece made great innovations in philosophy, politics, science, architecture, and the arts, and Greek culture forms the basis of western civilization to this day. Small samples of those are presented in this slide show.
3:21
Ancient Greece - democracy in ancient Athens
Ancient Greece - democracy in ancient Athens
No other city has contributed more to the civilization of mankind than Athens. It is the place where Socrates was born, Plato, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and many others. It is the place that humanism and democracy were born. The intellectual light that Athens created will always be alive.
1:36
Ancient Greek music - Lament (2-3th century AD)
Ancient Greek music - Lament (2-3th century AD)
Ancient Greek music - Lament
10:01
Greek Sculpture (BBC: How Art Made The World)
Greek Sculpture (BBC: How Art Made The World)
How greek art created something more human than human. Excerpt from the BBC documentary "How Art Made The World" concerning greek sculpture. Presented by Dr Nigel Spivey (University of Cambridge). Music: "Enfer (La Double Vie De Veronique)" by Zbigniew Preisner.
2:09
Ancient Greek Music - "First Delphic Hymn to Apollo"c.138BC
Ancient Greek Music - "First Delphic Hymn to Apollo"c.138BC
This is my 1st (somewhat shakey!) attempt at playing on replica lyre, the famous "First Delphic Hymn to Apollo" - a precious surviving fragment of music, which is an amazing legacy from the mostly lost musical culture of ancient Greece! In this upload, I attempted to use ancient Greek cyclical tuning to TRY and achieve "Just Tuning"...with not very good results! I couldn't get the 3rds to sound "right" :o( There are two Delphic Hymns that have been discovered, and they were dedicated to the god Apollo. Unlike the famous "Song of Seikilos" (the first COMPLETE piece of music that has been so far found to have survived from antiquity), the two Delphic Hymns have sadly not survived in their complete form. However, they do survive in substantial fragments...giving just a tantilizing taste of the glory of the tragically lost, magnificant musical culture of ancient Greece! The two Delphic Hymns are dated c.138 BC and 128 BC. My rendition here, is of the earlier of them; the First Delphic Hymn. Although it has unfortunately not survived in its complete form, the First Delphic Hymn to Apollo is THE earliest unambiguous surviving fragment of notated music from ANYWHERE in the Western World! It is written in the ALPHABETICAL musical notation system used in ancient Greece, whereby alphabetical notation describing the pitch of the melody, is written above the text of the song, as can be clearly seen in this image of the actual Delphic Hymn, as it was found, inscribed in marble: www <b>...</b>
4:13
Ancient Greece - Grèce antique - Αρχαία Ελλάδα
Ancient Greece - Grèce antique - Αρχαία Ελλάδα
Photos of various archeological sites in Greece, from every part of the country. From 5500 BC, to 1st century AD. 1. Abdera, Thrace (4th century BC) 2. Acrocorinth, Corinth, Peloponnese (6th-3th century BC) 3. Acropolis of Athens aerial view 4. Acropolis of Athens, Erechthion detail with Caryatis (5th century BC) 5. Aegina island, temple of Afea (6th century BC) 6. Egosthena, classical fort, Attica (4th century BC) 7. Akrotiri at Santorini island, (destruction 1600BC) 8. Amphipolis wall, Macedonia (5th century BC) 9. Antikythira island mechanism (around 100BC) 10. Apollo temple at Vassai in Elis, Peloponnese (5th c.BC) 11. Argos, "Larissa" Acropolis in Argolid Peloponnese (from 6th c.BC) 12. Chaeronia Lion at Boeotia (4th c.BC) 13. Corinth, Temple of Apollo (7th c.BC) 14. Delos island, Cyclades General view 15. Delos Lions (5th c.BC) 16. Delphi, Tholos, Phocis (4th c.BC) 17. Delos island stoa (3rd c.BC) 18. Dimini Neolithic Citadel, Magnesia, Thessaly (6th Millennium BC) 19. Dion, Pieria, Macedonia mount Olympus visible (3rd-1st c.BC) 20. Dodoni Theater, Epirus (4th c.BC) 21. Dodona, Epirus, The Oracle 22. Drakospita of Karystos interior, Evia (Euboea) island, (6th c.BC) 23. Karystos Drakospito (Dragon House) exterior 24. Samos island, the Efpalinos tunnel (6th c.BC) 25. Eleusis,(ELEFSINA) Attica, The Telesterion (5th c.BC) 26. Epidaurus, Argolid, Peloponnese. Theatre (4th c.BC) 27. Erechthion, Acropolis of Athens (5th c.BC) 28. Faestos (Festos) Crete, Palace (1800 BC) 29 <b>...</b>
10:34
Homosexuality in Ancient Greece - The Myth is Collapsing [Audio Edited]
Homosexuality in Ancient Greece - The Myth is Collapsing [Audio Edited]
Debunking the Myth of Homosexuality in ancient Greece
6:59
Making Throwing a Greek Roman Amphora vase potters wheel demo how to throw clay pottery technique
Making Throwing a Greek Roman Amphora vase potters wheel demo how to throw clay pottery technique
Ingleton Pottery www.ingletonpottery.co.uk My 1st attempt at making a greek or roman designed amphora vase on the wheel. Making a Greek Roman Amphora vase on the potters wheel demo clay pottery throwing. Ingleton Pottery
2:02
New Scientist recreates a robot made by the ancient Greeks
New Scientist recreates a robot made by the ancient Greeks
Technology feature editor Ben Crystall explains how he recreated a programmable robot dating from 60AD. More here: www.newscientisttech.com
5:33
Olympian Goddesses of Ancient Greek Mythology
Olympian Goddesses of Ancient Greek Mythology
A video I really like explaining about the Olympian GODDESSES in Greek Mythology. I did not make the video, but I DID create and embed the subtitles for your convenience. Enjoy.
2:27
The Greeks -- Introduction of the PBS series
The Greeks -- Introduction of the PBS series
The first few moments of the PPS series "The Greeks -- Crucible of civilization"
5:32
Ancient Greek Theatre.flv
Ancient Greek Theatre.flv
A segment from the Discovery Channel's Seven Wonders of Ancient Greece.
2:51
Ancient Greek Swastika symbols
Ancient Greek Swastika symbols
The Swastika symbol was used in ancient Greece. It was the sign of Zeus and a symbol of peace.The Nazis desacreded the swastika symbol and transfomed it into a symbol of hatred and racism . The gammadion, or rather the tetra-gammadion, is an ancient symbol also known as swastika. The name gammadion comes from the fact that it can be seen as being made up of four Greek gamma (Γ) letters. Ancient Greek priestesses would tattoo the symbol, along with the tetraskelion, on their bodies. Ancient Greek architectural designs are replete with the interlinking symbol. Artemis as Mistress of Animals, about 680 BCE 0:11 Greek vase from the 7th century BC 0:16 Greek vase 0:19 Theseus slaying Minotaur Greek pottery arount 5th Century BC 0:24 Geometric Greek pottery from Eleusis 0:30 Pyxis with horses on lid 750BC 0:35 Greek vase displayed in the national museum of Athens 0:40 Decorations from Heraclea Lynkestis 0:46 1:14 Ancient Greek phrygian helmet with swastika marks, 350-325 BCE, found at Herculanum, Taranto. 0:55 Boeotian idol 700 BC 1:00 Decorations from Heliopolis (Baalbek) 1:06 Gold disc from Skyros island 1:18 Greek pottery 1:26 Greek Column from Didyma temple of Apollo 1:31 Shield of king Philip II of Macedon 1:38 Maeander decorations from the palace of Pella 1:42 1:48 Byzantine Church of Christ Pantocrator in Bulgaria 2:05 Byzantine church in Greece 13th century 2:12 Hinduistic Swastikas with Ganesh 2:23 Buddhist swastika on a statue of Buddha 2:29