14 Leisure and Entertainment.mp3
28.08 MB
12 Philhellenism and Hellenophobia.mp3
27.98 MB
13 The Two Languages.mp3
28.85 MB
11 Why the Greeks Lost, Why the Romans Won.mp3
26.28 MB
09 The Iron Fist, 272-190 B.C.mp3
26.32 MB
10 The Last Hellenistic Dynasts, 146-31 B.C.mp3
27.47 MB
08 How the Two Polytheisms (Almost) Merged.mp3
31.27 MB
06 Close Encounters, 750-272 B.C.mp3
29.31 MB
07 The Velvet Glove, 272-190 B.C.mp3
27.81 MB
04 Law and Order.mp3
27.90 MB
05 Less than Fully Human.mp3
26.43 MB
02 Trade and Travel in the Mediterranean.mp3
28.07 MB
03 Democratic or Republican.mp3
27.21 MB
01 Who Were the Greeks - Who Were the Romans.mp3
30.31 MB
15 Sex and Sexuality.mp3
31.33 MB
16 Death and the Afterlife.mp3
27.31 MB
17 From Mystery Religion to Ruler Cult.mp3
28.70 MB
18 Greek Cities under Roman Rule.mp3
29.25 MB
19 Greeks in Rome, Romans in Greece.mp3
28.05 MB
20 The Hellenism of Augustus.mp3
27.35 MB
21 Art, Looting, and Reproductions.mp3
28.40 MB
22 Architecture, Sacred and Secular.mp3
29.04 MB
23 Science and Technology.mp3
30.68 MB
24 Disease, Medical Care, and Physicians.mp3
29.39 MB
25 The Greek Epic and Its Roman Echo.mp3
30.10 MB
26 Tragedy and Comedy.mp3
29.50 MB
27 Love Poetry, Satire, History, the Novel.mp3
30.51 MB
28 Greek Influences on Roman Education.mp3
26.40 MB
29 Greek Philosophy and Its Roman Advocates.mp3
28.30 MB
30 Hellenomania from Nero to Hadrian.mp3
26.99 MB
31 Jews, Greeks, and Romans.mp3
29.27 MB
32 Christianity's Debt to Greece and Rome.mp3
27.86 MB
33 The Apotheosis of Athens.mp3
27.41 MB
34 The Decline of the West.mp3
30.07 MB
35 The Survival of the East.mp3
29.05 MB
36 The Enduring Duo.mp3
28.83 MB
Greece and Rome An Integrated History of the Ancient Mediterranean Course Description.mht
150.76 KB
Greece and Rome An Integrated History of the Ancient Mediterranean Starter Materials.mht
149.33 KB
Robert Garland - Greece and Rome.pdf
12.08 MB
Robert Garland Biography.mp3
1.96 MB
Robert Garland Biography.mht
133.19 KB
Torrent downloaded from Demonoid.com.txt
0.05 KB
It explores the many ways in which two very different cultures intersected, coincided, and at times collided. The relationship between Greeks and Romans has virtually no parallel in world history. Their contact created the extraordinary fusion that we call Greco-Roman—a unique marriage of civilizations that encompasses statecraft, mythology, language, philosophy, literature, fine arts, architecture, science, and much else.
Yet there is truth to the traditional view that parts of our cultural heritage derive specifically from Greece or from Rome. For example, the West owes its law codes to the legally oriented outlook of the Romans. By contrast, drama, which never caught on in Roman circles, is a wholly Greek invention. This is an example of how the relationship between these two cultures was like a marriage: two distinct personalities, competing in some areas, sharing in others, and creating a completely new synthesis in a third realm.