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International School of Central Switzerland

The Ancient World - 0 views

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    "The Ancient World From the first human civilizations to 500 BC in (around) a dozen podcasts" Subscribe to the podcast through iTuneshttp://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-ancient-world/id517589332
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    "The Ancient World From the first human civilizations to 500 BC in (around) a dozen podcasts" Subscribe to the podcast through iTuneshttp://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/the-ancient-world/id517589332
International School of Central Switzerland

Google Maps Mania: Google Maps of the Ancient World - 0 views

K Epps

Art of the Ancient World | Museum of Fine Arts, Boston - 0 views

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    "The Art of the Ancient World collection ranks among the premier encyclopedic collections in the world, with over 83,000 works of art from Egypt, Nubia, the Near East, Greece, Italy, Cyprus, and Anatolia. The objects in the collection range in date from about 6500 BC to AD 600 and cover a broad geographical expanse, from Britain to Afghanistan. There is something for everyone, including sculpture, jewelry, coffins, mummies, coins, weapons, architecture, vases, carved gems, musical instruments, and mosaics."
International School of Central Switzerland

BBC - Radio 4 - Ancient World Collection - 0 views

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    "Radio 4's Ancient Worlds Collection Listen to selection of Radio 4 programmes looking at ancient civilizations."
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    "Radio 4's Ancient Worlds Collection Listen to selection of Radio 4 programmes looking at ancient civilizations."
International School of Central Switzerland

History of the Ancient World | Ancient History News and Resources - 0 views

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    "HISTORY OF THE ANCIENT WORLD ANCIENT HISTORY NEWS AND RESOURCES"
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    "HISTORY OF THE ANCIENT WORLD ANCIENT HISTORY NEWS AND RESOURCES"
International School of Central Switzerland

BBC - History: Egyptians - 0 views

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    "Around 5000 years ago the ancient Egyptians established an extraordinary and enduring civilisation. Enter their world."
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    "Around 5000 years ago the ancient Egyptians established an extraordinary and enduring civilisation. Enter their world."
International School of Central Switzerland

James Burke - The Day The Universe Changed | Watch Free Documentary Online - 0 views

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    The Day the Universe Changed is a ten-part documentary television series presented by science historian James Burke. The series tells a series of stories of how specific scientific and technological advances have shaped the Western way of life. The series posits that when one's view of the universe changes, the universe itself effectively changes. The series' primary focus is on the effect of advances in science and technology on western philosophy. The title comes from the philosophical idea that the universe essentially only exists as you perceive it through what you know; therefore, if you change your perception of the universe with new knowledge, you have essentially changed the universe itself. To illustrate this concept, James Burke tells the various stories of important scientific discoveries and technological advances and how they fundamentally altered how western civilization perceives the world. The series runs in roughly chronological order, from around the beginning of the Middle Ages to the present.
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    The Day the Universe Changed is a ten-part documentary television series presented by science historian James Burke. The series tells a series of stories of how specific scientific and technological advances have shaped the Western way of life. The series posits that when one's view of the universe changes, the universe itself effectively changes. The series' primary focus is on the effect of advances in science and technology on western philosophy. The title comes from the philosophical idea that the universe essentially only exists as you perceive it through what you know; therefore, if you change your perception of the universe with new knowledge, you have essentially changed the universe itself. To illustrate this concept, James Burke tells the various stories of important scientific discoveries and technological advances and how they fundamentally altered how western civilization perceives the world. The series runs in roughly chronological order, from around the beginning of the Middle Ages to the present.
K Epps

Women in Old World Archaeology - 0 views

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    Breaking Ground may as well have been titled "Against all Odds," as the women archaeologists whose lives and careers we remember here faced innumerable challenges and difficulties but prevailed to contribute significantly to the expansion of our knowledge of the ancient world. Most entered this male dominated field at a time when few educational opportunities or careers were open to women. They excavated in countries where traditional, patriarchal societies did not generally allow women leadership or even public roles. Yet we found English women as early as the 19th century gaining government permissions to excavate in Egypt and Greece. We found women traveling alone through deserts and mountains and gaining acceptance from Bedouin tribes. We found them directing fieldwork using male workers whose own wives held subservient roles. The women archaeologists' rewards were almost purely intellectual, as many received no (or almost no) compensation for their demanding jobs, but of adventure there was plenty. Their activities were arduous, often dangerous, and required determination, stamina, a love of adventure, and certainly dedication.
K Epps

World History Timeline - Ancient Mesopotamia - 0 views

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    "Ancient Mesopotamia was the earliest civilization in world history, and the longest lasting. It was probably also the most influential, as all later western civilizations were built on foundations it laid."
K Epps

Major river basins of the world | GRID-Arendal - Maps & Graphics library - 0 views

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    "Rivers form a hydrological mosaic, with an estimated 263 international river basins covering 45.3% of the land surface area of the earth, excluding Antarctica. This graphic shows the locations of 26 of the world's major river basins. A basin is defined as the land area (watershed) where all surface water drains to a certain river."
K Epps

ChronoZoom - 0 views

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    The open source tool turns the vast history of the universe -- 13.8 billion years of information -- into an interactive, visual timeline. Features enable users to zoom in and out as they explore curated content about, for example, the history of life on Earth, extinction of the dinosaurs, or causes of World War I. Users also can author and share their own timelines about specific events or eras.
K Epps

Information about the Hittites - Home Page - 0 views

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    "Learn the history of the Hittites. Read about them in their own words. Reference a powerful map to reveal the Hittite world. Uncover the most recent discoveries. Discuss with others. You can do all of this at Hittites.info, in a single, powerful, integrated environment. Learn history in a way never before possible - at Hittites.info."
K Epps

The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia: A New Beginning (Getty Villa Exhibitions) - 0 views

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    " Found at Babylon in 1879, the Cyrus Cylinder is among the most celebrated discoveries from the ancient world, with a legacy that resounds to this day."
K Epps

Digital Humanities and the Ancient World - Biblical Archaeology Society - 0 views

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    "What would happen if the Pope's library were accidentally burnt? How can we reconstruct and visualize ancient and medieval pilgrimage routes? Technology is changing the way we study and preserve texts and artifacts. In a series of web-exclusive articles written by pioneering scholars developing the Digital Humanities, learn how this growing field of study is helping to analyze textual and archaeological data-and how you can help."
K Epps

Exploring Civilization Beyond the Walls | Voices - 0 views

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    "Before we'd even become Homo sapiens sapiens, humans lived everywhere from South Africa up to Britain and over to China. There were mountain people, coastal people, people who hunted woolly mammoths, and people who'd never seen a woolly mammoth in their lives. Just like we see with distinct groups of other animals, these differences of experience, adaptation, and expectation would have made for real cultural and even physical differences between populations. A few hundred thousand years later, as groups began to settle down and build cities they often enclosed them within massive walls. The ways different cultures interact across those walls could be seen as the central story of civilization. Top archaeologists from around the world have been exploring that story for the past week in public presentations and conversations at the 2015 Dialogue of Civilizations in Beijing."
K Epps

New Research on Ancient Greek Politics - 0 views

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    "New research has been analysing the text of the Iliad, and in particular how the Greeks and Trojans conducted assemblies for decision-making purposes. Joel P. Christensen has studied the text and come to some interesting conclusions which are published in the most recent edition of the journal Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. Christensen believes this is an under-studied area which has the potential to reveal a huge amount about the Classical world."
International School of Central Switzerland

Maps for Students - Ancient World - 0 views

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    " list provides access to all of the maps in the Maps for Students collection."
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    " list provides access to all of the maps in the Maps for Students collection."
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