Ancient Greece Declassified artwork

Ancient Greece Declassified

60 episodes - English - Latest episode: 4 months ago - ★★★★★ - 446 ratings

The podcast that transports you to the ancient world and back, with some good conversation along the way. It's not just about ancient Greece. It's about a huge chunk of human history that the Greek texts give us access to: from Egypt and Babylon, to Persia, to Carthage and Rome, we'll sail the wine-dark sea of history with some expert guides at the helm. Topics will include archaeology, literature, and philosophy. New episode every month.

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Episodes

09 The World's Oldest Computer w/ Xenophon Moussas (Antikythera Mechanism)

May 19, 2017 11:27 - 49 minutes - 45.6 MB

Xenophon Moussas, physicist and member of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, sheds light on the mysterious device that has been described as an “ancient computer,” an “astronomical calculator,” and a “mechanical cosmos.” For more information on the mechanism – including images, reconstructions, and other resources – visit our website at greecepodcast.com/9 Also check out the YouTube channel “Clickspring” to see a clockmaker build a replica of the mechanism piece by piece.  

08 Plato Strikes Back! w/ Rebecca Newberger Goldstein

April 06, 2017 08:48 - 50 minutes - 46.8 MB

Rebecca Newberger Goldstein joins us for a discussion about Plato, Socrates, and the legacy of Greek philosophy. Goldstein is one of the most acclaimed and widely-read philosophers today. Her most recent book, Plato at the Googleplex: Why Philosophy Won't Go Away, imagines Plato transported through time to the modern world having philosophical debates with scientists, celebrities, and technology pioneers about important life questions. More than just a series of fascinating dialogues, the bo...

07 The Persian Wars w/ Ian Morris (Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon)

February 27, 2017 04:14 - 48 minutes - 45.3 MB

Ian Morris, archaeologist and professor of Classics at Stanford University, joins us for a discussion on the Persian expeditions against Greece in 490-479 BC. How did the Greeks pull off a totally unexpected victory against the biggest invasion force that had ever been launched? Morris explains what the latest research and archaeology tell us about the economies, technologies, and demographics of these civilizations, as well as how these factors may have affected the result of the conflict. ...

06 What Is Greek Tragedy? w/ Rush Rehm (Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides)

January 29, 2017 19:28 - 49 minutes - 46.1 MB

Rush Rehm, professor of classics and of theater and performing studies at Stanford University, joins us for a discussion about Greek tragedy. The origins of tragedy (and theater in general) can be traced back in time to one city in the late 6th century BC: Athens. Theater in Athens seems to emerge at the same time that democracy is born. Is that a coincidence? Or is there some deeper connection between the invention of theater and democracy? Scholars have been debating this for a long time. ...

05 Democracy and Demagogues in Ancient Athens w/ Josiah Ober

January 09, 2017 05:49 - 49 minutes - 45.5 MB

Historian Josiah Ober of Stanford University joins us for a discussion on classical Athens and how the Athenian system compared to our own democracy. As Ober writes in his recent book The Rise and Fall of Classical Greece, “Democracy and growth define the normal...conditions of modernity: Autocracy, while still prevalent, is regarded as aberrant, so that most autocrats pretend to be democrats.... These conditions were not normal, or even imaginable, for most people through most of human hi...

04 Sappho: The Tenth Muse w/ Andromache Karanika

November 21, 2016 10:36 - 46 minutes - 42.9 MB

Sappho is one of the first song-writers we know of in history, partly because she was one of the first singers to write down her songs, in around 600BC. We still know about her because she was considered the best song-writer for about a thousand years after her death. While best known as a singer of female desire, her lyrics were so powerfully felt by men and women across the centuries that she became known as the tenth muse, joining the ranks of the 9 divine muses – the goddesses of art and...

03 Dying For Immortality in Homer's Iliad w/ Andrew Ford

October 20, 2016 06:01 - 49 minutes - 45.9 MB

Andrew Ford of Princeton University joins us for a conversation about the Iliad. What makes it so...epic? And what kind of vision of the world does Homer provide his audiences?

02 Bronze Age Apocalypse 1177BC w/ Eric Cline

September 24, 2016 07:50 - 48 minutes - 45.4 MB

Archaeologist Eric Cline on what caused the simultaneous collapse of the Mycenaeans, Hittites, and most other major civilizations at the end of the second millennium BC, thus ushering in the world's first dark ages. Hint: it wasn't just the Sea Peoples.

01 Tomb Raiders, Codebreakers, and the Discovery of Antiquity (Rosetta Stone, Cuneiform, Linear B)

September 24, 2016 06:59 - 40 minutes - 37.1 MB

Four astonishing archaeological discoveries that extended our knowledge of history back into the mythical past: Champollion and the Rosetta Stone, Grotefend's cuneiform breakthrough, Schliemann digging for Troy, and Michael Ventris' deciphering of Linear B.

00 Introduction

September 22, 2016 02:09 - 4 minutes - 5.31 MB

Guests

Matt Simon
2 Episodes
Andrew Ford
1 Episode
Edith Hall
1 Episode