Wondrium (formerly The Great Courses) is a series of college-level audio and video courses and documentaries produced and distributed by The Teaching Company, an American company based in Chantilly, Virginia. As of 2015, it had created over 700 courses and sold over 14 million copies.

American conservative analysts have described the social science courses offered by The Teaching Company as more suitable to general audiences than what is offered at traditional American liberal arts colleges, describing the selection as being driven by market forces, with the firm's founder, Tom Rollins, asking customers which subjects they wanted to learn, and using market research techniques to identify what courses to offer, and even what lectures to include, to satisfy a loyal customer base. Noting that the company's audience is not similar to current U.S. college admissions, the indicated result was that the catalog has had less emphasis on issues such as sexism and racism, to prioritise content that describes "everything the civilization has figured out so far and to discover new things". The conservative analysts further note that the survey format of instruction predominates, and more emphasis on covering the fundamentals of a subject, as if it were an introductory college course.

The Great Courses: The Foundations of Western Civilization DVDs & Lectures 1-48.

You can discover the essential nature, evolution, and perceptions of Western civilization from its humble beginnings in the great river valleys of Iraq and Egypt to the dawn of the modern world. With these 48 lectures on the people, places, ideas, and events that make up The Foundations of Western Civilization, award-winning scholar and teacher Thomas F. X. Noble of the University of Notre Dame invites you to explore the vast and rich territory of Western civilization.

Grasp History over Thousands of Years
From the late stages of the Agricultural Revolution to the doorstep of the Scientific Revolution, your learning in this course will cover roughly 3000 B.C. to A.D. 1600, when the "foundations" of the modern West come into view.

Professor Noble's goal is to offer a history of what has been fundamental across millennia in the West, that most unusual of world civilizations.

"Throughout the course, we will pause to reflect on where Western civilization finds its primary locus at any given moment," he says. "But Western civilization is much more than human and political geography.

"We will explore the myriad forms of political and institutional structures by means of which Western peoples have organized themselves and their societies. These include monarchies of several distinct types, as well as participatory republics.

"Looking at institutions will draw us to inquire about the Western tradition of political discourse. Who should participate in any given society? Why? How have societies resolved the tension between individual self-interest and the common good?"

Your learning will follow a timeline and order to cover vast amounts of territory and thousands of years:

Begin in the ancient Near East and move to Greece, then to Rome
Explore the shape and impact of large ancient empires, including those of Persia, Alexander the Great, and Rome
Consider Western Europe to watch Europe gradually expand physically and culturally
Examine the globalization of Western civilization with the Portuguese and Spanish voyages of exploration and discovery.

Discover a Treasure of Rich Historical Detail
This course rewards the desire for useful generalization and theory. But it also highlights the telling detail on which history can turn. Professor Noble's guidance allows you to comprehend the ongoing presence of the Roman Empire, the ceaseless influence of a 20-year golden age in Athens, the living struggle between Abraham's three great religions, and much more.

Professor Noble seeks to delight the mind with the "Aha!" experience: "That's why we do that!" "That's where that word came from!" "That's why those people won!" (In the last revelation, metals and horses figure more prominently than social virtues.)

And the course is a lavish treasure of rich detail. For example:

The Greek Dark Ages (c. 1100 to 700 B.C.) went "dark," at least in part, because the Greeks forgot how to write—the only people in human history known to have lost literacy after having once attained it.
The architects of the Parthenon, to achieve the optical illusion of perfect straightness, subtly angled the building's columns so that, if extended, they would meet a mile and a quarter above the temple's roof—over its exact center.
Although fewer than 200 books (including classical texts) survive from before the year 800, the 9th century—meaning the literate monastic establishment fostered by Charlemagne—has left us more than 6,000.
The city of Florence, at the height of the Renaissance, had no university, but this was compensated somewhat by Lorenzo de'Medici, who was spending 50 percent of the city's annual budget on books for his Medicean Academy's library.
Christopher Columbus, in what was perhaps a bit of "spin" from a practiced self-promoter, based his plan for reaching the East Indies by sailing west partly on suppositions about the Earth's size that had been known to be false since Hellenistic times.
A Learning Experience Built around Powerful Organizing Themes
This broad and panoramic series will help you pull an enormous sweep of history together into one coherent—though by no means closed—framework.

Professor Noble walks you through history as it develops, taking into account: ecology, geography, and climate; government and economics; religion; work and leisure; philosophy; literature; art and architecture; and even virtues, values, and aesthetics.

You will find everything from a thumbnail sketch of the Assyrians (cruel practitioners of state terror) to a detailed analysis of how the Roman constitution worked. For example, the word veto, which means "I forbid," was literally shouted into the Senate chamber by Roman tribunes listening from just outside the door.

In addition to such detailed, anecdotal information, another way you will gain a more vivid sense of the past from these lectures is from the number of memorable sketches of individuals and great works of Western culture. You will:

Ponder the view of life in the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh
Review the impressive amount of historical information preserved in the Iliad

Listen to selections from the great poets of ancient Rome, including not only Virgil and Ovid but Sallust, Juvenal, and Martial
Encounter amazing figures such as Charlemagne's lieutenant Theodulf, who was not only a bishop but an imperial diplomat and administrator, a theologian and scholar of the Hebrew Bible, a poet, and an architect who designed an exquisite chapel at Germigny.

The Importance of Material Factors
Professor Noble is careful never to neglect the environmental and technological factors that also shape history.

You will examine how a sustained period of favorable weather around the 10th and 11th centuries allowed western Europe to become more populous, found and rebuild cities, increase trade, and go from being a target of outside invasions by Vikings, Huns, Mongols, and Arabs to launching incursions of its own: The Crusades, which began in 1095.

And delving even deeper into the story, you will learn how a seemingly humble item, the horse collar, contributed so powerfully to this trend. If it were not for the invention of the horse collar, there may have been no Crusades at all.

Illuminating Questions about Familiar Categories
Professor Noble suggests that many conventional historical categories and concepts can obscure as much as they reveal. By setting aside these ideas, you can open your mind to a broader and perhaps more accurate picture of history.

Did the Roman Empire really "fall"? What did people at the time experience? What exactly was being reborn in the Renaissance? Is it historically accurate to speak of the "Protestant Reformation"? Why do we think of the Middle Ages as just that—i.e., a time somehow sandwiched between two other (and presumably superior) times? Did the brilliant intellectuals and writers who clustered around the court of Charlemagne see it that way?

No other civilization has achieved the global reach of the West. By surveying Mesopotamia to modernity and everything in between, you will pursue answers to the questions of what "the West" most essentially is or has been thought to be, and what distinguishes it from other world civilizations—not necessarily better in all ways but surely unique.


48 Lectures  -  - Average 31 minutes each


1  -  “Western,” “Civilization,” and “Foundations”

2  -  History Begins at Sumer

3  -  Egypt—The Gift of the Nile

4   - The Hebrews—Small States and Big Ideas

5  -  A Succession of Empires

6  -  Wide-Ruling Agamemnon

7  -  Dark Age and Archaic Greece

8  -  The Greek Polis—Sparta

9  -  The Greek Polis—Athens

10  -  Civic Culture—Architecture and Drama

11  -  The Birth of History

12  -  From Greek Religion to Socratic Philosophy

13  -  Plato and Aristotle

14  -  The Failure of the Polis and the Rise of Alexander

15  -  The Hellenistic World

16  -  The Rise of Rome

17  -  The Roman Republic—Government and Politics

18  -  Roman Imperialism

19  -  The Culture of the Roman Republic

20  -  Rome—From Republic to Empire

21  -  The Pax Romana

22  -  Rome's Golden and Silver Ages

23  -  Jesus and the New Testament

24  -  The Emergence of a Christian Church

25  -  Late Antiquity—Crisis and Response

26  -  Barbarians and Emperors

27  -  The Emergence of the Catholic Church

28  -  Christian Culture in Late Antiquity

29  -  Muhammad and Islam

30  -  The Birth of Byzantium

31  -  Barbarian Kingdoms in the West

32  -  The World of Charlemagne

33  -  The Carolingian Renaissance

34  -  The Expansion of Europe

35  -  The Chivalrous Society

36  -  Medieval Political Traditions, I

37  - Medieval Political Traditions, II

38  -  Scholastic Culture

39  -  Vernacular Culture

40  -  The Crisis of Renaissance Europe

41  -  The Renaissance Problem

42  -  Renaissance Portraits

43  -  The Northern Renaissance

44  -  The Protestant Reformation—Martin Luther

45  -  The Protestant Reformation—John Calvin

46  -  Catholic Reforms and "Confessionalization"

47  -  Exploration and Empire

48  -  What Challenges Remain?

offered here is the  4  Workbooks and 24 DVD's that comprise GREAT COURSES - The Foundation of Western Civilization

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