Ancient
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Tutankhamun: Life Not Death
Renowned Egyptologist Prof. Joann Fletcher explores the most famous pharaoh of them all - Tutankhamun. Jo has curated a very special exhibition in her hometown, Barnsley, not only to celebrate the world of Tutankhamun, but also the people from northern England who played an important role in his...
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Maps: Our Place in the World
Many of us canât help but be obsessed with maps â including Dan. They tell us where we are in the world and let us know how our environment has changed overtime. History, geography and philosophy â maps cross all these fields of study. The history of mapmaking has its roots in the ancient world, ...
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Tom Holland on the Birth of Islam
Historian Tom Holland shares his fascination at how the events of ancient history can resonate in the modern world. The author of Islam: The Untold Story talks to Dan Snow about the birth of this rich and sophisticated civilisation, tracing its history through the centuries, and its interaction a...
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Imagining the Divine
Dr Janina Ramirez takes an exclusive tour of 'Imagining the Divine', the new exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. With the exhibition's co-curator, Jas Eslner, Janina discovers how the art of the 5 major world religions spread across the globe in the first Millennium AD, and takes a fasc...
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How Christianity Shapes Our Morality
Tom Holland sits down with Dan to talk about the history of Christianity, and how the religion has shaped morality in Western civilisation to this day.
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Vindolanda Unearthed
Situated roughly one mile south of Hadrianâs Wall is one of the great jewels of Roman and early medieval archaeology: Vindolanda. Over the past 50 years, annual excavations at this site have revealed incredible amounts of new information. Information that has not only shone more light on the site...
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Boudica: Death to Rome
In 60/61 AD turmoil seized southern Britain. A massive anti-Roman revolt reared its ugly head in East Anglia, as tens of thousands of Britons attempted to evict the recently-arrived Romans from the island by the spear. At its head was one of the most famous figures in the whole of British history...
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đ§ Chinese Philosophy
Michael Puett is Professor of Chinese History at Harvard and has lectured widely at the world's leading universities. His course in Chinese philosophy is among the most popular at Harvard and in 2013 he was awarded a Harvard College Professorship for excellence in undergraduate teaching.
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Mary Beard on Lessons from Ancient Rome
The deepening political divide in the U.S. and an apparent realignment of the world order through President Trumpâs foreign policy have prompted many comparisons to the fall of the Roman Empire. But can we really look back at ancient civilisations and draw parallels with those that exist today? A...
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Ancient Greece
Did the Ancient Greeks really invent the olympics? What did they wear? How did they party? What did Ancient Greek music sound like?
Host of 'The Ancients' podcast, Tristan Hughes, answers the most searched Google questions about Ancient Greece.
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The Ashmolean Up Close: Demons of Mesopotamia
The second film in our series exploring the remarkable collections of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. In this episode, Prof. Suzannah Lipscomb journeys into the world of Ancient Mesopotamian protectors. Guided by curator Dr Nancy Highcock, we uncover a fascinating array of objects, from fearsome ...
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đ§ Circe and Greek Myths with Madeleine Miller
Dan and bestselling author Madeleine Miller chat Greek myths and the Odyssey. They talk about Virgil, the Aenead, Patroclus and Agamemnon, and whether Dan should sacrifice his daughter to ensure prevailing winds. Producer: Peter Curry
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Hatshepsut: She Who Would Be King
Hatshepsut â whose name means âforemost of noblewomenâ â was an exceptional figure in the history of Ancient Egypt. Only the second woman in history to assume the title of pharaoh, during her reign she oversaw the building of monumental temples, established trade connections with far away African...
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Mary Beard on Women and Power
In Greek and Roman antiquity, womenâs voices were proof of their wickedness. The pitch and prattle was considered harmful, even unsanitary. In literature, powerful women were emblems of usurpation and mortal danger. Women speaking in public could not only jeopardize the men close to them, but bri...
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The Wall: Rome's Great Northern Frontier
Hadrianâs Wall is celebrating its 1900th birthday⊠the perfect time for History Hit to investigate this potent embodiment of Roman dominance.
Dan Snow explores the physical remains of Hadrianâs vast project of 122AD - over 80 Roman miles of wall, turrets and forts, stretching from coast to coast...
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The Ashmolean Up Close: Nero's Golden House
The first film in an exciting new partnership between History Hit and one of the worldâs oldest and finest public museums, the University of Oxfordâs Ashmolean Museum.
Over the course of six films, to be released through 2025, History Hit is going behind the scenes to discover some of the Ashmol...
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Building the Wall
Tristan Hughes looks into the construction of Hadrian's Wall and the many mysteries that still abound. Featuring Frances McIntosh, curator at Hadrian's Wall.
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đ§ Confucius with Roel Sterckx
Dan and Roel Sterckz sit down to talk about all things Confucius, the ancient Chinese philosopher and politician. They discuss his influence in the trajectory of intellectual history and what we know about the historical Confucius. Producer: Oliver Nelken
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Rodin and the Art of Ancient Greece
Born in Paris in 1840, François-Auguste-RenĂ© Rodin is quite possibly the most famous sculptor in recent history. Considered by many to be the first âmodernâ sculptor, his works such as âThe Kissâ and âThe Thinkerâ have become iconic throughout the world. He possessed a unique ability to model a c...
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Decoding the Roman Dead
Colchester Museums have been working with archaeologists and specialists to âdecodeâ the hidden stories of 40 of Colchesterâs earliest inhabitants.
Through new scientific research techniques, they have reconstructed the identity and lives of these people: where they came from in the empire, wha...
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Live from the British Museum: The Scythians
2,500 years ago groups of formidable warriors roamed the vast open plains of Siberia. Ferocious nomads, they roamed from Southern Russia down into Iran â a whole region that makes up the middle portion of the Silk Roads. Feared, loathed, admired â but over time forgotten⊠until now. A new major e...
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Bignor Roman Villa
West Sussex has its fair share of stunning Roman sites: Fishbourne Roman Palace, Stane Street, the Novium, the list goes on. But one of the region's star Roman attractions has to be Bignor Roman Villa. Situated deep in the heart of the Sussex countryside Bignor is home to some of the most impress...
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The Rollright Stones: Mind, Myre and Magic
The Rollright Stones are some of Britainâs most remarkable and mysterious ancient monuments. They consist of three separate sites - a looming funerary monument built to contain dismembered corpses, a venerated stone circle, and a single monolith with an innominate purpose. Alice Loxton traces six...
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A Tour of Fishbourne Palace
In 1960, a man was laying a waterpipe underneath the quaint village of Fishbourne near Chichester, West Sussex, when he uncovered what looked like Roman remains. After he duly reported the discover, the archaeologists were called in and they quickly unearthed more and more prestigious finds. They...