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    Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World [repost]

    Posted By: FenixN
    Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World [repost]

    Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World
    48xDVDRip | AVI/XviD, ~557 kb/s | 640x432 | Duration: 24:26:40 | English: MP3, 128 kb/s (2 ch) | + PDF Guide | 5.13 GB
    Genre: Religion

    How did people of ancient times cope with the overwhelming mysteries of the universe? The cycles of nature kept predictable time with the sun, moon, and stars; yet, without warning, crops failed, diseases struck, storms wreaked havoc, and empires fell.
    In the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea, they responded with a rich variety of religious beliefs that have provided some of Western civilization's most powerful texts: the Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh, the Hebrew Bible, the Greek epics of Homer, Ovid's Metamorphoses, and the New Testament, among many others. Composed largely of stories of human interaction with the divine, these narratives gave ordinary people a window into the unfathomable realm of the sacred.

    People also responded with a complex array of religious rituals that survive in the archaeological remains of temples, cultic statues, funerary goods, and household devotional items—artifacts that are among the world's greatest cultural treasures.

    In these 48 lectures, Professor Glenn S. Holland uses such textual and archaeological evidence to explore the religious cultures of the ancient Mediterranean world. He covers times from the earliest prehistoric indications of human religious practices to the conversion of the Roman Empire to Christianity in the 4th century A.D.

    You will be introduced to religious traditions of a range of civilizations, including the ancient kingdom of Egypt; Mesopotamia; Syria-Palestine, including Israel and Judah; Minoan civilization on the island of Crete and the successive civilizations of the Greek mainland; and the city of Rome, whose empire dominated the Mediterranean world.

    Ancient Roots of Our Culture

    These civilizations provided the source of much of our own religious heritage, and each gave rise to a remarkable body of stories, beliefs, and traditions that have had wide-ranging and sometimes surprising influences. For example:

    The Egyptian goddess Isis came closer to becoming the central deity of a worldwide religion than any other traditional god or goddess of the ancient Mediterranean world. In Christianity, Jesus' mother Mary was credited with many of the beneficent qualities of Isis, particularly mercy, and the special intercessory role for those who were her devotees.
    The chief god of the Syro-Palestinian pantheon was 'El. In time his name became the generic word for any god. Many biblical names reflect this change, such as the Hebrew name Michael, which translates as one "who is like God."
    Roman imperial soldiers were especially devoted to the god Mithras, who was born on December 25, the same date that later tradition assigned to the birth of Jesus. According to some accounts, Mithras was also born in the presence of shepherds.
    Perhaps the best-known example of cross-cultural influence among ancient religions is an account of a devastating flood. It appears in the celebrated story of Noah in the Hebrew Bible, and also in Mesopotamian and Greek versions. Notably, in all these accounts, the survivors' first impulse after making landfall is to offer worship.

    A Believer's Viewpoint

    A distinguished professor of religious studies at Allegheny College, Dr. Holland brings both a historian's and a literary critic's perspective to this fascinating subject. His emphasis is not only on the rituals and mythology of a civilization's official religious culture, but also on the beliefs, practices, and yearnings of the common person. Professor Holland analyzes literary works as a way of seeing a religious culture from the inside, from a believer's point of view.

    The course is presented in four parts of 12 lectures each:

    Part I introduces the subject and addresses the fundamental question, "What is religion?" Professor Holland traces the development of religious practices from the earliest evidence in the Paleolithic and Mesolithic eras into the Neolithic era, the age that saw the beginnings of the first great Near Eastern civilizations. The first of these civilizations to be considered is Egypt.

    Part II moves on to religious culture in ancient Mesopotamia, especially in the cities of Sumer and Babylon, and later Ashur and Nineveh. The concluding four lectures in this part introduce the religious cultures of Syria-Palestine, focusing on the Hebrew kingdoms of Israel and Judah.

    Part III continues the study of religious culture in ancient Israel and Judah with lectures on prophecy, the Babylonian exile, and the problem of evil. Professor Holland then shifts to the study of Greek religious cultures, beginning with Minoan civilization on Crete and moving to the civilizations of Mycenae and Athens, as well as the Hellenistic culture established in the wake of the conquests of Alexander the Great.

    Part IV opens with a lecture on mystery religions of the East and introduces the study of Roman religion. This final part culminates with the Jesus movement and the eventual triumph of Christianity over traditional Roman religion. The concluding lecture considers the ways religious cultures of the ancient Mediterranean world are most foreign to our own, and the ways they have expressed the enduring religious yearnings of all humanity.

    Lectures

    01 Talking About Ancient Religious Cultures
    02 What is Religion?
    03 Early Prehistoric Religion
    04 Prehistoric Religion—The Neolithic Era
    05 Egypt—A Unique Religious Culture
    06 Egyptian Creation Stories and Their Meaning
    07 The Egyptian Pantheon
    08 Egyptian Myths of Kingship
    09 Egyptian Myths of the Underworld
    10 Egypt—The Power of Goddesses
    11 Egypt—Religion in Everyday Life
    12 Egypt—The Beginning of Wisdom
    13 Mesopotamia—The Land Between the Rivers
    14 Mesopotamia—Stories of Creation
    15 Mesopotamia—Inanna the Goddess
    16 Mesopotamia—Gilgamesh the King
    17 Mesopotamia—The Search for Eternal Life
    18 Mesopotamia—The Great Flood
    19 Ancient Concepts of the Divine
    20 The Gods of Syria-Palestine
    21 Israel's Ancestral History
    22 Israel's National History
    23 Prophecy in the Ancient Near East
    24 Early Prophecy in Israel
    25 Classical Israelite Prophecy
    26 Israel's Great Crisis
    27 Syria-Palestine—The Problem of Evil
    28 Early Aegean Civilizations
    29 Religious Culture in the Iliad and the Odyssey
    30 Religious Culture in Archaic Greece
    31 Greece—How Things Came to Be
    32 Greece—The Goddess
    33 The Classical Era in Greece
    34 Greece—Philosophy as Religion
    35 Religious Culture in the Hellenistic World
    36 Mystery Religions in the Hellenistic World
    37 Mystery Religions from the East
    38 Roman Religious Culture Before the Empire
    39 Rome—Saviors and Divine Men
    40 Rome—Divination, Astrology, and Magic
    41 Rome—Critics and Charlatans
    42 Jesus of Nazareth as a Figure in History
    43 Creating Jesus Communities
    44 Living and Dying for the God(s)
    45 Women's Religious Roles in the Early Empire
    46 The Jesus Movement in the Greco-Roman World
    47 The Death and Rebirth of the Old Gods
    48 Conclusion—Persisting Ideas and Yearnings

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    Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World [repost]

    Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World [repost]

    Religion in the Ancient Mediterranean World [repost]

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