Classics Confidential

Classics Confidential

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  • @nozecone
    @nozecone Жыл бұрын

    Volume too low for my pc. FYI.

  • @theumai2356
    @theumai23562 жыл бұрын

    #shorts | Manusia ditelan paus tapi tidak mati kzread.infoTk65LamtHgA

  • @ShiningTrailblazerTV
    @ShiningTrailblazerTV2 жыл бұрын

    The woman in the green (rosemary) was a close friend and associate of my grandad (Michael Stephen Silk, another well-known emeritus professor) who died on September 21st 2016. She was one of the most genuine, kind and caring people I’ve ever known. My grandad still gets sad when her name is brought up. Her two chihuahuas now live with us, and I hope that the memory of her is forever relinquished. RIP Rosemary Julia Barrow

  • @mrnarason
    @mrnarason5 жыл бұрын

    k

  • @greekingreeceuohiopatras5522
    @greekingreeceuohiopatras55227 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this insightful interview! Keep up the good work!

  • @g.t.2053
    @g.t.20538 жыл бұрын

    Maybe you are interested in the historical novel "His Archilochus". Visit the blog www.tehlemetzis.blogspot.gr

  • @Beetlebug202
    @Beetlebug2028 жыл бұрын

    Merton bells!

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan92268 жыл бұрын

    That was an interesting talk, Dr. Mairs!

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan92268 жыл бұрын

    Dear Professor Bakogianni and Professor Manuwald: I have been trying to post my comments about your discussion of 'Neo-Latin' on the Classics Confidential page, but the comment does not seem to be appearing on the WordPress. I do not know what the problem is. I do not know what is going on? I will like to get to the bottom of it.

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan92268 жыл бұрын

    Professor Manuwald, this was a very interesting topic that you discussed about 'Neo-Latin'. I took a 'Medieval Latin' course ten years ago as a special student at the University of Ottawa in Canada, I found Medieval Latin much easier to translate without a dictionary than Classical Latin.

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan92268 жыл бұрын

    That was a very interesting talk that you made about democracy, Professor Cartledge! Now that I have learnt that democracy is definitely not recent. It has been around a long time since antiquity.

  • @ENGSDCA
    @ENGSDCA8 жыл бұрын

    Very nicely done. Thanks to Dr Orrells. (Note: Jowett pronounced his surname JOE-it; cf. J. K. Rowling, ROE-ling.)

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan92268 жыл бұрын

    This discussion was useful, because they mentioned different film adaptations such as 'Troy' and 'The Gladiator'. You see by watching those movies, if they follow the text and are historically correct.

  • @silvialogan9226
    @silvialogan92268 жыл бұрын

    It is introducing to see different stage and film productions on Euripides' 'Trojan Women' and the other Roman and Greek tragedy plays to see how they work to attract a modern audience.

  • @fratozdmir4788
    @fratozdmir47888 жыл бұрын

    I love the interviews in this channel but could you possibly pay more attention to the audio? The background noise makes it difficult to follow.

  • @MarcusCato275
    @MarcusCato2758 жыл бұрын

    My Professor and teacher for one of my modules. Love Exeter and its theology team. Best theology faculty in the world!

  • @letsomethingshine
    @letsomethingshine8 жыл бұрын

    The book of Job and a lot of surviving religions are based on the idea of supernatural wisdom in auto-dissonant texts (with vagueness, partial internally contradiction, and/or cliff-hangers).

  • @jlmcgill2031
    @jlmcgill20318 жыл бұрын

    This woman is brilliant.

  • @TheLittledikkins
    @TheLittledikkins8 жыл бұрын

    What is needed is to find some sequencable DNA from a Etruscan tomb or necropolis. If they can sequence Neanderthal DNA a far newer sample should be able to be done.

  • @Firstavenueconsultin
    @Firstavenueconsultin8 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant this classics confidential was great!

  • @0bubblemix
    @0bubblemix8 жыл бұрын

    at min 1:48 he mentions a book as evidence for early atheism, but I cannot understand what he is saying! can anyone give me that title please? thanks!

  • @JamesPeach
    @JamesPeach9 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Interview was trying to (eh) push the question of Socrates being atheist, but the interview was kindly trying to say he was theist. Shame, that Socrates isn't a confirmed atheist, though.

  • @bugsby4663
    @bugsby46639 жыл бұрын

    I thought the Hebrew bible was written during the exile in Babylon, so just before the Persian liberation.

  • @xerox1959
    @xerox19599 жыл бұрын

    Francesca Stavrakopoulou: very interesting vieuws on religion etc. Excellent in debates. Great mind. Also: a greek goddess... :-) : Aphrodite :-)

  • @erockerock238
    @erockerock2389 жыл бұрын

    I attended a wedding recently. It was a religious ceremony at the church I attended as a child (I'm not longer religious). All I could think about during scripture readings and interpretations was possible responses that Dr. Francesca could have to completely falsify and question said text. (Dr. Francesca along with Dawkins, Krauss and the late Hitchens). I looked upon other attenders faces blindly and blissfully resonating with the readings and all I could do was think critically (to the best of my ability).

  • @debbyvanlinden2570
    @debbyvanlinden25709 жыл бұрын

    The lifting up (skirt) is a woman's power, darlings, it is BAUBO, the Mother Goddess!!

  • @williammoulton2813
    @williammoulton28139 жыл бұрын

    Prof. Suzuki , If you are still interested Helen, you might check out "Helen in Egypt" by Hilda Doolittle. She is a turn of the century poetess. I found her retelling of Helen's stay in Eygpt during the war very insightful Also the Center for Hellenic Studies recently arranged dramatic reading of Antigone in Greece and the U.S. by high school students. Eventually the kids got to talk to one another. The Greek kids were sympathetic to Creon's role in the tragedy, to the extent that they felt the play should be renamed in his honor! Bill Moulton Hour25

  • @OriginalOgraphy
    @OriginalOgraphy9 жыл бұрын

    Much Love

  • @markdobs
    @markdobs9 жыл бұрын

    To bad the microphone was placed 6 feet away from their voices...poor audio...

  • @kevinpetti3724
    @kevinpetti37249 жыл бұрын

    Bravi Francesco e Hutan! Glad to see the conversation continue!!

  • @loungydoc
    @loungydoc9 жыл бұрын

    So I far I like what she presents. From what I've gathered and been taught religion and the concept of God started as way to deal with the stress of nature then it became a way to deal with social pressures and oppression of people and so this perpetual cycle of trying to create gods or religions to oppress the oppressor. I really enjoy the historical aspects of of it all.

  • @namiqui
    @namiqui9 жыл бұрын

    ati cathe luthe cel/celOim(Etruscan/Liber Linteus/creation prayer spell)= atl ecatl lotl ocel(Nauatl). note reversal lotl o/cel=ocelotl(N)=ocelome(plural)= celOim(Etr)=Elohim(Hebrew/dual deity). ocelotl is totem(Algic)=totemo(N)= to/our descent/temo, felid of Tlazolteotl, regent of Tonalamatl birthing calendar of Tlaloc Nomad Deer Age, 45k-10kBCE. Tlazol=goddess of Zatal Hüyuk,= Gramma of West(fire drill goddess), as Chinese called her,=Toci/Tocitli(Naua-Aztec)= our granny/our star/citlali/our rabbit=onne huchi(Ainu)=fire goddess,=ome tochtli(N)= 2 rabbit of deer/mazatl trecena/13, whom Aztecs mad vicar&composer of their Pulque Choir, but her husband, Xiuhtletl Ueueteotl=old fire god, Lord Turquoise, is god of her daynight,=Canaan=ca nantli(N)=being mother, the mother goddess granny, spiritual home of the Etruscan/Tarquin=tlalli qui(N)=who earths/mines iron/iloa(N)= reuse,=tlallo=subject to earth,=tlalloque=Tlalocs=dwarves of Tlaloc, god of rain/deer, and name of the nomad/tribal age before ciuia(N)=cities.

  • @timothymilligan3450
    @timothymilligan34509 жыл бұрын

    So far the only etruscan descendants have been traced through pagan religious similarities to the northern parts of the carpathian mountains. They were believed to be ran out of Italy by the romans in the first century by invading countries killing them for there wealth and precious metals. They agape to Hungary and later were killed off by the huns in the carpathian mountains after escaping the romans. They also predicted there own demise through there pagan rituals. They believed they would only live 600 years before their extinction. and it happened to them as they predicted. Also their culture was the basis for european culture advancement. they taught the romans to build chariots and to build armor and mold different steels like bronze and steel. they taught the french to make wine. They taught the world to use coin as trade. they taught the Mesopotamians to build see worthy ships that could cross the oceans that made it to the great lakes and mined millions of pounds of copper out of islands out of norther Michigan and Illinois 2500 years ago. Most of the culture of ceremony and entertainment of fighting for entertainment was also taught by them. Also the way we give people surname like the way you get your last name by your father was taught by them but changed by the romans, the etruscans used the mothers surname for the children instead of the father. The etruscans also introduced writing and trademarking to the world, but their history was lost because they veiled more about writing and cataloging death and the afterlife like the Egyptians than writing about their current events.

  • @davidknappett9203
    @davidknappett92039 жыл бұрын

    Giving a voice for the first time? to these ancient women warriors is a noble and exciting prospect and I for one will want to be at the premiere of ICONS. I cannot wait to gain insights into what drove these tribal icons, their power, courage and reputation which has reverberated down through the ages. Were they real or mythical, and what can they teach us about women and society today? Thank you Laura and associates for whetting our appetites for the subject and every success in your journey towards realising this utterly worthy project.

  • @Tocaheheh
    @Tocaheheh9 жыл бұрын

    12. Burning of the Library of Alexandria - papyrus crisis "If there was not the fire in the era of Caliph Omar which would destroy the well-known library of Alexandria with a number of outstanding works in many languages, especially Pelasgian or Etruscan, unless it would have been that systematic wash monks or others to pelasgian or Etruscan manuscripts, and those in Greek and Latin over the centuries VI, VII, VIII, IX, X, and XI, - a period of deep crisis of papyrus to get there what young writers lacked, it is certain that today we won’t have been missing various documents in Pelasgian or Etruscan language, and language puzzles that stand today in front of us, would not exist. But today, we can say we are happy that even in lack of written documents, the study of this language so old as it is the Pelasgian language at its most vibrant, can be done through the features of today's Albanian language, which is transmitted to us in an exact and complete way.

  • @NikkoYM
    @NikkoYM9 жыл бұрын

    thank you for the explanation, as I'm watching the French language performance of this (opera) on Arte. Very helpful!

  • @vulpes6144
    @vulpes61449 жыл бұрын

    I am sorry, but the sound seems so low

  • @basclips01
    @basclips019 жыл бұрын

    Indeed. Very interesting talk. Johannes is great. The interviewer also is very good, he has done interviews on subjects as varied as Archilochus, Plutarch, and Fables from the near east. Would love to see more on fables and perhaps the Persians. My entry into the classics was Alexander but the Persians have really grown on me over the years.

  • @GodWorksOut
    @GodWorksOut9 жыл бұрын

    I loved by your video. If you believe that Age of REASON is unavoidable, then you should check out my channel. I have teamed up with the Godless Engineer and The Prototype Atheist to create REASON, Religiously Educated Atheists, Secularists, and Other Non-Theists, also known as The Secular Round Table. We have a weekly livestream every Sunday at 9pm eastern, a biweekly podcast, a weekly newsletter, a brand new website, and tshirts. If you get the time, please check us out. You should also consider attending our live stream or podcast as a guest. We like to get different perspectives on our show and network with new people.

  • @anotherblonde
    @anotherblonde9 жыл бұрын

    Excellent interviewee, and v interesting topic. Thanks for sharing.

  • @OLGAKOCHARYAN
    @OLGAKOCHARYAN9 жыл бұрын

    turkobosniyak-you are serb.krov vperedi,religiya potom

  • @OLGAKOCHARYAN
    @OLGAKOCHARYAN9 жыл бұрын

    voobshe pobolshe sravnivayte vashi dna- testi s armyanskimi i vam vse stanet yasno.sovetuyu eto delat daje jidam,a o slavyanax i nemtsax ne govoryu.v turtsii oni zapresheni-potomucto budet mnogo smexa.

  • @OLGAKOCHARYAN
    @OLGAKOCHARYAN9 жыл бұрын

    etruscans like germans, slavons... from asia minor, what min-ARMENIA

  • @OLGAKOCHARYAN
    @OLGAKOCHARYAN9 жыл бұрын

    they are not turk.ishtahna sirke. turks bay themself mostly armenian,greek serbian... look at there fase

  • @jerryjared644
    @jerryjared6449 жыл бұрын

    nice!

  • @JimMac816
    @JimMac8169 жыл бұрын

    Fascinating

  • @bossmancraft9069
    @bossmancraft90699 жыл бұрын

    More than likely the Etruscans are derivatives of the Phoenicians and/or Egyptians. The Etruscans are too sophisticated to have originated in Italy, it's well know they have next to nothing in common with their neighbors who were tribal and barbaric during their timeline.

  • @richardyates4665
    @richardyates466510 жыл бұрын

    Francesca thank you for your honesty. You have not hidden the Truth based on your search for it in a Nubian-Khmetian (Egyptian) Culture older than Judaism, Christian, & Islam. Kindly watch the youtube videos titled Virgin Islands Religious Debate. Religious Debate Amenuel vs Jesus Part 1A. Send me ([email protected]) more of your search and re-search on The Wife of GOD in other cultures.

  • @uncanny9879
    @uncanny987910 жыл бұрын

    childish? i don't think so, what do you say about Christ giving Christians 'the Our Father' prayer and when he was dying on the Cross before he took his last breath he said "Father into your hands I commit my spirit." You need to acknowledge HIS statements plus God incarnating as a Man (Jesus) . Then you will realize she has a point! please watch her Doco 'the bibles buried secrets: did God have a wife?' and you will realize how Monotheism was invented out of fear after the sacking of the temple of Jerusalem and how the Canaanite slaves who were not yet Israelite's' were led out of Egypt by Moses under the guidance of the Pagan Male God El who became the God we know today as Yahweh! And how the Goddess became erased out of Israelite religion. Please do your research before criticizing a superb, progressive scholar like Prof Stavrakopoulou who liberated me from Christianity.

  • @slydessertfox6267
    @slydessertfox626710 жыл бұрын

    Been looking on a book on this period for awhile now. Glad one exists!