Songtexte
- Byzantine Cultural Revival
- Skaldic Poetry and Sagas
- Turning Point — Theodosius I
- The Byzantine Dark Age
- The Battle of the Granicus
- The Rise of Christianity
- Collapse of the Peace of Nicias
- Justinian and the Demise of Paganism
- The Persian Conquest
- Alexander, Heir Apparent
- From Mantinea to Sicily, 418–415 B.C.
- The Roman Imperial Army
- The Conquest of Cisalpine Gaul
- Christian Bishops and Apostolic Churches
- From Delian League to Athenian Empire
- Scandinavia in the Celtic and Roman Ages
- Jugurtha and the Nomadic Threat
- Alexius I and the First Crusade
- Hellenization and the Gods
- Jews in the Roman Empire
- Attila and the Huns
- The Roman Imperial Cult
- The Genesis of Roman Spain
- The Campaign of Gaugamela
- Alexander and the Macedonian Opposition
- Comnenian Emperors and Crusaders
- The Settlement of Iceland
- Imperial Church and Christian Dogma
- The World of Frankish Greece
- Splinter Empires and Orthodox Princes
- Hattušaš and Imperial Hittite Culture
- Alcibiades and Sparta, 414–412 B.C.
- The Varian Disaster
- The Friends of God — Ascetics and Monks
- Ayyubid Egypt and Seljuk Anatolia
- Recovery Under the Macedonian Emperors
- Imperial Zenith — Basil II
- Venice and Genoa
- Arsacid Parthia
- Crisis in Corcyra, 435–432 B.C.
- Runes, Poetry, and Visual Arts
- The Empire at Bay
- From Clermont to Jerusalem
- Constantine
- Byzantine Letters and Aesthetics
- From Germanic Tribes to Confederations
- Victory Over Persia, 490–479 B.C.
- Trade and Currency in the Mediterranean
- The Search for Religious Unity
- Abbasid Baghdad and Fatimid Egypt
- The Age of Justinian
- The Collapse of the Bronze Age
- Religious Conflict in the Roman World
- The Mongols and the Legend of Prester John
- Trajan, the Dacians, and the Parthians
- The Battle of the Hydaspes
- The Diadochoi, 323–316 B.C.
- Viking Raids on the Carolingian Empire
- Governing and Taxing the Empire
- The Emperor Heraclius
- Romans and Carthaginians in Spain
- From Foes to Federates
- Merchants and Commerce in the Viking Age
- Land and People of Medieval Scandinavia
- Greek and Roman Views of Barbarians
- Achaemenid Persia
- New Leaders and New Strategies
- From Varangians Into Russians
- The Augustan Principate and Imperialism
- The Invasion of India
- Strategies and Stalemate, 431–429 B.C.
- Julius Caesar and the Conquest of Gaul
- Athenian Empire and Spartan Hegemony
- Formation of the Kingdom of Denmark
- A Renaissance of Byzantine Letters and Arts
- The Heirs of Rome
- Imperial Crisis and Decline
- Cimonian Imperialism
- The Age of Migrations
- The Thirty Years' Peace
- The Norse Gods
- Greece in the Age of Hegemonies
- Economy and Society of Imperial Athens
- Christianizing the Roman World
- The Mystery Cults
- Struggle Over Faith and Culture
- Sparta After the Persian Wars
- The Hittite Empire
- Jarls and Sea Kings of Norway
- Gods and Their Cities in the Roman Empire
- Western Voyages to Greenland and Vinland
- Imperial Exile and Restoration
- Warfare in Western Europe
- New Christian Warriors — Ascetics and Monks
- The Conversion of Constantine
- The Vikings in Medieval History
- From Hebrews to Jews
- Imperial Rome and the Barbarians
- The Defeat of Athens, 406–404 B.C.
- Birth of the Barbarian Medieval West
- Cultural Exchange in Gothic Europe
- The Turning Point — Issus and Tyre
- Alcibiades and Athens, 411–406 B.C.
- The Roman Republic
- The Legend of Troy
- Flavian Frontiers and the Dacians
- Crusaders and Seljuk Turks
- First Christian Theologians
- The Roman Way of War
- The Hellenization of the Near East
- The Coming of the Seljuk Turks
- Plague, Fiscal Crisis, and War
- The Peace of Nicias
- Demagogues and Stasis
- Athens or Sparta — a Question of Leadership
- Swedes in the Baltic Sea and Russia
- Rome and the Barbarians in the Fourth Century
- The Spirit of Late Paganism
- The Roman Conquest of Britain
- Alexander, Pharaoh of Egypt
- Securing the Inheritance, 336–335 B.C.
- Jews and Early Christians
- Commerce Beyond the Imperial Frontiers
- The Third Sacred War
- Roman Society
- Muslim Transformation
- Deification and Succession
- Pagan Response — First Persecutions
- The Second Crusade
- Piety and Pilgrimage
- The Macedonian Conquest of Greece
- Alexander the Great and the Diadochoi
- The Ottoman Empire
- Imperial Collapse
- Warfare and Society in the Viking Age
- Romanization of the Provinces
- The Invasion of Asia
- Viking Assault on Ireland
- Viking Assault on England
- The Viking Legacy
- The Greek Way of War
- Alexander on the Rim of the World
- Alexander and the Macedonians — Opis
- Goths and the Crisis of the Third Century
- Rome Versus the Kings of the East
- Alexander the Great — Conqueror or Tyrant?
- Legendary Kings and Heroes
- Imperial Recovery Under the Tetrarchs
- The Danelaw
- The Gedrosian Desert and Voyage of Nearchus
- Imperial Egypt
- The Recovery of Western Europe
- Christianization and Economic Change
- Kings and Princes of Western Europe
- Egypt in the Pyramid Age
- Christian Challenge — First Conversions
- Iron Age Kingdoms of Asia Minor
- Frankish Settlement of Outremer
- The Royal Crusaders
- State and Society Under the Dominate
- From Rome to Byzantium
- Christendom on the Eve of the Viking Age
- Triumph of the Radical Democracy
- The Duchy of Normandy
- Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes
- Christian Offensives in Spain and Sicily
- The World of Early Macedon
- Introduction to Anatolia
- Celtic Europe and the Mediterranean World
- Sparta, Athens, and the Western Greeks
- Constantinople, Queen of Cities
- Crusader Cyprus and the Levant
- The Third Crusade
- The Papacy and Religious Reform
- The Emperor Julian and the Pagan Reaction
- Sparta — Perceptions and Prejudices
- From Jerusalem to Constantinople
- Sparta and Her Allies
- Byzantine Zenith in the Macedonian Age
- Conquest and Defense of Outremer
- The Great Persecutions
- Iceland — a Frontier Republic
- Prosperity and Roman Patronage
- The Reconquest of the West
- Frontier Settlement and Assimilation
- Comnenian Emperors and Crusader Princes
- Athens, School of Greece
- Ionia and Early Greek Civilization
- Rome's Rivals in the East
- The Hellenization of Asia Minor
- The Road to Byzantium
- Justinian and the Barbarians
- Civil War and Rebellion
- Eastern Rivals — Sassanid Persia
- Gods and Sanctuaries of Roman Asia Minor
- Marius and the Northern Barbarians
- Alexander and the Greeks — The Lamian War
- Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War
- Athenian Victory in Northwest Greece
- Alexander the Great and the Shadow of Rome
- The Price of Empire — The Roman Revolution
- Emergence of the Polis
- The Failure of the Heirs of Basil II
- The Conquest of Iran
- The Iconoclastic Controversy
- Philip II and the Macedonian Way of War
- A Revolution in Shipbuilding
- Transformation of Scandinavian Society
- The Nomads of Eastern Europe
- Cradles of Civilization
- Mutiny and Withdrawal
- St. Olaf of Norway
- Norse Kings of Dublin and Ireland
- The Sack of Constantinople
- The Partition of the Empire, 316–301 B.C.
- The Middle Kingdom
- Athens and the Navy
- Thucydides and the Peloponnesian War
- Byzantine Orthodox Civilization
- Sparta's Bitter Victory
- Hammurabi’s Babylon
- The First Peloponnesian War
- New Peoples of the Bronze Age
- The Fall of the Western Empire
- The Passing of the Crusades
- Kings of the Swedes and Goths
- Life in the Byzantine Dark Age
- First Civilizations in Anatolia
- Early Germanic Europe
- The Athenian Expedition to Sicily
- Macedonian Courts in the Near East
- Byzantine Recovery Under the Comnenians
- The Horns of Hattin
- The Christian Citadel
- Origins of Greek Civilization
- Constantine and the Bishops
- Imperial Assyria
- The League of Corinth
- Platonism and Stoicism
- The Athenian Democracy
- Imperial Crisis — The Chalcidice and Mytilene
- Pagan Critics and Christian Apologists
- Pylos, 425 B.C. — a Test of Leadership
- First Cities of Sumer
- The Monetization of the Near East
- Conspiracy and Revolution, 411 B.C.
- Cnut the Great
- Collapse of Cnut’s Empire
- St. Anskar and the First Christian Missions
- The Fall of Constantinople
- The Limits of Hellenization
- Scandinavian Society in the Bronze Age
- The Hellenistic Concert of Powers
- Lessons of the Peloponnesian War
- Heroes, Oracles, and the Gods
- From Vikings to Crusaders
- The Persian Empire
- Imperial Crisis and Spiritual Crisis
- The Roman Conquest of Spain
- Imperial Crisis and Reform
- The Birth of Christian Aesthetics and Letters
- The Rise of Saladin
- 7. Imperial Egypt: I.
- 7. Imperial Egypt: V.
- 6. The Middle Kingdom: III.
- 6. The Middle Kingdom: I.
- 6. The Middle Kingdom: V.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: IV.D.
- 10. From Hebrews to Jews: III.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: IV.
- 12. The Persian Empire: III.
- 12. The Persian Empire: II.
- 12. The Persian Empire: IV.
- 6. The Middle Kingdom: II.
- 12. The Persian Empire: I.
- 6. The Middle Kingdom: VI.
- 8. New Peoples of the Bronze Age: V.
- 11. Imperial Assyria: III.
- 3. Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes: IV.
- 11. Imperial Assyria: V.
- 4. Hammurabi’s Babylon: IV.
- 10. From Hebrews to Jews: V.
- 5. Egypt in the Pyramid Age: II.
- 5. Egypt in the Pyramid Age: III.
- 5. Egypt in the Pyramid Age: I.
- 5. Egypt in the Pyramid Age: V.
- 1. Cradles of Civilization: V.
- 7. Imperial Egypt: IV.
- 4. Hammurabi’s Babylon: I.
- 4. Hammurabi’s Babylon: V.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: I.
- 3. Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes: III.
- 8. New Peoples of the Bronze Age: I.
- 6. The Middle Kingdom: IV.
- 8. New Peoples of the Bronze Age: II.
- 8. New Peoples of the Bronze Age: IV.
- 8. New Peoples of the Bronze Age: III.
- 3. Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes: II.
- 2. First Cities of Sumer: III.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: III.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: II.
- 4. Hammurabi’s Babylon: II.
- 1. Cradles of Civilization: III.
- 4. Hammurabi’s Babylon: III.
- 2. First Cities of Sumer: III.F.
- 10. From Hebrews to Jews: II.
- 10. From Hebrews to Jews: IV.
- 10. From Hebrews to Jews: I.
- 3. Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes: I.
- 3. Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes: V.
- 7. Imperial Egypt: III.
- 5. Egypt in the Pyramid Age: IV.
- 7. Imperial Egypt: II.
- 2. First Cities of Sumer: II.E.
- 11. Imperial Assyria: I.
- 2. First Cities of Sumer: II.
- 1. Cradles of Civilization: I.
- 2. First Cities of Sumer: I.
- 12. The Persian Empire: II.C.
- 1. Cradles of Civilization: II.
- 1. Cradles of Civilization: IV.
- 11. Imperial Assyria: II.
- 11. Imperial Assyria: IV.
- Par 2
- Part 1
- 2. First Cities of Sumer: Intro
- 8. New Peoples of the Bronze Age: VI.
- 11. Imperial Assyria: VI.
- 10. From Hebrews to Jews: VI.
- 5. Egypt in the Pyramid Age: VI.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: V.
- 3. Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes: VI.
- 9. The Collapse of the Bronze Age: VI.
- 12. The Persian Empire: VI.
- 4. Hammurabi’s Babylon: VI.
- 7. Imperial Egypt: VI.
- Intro