All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 1433—The Great Voyages of Admiral Zheng He

    • January 1, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Explore the idea of modernity and define "turning point." Then, consider why Chinese admiral Zheng He's voyages promoting the power of China's authority did not continue as part of a larger campaign of discovery--and what the consequences might have been had he reached the Americas.

  • S01E02 1453—The Fall of Constantinople

    • January 1, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Although many educated people think they know about the fall of the Roman Empire, Professor Liulevicius says the end actually happened 1,000 years later with the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Turks. Delve deeper into this event and learn the trauma the loss created for Europeans.

  • S01E03 Gutenberg’s Print Revolution

    • The Great Courses

    Trace how Johannes Gutenberg’s introduction of a press with movable type sparked a print revolution, becoming a key factor in the Protestant Reformation, the Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution, and the standardization of vernacular languages.

  • S01E04 1492—The Columbian Exchange

    • The Great Courses

    Without intending to, Christopher Columbus’s search for Asia initiated an event that has been called the most important historical turning point of modern times. Investigate how Columbus’s encounter with the Americas brought distant peoples together politically, culturally, and environmentally in ways that were simultaneously productive and deeply destructive.

  • S01E05 1600—The British East India Company

    • The Great Courses

    The English and Dutch East India companies coexisted in the Spice Islands as they worked to outflank the Portuguese, but their rivalry soon escalated into war. Examine the founding and meteoric growth of the East India Company and the violence that ultimately led Britain to establish an empire on which the sun never set.

  • S01E06 1648—The Treaty of Westphalia

    • January 1, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    The Thirty Years War involved some million soldiers and mass civilian casualties. Explore the significance of the Peace of Westphalia, the settlement that ended the war in 1648--a vital turning point that still shapes how international politics are handled.

  • S01E07 1676—Van Leeuwenhoek’s Microscope

    • The Great Courses

    Trace how Anton van Leeuwenhoek’s striking discovery fit into the larger Scientific Revolution and shifted intellectual authority from classic texts to that which is observable and measurable.

  • S01E08 1751—Diderot’s Enlightenment Encyclopedia

    • The Great Courses

    The Encyclopédie was the most ambitious reference work and publishing project of its time. Discover how the editors made knowledge accessible to a mass audience and championed the Enlightenment’s progressive, secular message, despite fierce opposition from the Catholic Church.

  • S01E09 1787—The American Experiment

    • The Great Courses

    Learn how America’s founders established a model of a republic through debate, compromise, separation of powers, and a flexible Constitution.

  • S01E10 1789—The French Revolution

    • The Great Courses

    How did France’s fight for liberation from royal authority lead to Napoleon’s rise and even greater despotism? Contrast events in America with those in France to see how attempts at creating modern republics radically diverged.

  • S01E11 1838—The British Slavery Abolition Act

    • The Great Courses

    Confront the harsh realities of the African slave trade and consider the role social mobilization played in eradicating the institution across the British Empire.

  • S01E12 1839—The Opium War in China

    • The Great Courses

    Delve into the causes, conflicts, and consequences of the Opium Wars, in which China was psychologically devastated and subjugated by British imperialism.

  • S01E13 1859—Darwin and the Origin of Species

    • The Great Courses

    Discover how a simple observation inspired Darwin’s theories of evolution and natural selection, and why his Origin of Species was eagerly accepted by much of Victorian society. Then, look at how the Nazis and others distorted Darwin’s ideas.

  • S01E14 1869—Binding Continents

    • The Great Courses

    In 1869, two events connected the world through modern technology, giving science vast significance as a source of authority. Learn how the building of the Transcontinental Railroad in the United States and the Suez Canal in Egypt revolutionized the way people perceived space and time.

  • S01E15 1893—First Women Voters in New Zealand

    • The Great Courses

    Follow the fight for women’s suffrage in New Zealand and America, as two global trends—the demand for women’s political voice and the growth of settler societies—intersected.

  • S01E16 1896—The Invention of Motion Pictures

    • The Great Courses

    Motion pictures revolutionized people’s view of the world. Survey early movie culture, along with the contributions of Thomas Edison, Georges Méliès, and others, then see how the medium became “weaponized” by Bolsheviks in Russia and Nazis in Germany.

  • S01E17 1903—Kitty Hawk and Powered Flight

    • The Great Courses

    Witness the dawning of the air age and meet the Montgolfier brothers, the Wright brothers, and others who brought humanity’s dream of flying to fruition. Then, explore how aviation shaped the experience of modernity, from the relative ease of travel to the stark reality of “total warfare.”

  • S01E18 1904—The Russo-Japanese War

    • January 1, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    To the world's surprise, Japan defeated Russia in the Russo-Japanese War. Learn how this conflict fought with industrialized weapons reconfigured world politics by igniting the process of global decolonization, establishing Japan as a great power, and setting the stage for two world wars.

  • S01E19 1928—The Discovery of Penicillin

    • The Great Courses

    The advance of antibiotics occurred amid the larger context of the development of germ theory. Trace how scientists’ understanding of the mechanisms of infection and disease evolved during the 19th century—and see how Alexander Fleming stumbled upon his life-saving discovery.

  • S01E20 1942—The Dawn of the Atom

    • The Great Courses

    When German physicists split the atom, Albert Einstein warned President Roosevelt of the potential for “extremely powerful bombs of a new type.” Chart the course of the nuclear bomb from this letter through the first nuclear chain reaction led by physicist Enrico Fermi, the Manhattan Project, and devastation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

  • S01E21 1969—Walking on the Moon

    • The Great Courses

    The moon landing expanded humanity’s sense of the possible. Learn how the space program grew out of advances in rocketry during World War II and advanced rapidly due to cold war paranoia exacerbated by the launch of Sputnik.

  • S01E22 1972—China Enters the World Balance

    • The Great Courses

    Nixon’s meeting with Mao shifted the cold war’s balance and returned China to the world stage. Learn the reasons for Nixon’s trip, the consequences of which still reverberate, and plot the rise of Mao and communism in China. Then, see how Deng Xiaoping’s promotion of private enterprise began a trajectory of growth that continues.

  • S01E23 1989—The Fall of the Berlin Wall

    • The Great Courses

    How did a bureaucratic blunder by a Politburo member lead to the fall of the Berlin Wall? Find out as you examine the surprisingly peaceful collapse of the Soviet Union and Communist regimes in Central and Eastern Europe.

  • S01E24 2004—The Rise of Social Media

    • The Great Courses

    Are the Web and social media making us more globally connected or locking us into niche societies and creating an epidemic of loneliness? Probe both the power and the perils of the Internet—from aiding popular uprisings to rewiring our brains.