Home / Series / The Western Tradition / Aired Order /

All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 The Dawn of History

    • January 1, 1989

    The origins of the human race are traced from anthropoid ancestors to the agricultural revolution.

  • S01E02 The Ancient Egyptians

    • January 1, 1989

    Egyptian irrigation created one of the first great civilizations.

  • S01E03 Mesopotamia

    • January 1, 1989

    Settlements in the Fertile Crescent gave rise to the great river civilizations of the Middle East.

  • S01E04 From Bronze to Iron

    • January 1, 1989

    Metals revolutionized tools, as well as societies, in the empires of Assyria, Persia, and Neo-Babylonia.

  • S01E05 The Rise of Greek Civilization

    • January 1, 1989

    Democracy and philosophy arose from Greek cities at the edge of the civilized world.

  • S01E06 Greek Thought

    • January 1, 1989

    Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle laid the foundation of Western intellectual thought.

  • S01E07 Alexander the Great

    • January 1, 1989

    Alexander's conquests quadrupled the size of the world known to the Greeks.

  • S01E08 The Hellenistic Age

    • January 1, 1989

    Hellenistic kingdoms extended Greek culture throughout the Mediterranean.

  • S01E09 The Rise of Rome

    • January 1, 1989

    Through its army, Rome built an empire that shaped the West.

  • S01E10 The Roman Empire

    • January 1, 1989

    Rome's civil engineering contributed as much to the empire as did its weapons.

  • S01E11 Early Christianity

    • January 1, 1989

    Christianity spread despite contempt and persecution from Rome.

  • S01E12 The Rise of the Church

    • January 1, 1989

    The old heresy became the Roman empire's official religion under the Emperor Constantine.

  • S01E13 The Decline of Rome

    • January 1, 1989

    While enemies slashed at Rome's borders, civil war and economic collapse destroyed the empire from within.

  • S01E14 The Fall of Rome

    • January 1, 1989

    Despite the success of emperors such as Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius, Rome fell victim to barbarian invasions.

  • S01E15 The Byzantine Empire

    • January 1, 1989

    From Constantinople, the Byzantine Empire carried on the traditions of Greece and Rome.

  • S01E16 The Fall of Byzantium

    • January 1, 1989

    Nearly a thousand years after Rome's fall, Constantinople was conquered by the forces of Islam.

  • S01E17 The Dark Ages

    • January 1, 1989

    Barbarian kingdoms took possession of the fragments of the Roman Empire.

  • S01E18 The Age of Charlemagne

    • January 1, 1989

    Charlemagne revived hopes for a new empire in Western Europe.

  • S01E19 The Middle Ages

    • January 1, 1989

    Amid invasion and civil disorder, a military aristocracy dominated the kingdoms of Europe.

  • S01E20 The Feudal Order

    • January 1, 1989

    Bishop, knight, and peasant exemplified some of the social divisions of the year 1000 A.D.

  • S01E21 Common Life in the Middle Ages

    • January 1, 1989

    Famine, disease, and short life expectancies were the conditions that shaped medieval beliefs.

  • S01E22 Cities and Cathedrals of the Middle Ages

    • January 1, 1989

    The great churches embodied the material and spiritual ambitions of the age.

  • S01E23 The Late Middle Ages

    • January 1, 1989

    Two hundred years of war and plague debilitated Europe.

  • S01E24 The National Monarchies

    • January 1, 1989

    A new urban middle class emerged, while dynastic marriages established centralized monarchies.

  • S01E25 Renaissance & the Age of Discovery

    • January 1, 1989

    Renaissance humanists made man "the measure of all things." Europe was possessed by a new passion for knowledge.

  • S01E26 Renaissance & the New World

    • January 1, 1989

    The discovery of America challenged Europe.

  • S01E27 The Reformation

    • January 1, 1989

    Voiced by Martin Luther, Protestantism shattered the unity of the Catholic Church.

  • S01E28 The Rise of the Middle Class

    • January 1, 1989

    As the cities grew, new middle-class mores had an impact on religious life.

  • S01E29 The Wars of Religion

    • January 1, 1989

    For more than a century, the quarrels of Protestants and Catholics tore Europe apart.

  • S01E30 The Rise of the Trading Cities

    • January 1, 1989

    Amid religious wars, a few cities learned that tolerance increased their prosperity.

  • S01E31 The Age of Absolutism

    • January 1, 1989

    Exhausted by war and civil strife, many Europeans exchanged earlier liberties and anarchies for greater peace.

  • S01E32 Absolutism and the Social Contract

    • January 1, 1989

    Arguments about the legitimate source of political power centered on divine right versus natural law.

  • S01E33 The Enlightened Despots

    • January 1, 1989

    Monarchs considered reforms in order to create more efficient societies, but not at the expense of their own power.

  • S01E34 The Enlightenment

    • January 1, 1989

    Intellectual theories about the nature of man and his potential came to the fore.

  • S01E35 The Enlightenment and Society

    • January 1, 1989

    Scientists and social reformers battled for universal human rights during a peaceful and prosperous period.

  • S01E36 The Modern Philosophers

    • January 1, 1989

    Freedom of thought and expression opened new vistas explored by French, English, and American thinkers.

  • S01E37 The American Revolution

    • January 1, 1989

    The British colonists created a society that tested Enlightenment ideas and resisted restrictions imposed by England.

  • S01E38 The American Republic

    • January 1, 1989

    A new republic, the compromise of radicals and conservatives, was founded on universal freedoms.

  • S01E39 The Death of the Old Regime

    • January 1, 1989

    In France the old order collapsed under revolutionaries' attacks and the monarchy's own weakness.

  • S01E40 The French Revolution

    • January 1, 1989

    Liberty, equality, and fraternity skidded into a reign of Terror.

  • S01E41 The Industrial Revolution

    • January 1, 1989

    Technology and mass production reduced famine and ushered in higher standards of living.

  • S01E42 The Industrial World

    • January 1, 1989

    A consumer revolution was fueled by coal, public transportation, and new city services.

  • S01E43 Revolution and Romantics

    • January 1, 1989

    Leaders in the arts, literature, and political theory argued for social justice and national liberation.

  • S01E44 The Age of the Nation-States

    • January 1, 1989

    The great powers cooperated to quell internal revolts, yet competed to acquire colonies.

  • S01E45 A New Public

    • January 1, 1989

    Public education and mass communications created a new political life and leisure time.

  • S01E46 Fin de Siècle

    • January 1, 1989

    Everyday life of the working class was transformed by leisure, prompting the birth of an elite avant-garde movement.

  • S01E47 The First World War and the Rise of Fascism

    • January 1, 1989

    Old empires crumbled during World War I to be replaced by right-wing dictatorships in Italy, Spain, and Germany.

  • S01E48 The Second World War

    • January 1, 1989

    World War II was a war of new tactics and strategies. Civilian populations became targets as the Nazi holocaust exterminated millions of people.

  • S01E49 The Cold War

    • January 1, 1989

    The U.S. and Soviet Union dominated Europe and confronted each other in Korea.

  • S01E50 Europe and the Third World

    • January 1, 1989

    Burdened with the legacy of colonial imperialism, the Third World rushed development to catch up with its Western counterparts.

  • S01E51 The Technological Revolution

    • January 1, 1989

    Keeping up with the ever-increasing pace of change became the standard of the day.

  • S01E52 Toward the Future

    • January 1, 1989

    Modern medicine, atomic energy, computers, and new concepts of time, energy, and matter all have an important effect on life in the 20th century.