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The Fall of the Pagans and the Origins of Medieval Christianity

By: Kenneth W. Harl, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Kenneth W. Harl
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Publisher's Summary

Explore the dramatic interaction between Judaism, Christianity, and paganism in Rome from the 1st to the 6th centuries. Why did pagan Rome clash with the early Christians? What was it like to be a Jew or a Christian under Roman law? And how did Christianity ultimately achieve dominance in the Roman Empire?

Over the course of 24 lectures, Professor Harl enables you to grasp the full historical sweep of this critically important era and its key figures. You'll examine why Christianity was able to emerge and endure and, in turn, spark a critical transition for religion, culture, and politics that underpins much of how today's Western world - both Christian and non-Christian alike - thinks about ethics, sin, redemption, forgiveness, progress, and so much more.

While the Judeo-Christian values that have shaped society's ideas are ones we might today take for granted, their emergence from an ancient era dominated by loyalties to a vast array of gods would once have seemed the most unlikely of narratives. Even after the Roman emperor Constantine converted to Christianity in A.D. 312, it would not be until the 6th-century reign of Justinian that medieval Christianity would emerge and this new historical pathway confirmed.

In this magnificent course, Professor Harl brings to life some of the most important and fascinating episodes of the era, taking you on a vibrant trek through the past - one that will lead you to a deeper understanding of the bedrock beliefs of Western culture.

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your My Library section along with the audio.

©2011 The Teaching Company, LLC (P)2011 The Great Courses

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Fantastic and informative

Really enjoyed the content of this course. Great knowledge of his subject area and engaging to listen to. Made my commute painless.

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Biases detected in this course

It’s clear that the author sympathies are with the Athenian Roman classical Heroes regardless of their shortcomings over the Jerusalem Alexandrian and Constantinople ethos that gave us human rights and the principle of individual’ worthiness
Constantine is a faker ,Theodisiuos a bigot and Justinian a mini hitler and the author of the inquisition
While Tolerant Alexandrian pagans are cute intellectuals run over by unintelligent riotous Christian mobs ???
Alexandria was not a Greek city in Egyptian land it’s a city built by Greeks to benefit from the superior knowledge accumulated over centuries by the people of Egypt and thus its success over other Alexandrias built by Greeks all over their world

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