Season 1 · Episode 1
The origins of the human race are traced from anthropoid ancestors to the agricultural revolution.
Egyptian irrigation created one of the first great civilizations.
Settlements in the Fertile Crescent gave rise to the great river civilizations of the Middle East.
Metals revolutionized tools, as well as societies, in the empires of Assyria, Persia, and Neo-Babylonia.
Democracy and philosophy arose from Greek cities at the edge of the civilized world.
Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle laid the foundation of Western intellectual thought.
Alexander's conquests quadrupled the size of the world known to the Greeks.
Hellenistic kingdoms extended Greek culture throughout the Mediterranean.
Through its army, Rome built an empire that shaped the West.
Rome's civil engineering contributed as much to the empire as did its weapons.
Christianity spread despite contempt and persecution from Rome.
The old heresy became the Roman empire's official religion under the Emperor Constantine.
While enemies slashed at Rome's borders, civil war and economic collapse destroyed the empire from within.
Despite the success of emperors such as Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius, Rome fell victim to barbarian invasions.
From Constantinople, the Byzantine Empire carried on the traditions of Greece and Rome.
Nearly a thousand years after Rome's fall, Constantinople was conquered by the forces of Islam.
Barbarian kingdoms took possession of the fragments of the Roman Empire.
Charlemagne revived hopes for a new empire in Western Europe.
Amid invasion and civil disorder, a military aristocracy dominated the kingdoms of Europe.
Bishop, knight, and peasant exemplified some of the social divisions of the year 1000 A.D.
Famine, disease, and short life expectancies were the conditions that shaped medieval beliefs.
The great churches embodied the material and spiritual ambitions of the age.
Two hundred years of war and plague debilitated Europe.
A new urban middle class emerged, while dynastic marriages established centralized monarchies.
Renaissance humanists made man "the measure of all things." Europe was possessed by a new passion for knowledge.
The discovery of America challenged Europe.
Voiced by Martin Luther, Protestantism shattered the unity of the Catholic Church.
As the cities grew, new middle-class mores had an impact on religious life.
For more than a century, the quarrels of Protestants and Catholics tore Europe apart.
Amid religious wars, a few cities learned that tolerance increased their prosperity.
Exhausted by war and civil strife, many Europeans exchanged earlier liberties and anarchies for greater peace.
Arguments about the legitimate source of political power centered on divine right versus natural law.
Monarchs considered reforms in order to create more efficient societies, but not at the expense of their own power.
Intellectual theories about the nature of man and his potential came to the fore.
Scientists and social reformers battled for universal human rights during a peaceful and prosperous period.
Freedom of thought and expression opened new vistas explored by French, English, and American thinkers.
The British colonists created a society that tested Enlightenment ideas and resisted restrictions imposed by England.
A new republic, the compromise of radicals and conservatives, was founded on universal freedoms.
In France the old order collapsed under revolutionaries' attacks and the monarchy's own weakness.
Liberty, equality, and fraternity skidded into a reign of Terror.
Technology and mass production reduced famine and ushered in higher standards of living.
A consumer revolution was fueled by coal, public transportation, and new city services.
Leaders in the arts, literature, and political theory argued for social justice and national liberation.
The great powers cooperated to quell internal revolts, yet competed to acquire colonies.
Public education and mass communications created a new political life and leisure time.
Everyday life of the working class was transformed by leisure, prompting the birth of an elite avant-garde movement.
Old empires crumbled during World War I to be replaced by right-wing dictatorships in Italy, Spain, and Germany.
World War II was a war of new tactics and strategies. Civilian populations became targets as the Nazi holocaust exterminated millions of people.
The U.S. and Soviet Union dominated Europe and confronted each other in Korea.
Burdened with the legacy of colonial imperialism, the Third World rushed development to catch up with its Western counterparts.
Keeping up with the ever-increasing pace of change became the standard of the day.
Modern medicine, atomic energy, computers, and new concepts of time, energy, and matter all have an important effect on life in the 20th century.
Theologian Hans Küng explains and explores religions around the world, where they originated, and what defines them.
1999
Ireland is a very different place, seen from above. Looking down, the secrets of our natural landscape, architecture, history and human experience come to light in new and unexpected ways. The hidden stories, memories and the mythologies of a nation, written into the very landscape itself. Filmed exclusively from on high using the latest drone technology, this 2 x 1 hour documentary series showcase Ireland, its splendours and its secrets like never before.
2022
In this three-part documentary series Waldemar Januszczak discovers paintings, sculptures and architecture of the Baroque period. Starting from the square of Saint Peter's Basilica in Italy to St Paul's Cathedral in England.
2009
No description available.
2017
From Lucrezia Borgia to Malinche to Marie Curie: Women’s contributions have often been downplayed or misrepresented in the history books. Duels of History (re)tells their stories.
2023
The series covers the life and work of leading science fiction authors of the last couple of centuries. It depicts how they predicted and, accordingly, influenced the development of scientific advancements by inspiring many readers to assist in transforming those futuristic visions into everyday reality.
2011
The story of the ill-fated ocean liner and the sinking that made it infamous.
1994
A group of history experts from London's King's College has created this documentary series that tries to assess the key political figures of WWII.
2013
From The Creators Of The Best-Selling Documentary Series "Up From Slavery"... A 7-Part Compelling Journey Through America's Greatest Saga. In 1860, the nation founded upon an idea that all men are created equal and endowed by their creator with the inalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness had as many as four hundred thousand slave-owners and almost four million slaves. By denying these rights to more than twelve percent of its population, America would soon pay with the blood of a generation. The story of African Slavery in America started with the first permanent English Colony in the 17th century... and ended with the Civil War. But those two hundred and fifty years of struggle were just the beginning. The beginning of a journey down the long Emancipation Road...
2014
His art changed the way we see the world - now change the way you see the artist. An unflinching look at Picasso's legacy, and the horror and brilliance of what he left behind. Family, friends and experts reassess the tumultuous artistic and personal life of Pablo Picasso, one of the greatest and most provocative artists of all time.
Jonathan Phillips attempts to find the answer to the question: How did Christianity grow and develop from just a small, Jewish sect to the largest, and majority, dominant religion of the West?
2015
2007
The history of mankind is a never-ending story of change, revolution, and evolution, but surely no span of a hundred years can claim to have changed the world so dramatically as the Twentieth Century. In this series we examine the 101 Events which, in the judgment of experts, including those who contribute to the series, most influentially shaped the century, our world, and our way of life.
2018
Following one of the few women in Britain to helm an auction house, Irita Marriott. The series follows her as she builds her business in south Derbyshire, helping vendors make money from unwanted items.
2024
As Johnny prepares to create a piece of public art for his home town of St Helens, an unexpected diagnosis sets him off on a complex emotional journey of self-discovery where art and life sometimes merge.
2025