Course Overview
This 12‑lecture course surveys the first great empires and civilizations of the ancient Near East and eastern Mediterranean from the late Neolithic and Bronze Age through the rise and fall of the Persian Empire. Professor Harl traces the emergence of urban life, the invention and uses of writing, the formation of kingship and bureaucracy, the dynamics of trade and law, and the religious and cultural contributions that shaped the foundations of Western history.
What you’ll learn
- How urban‑based, literate civilizations originated in river valleys (Mesopotamia, Nile, Indus)
- The social and political roles of kings, scribes, and soldiers in early states
- The development of law, administration, long‑distance trade, and imperial governance (Hammurabi, Assyria, Persia)
- Egypt’s unique trajectory (Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms) and Bronze Age interactions across the Levant, Anatolia, and the Aegean
- The causes and consequences of the Bronze Age collapse and the formation of new identities (Hebrews → Jews)
Video Lessons
01: Cradles of Civilization (33 min)
Introduction to the earliest civilizations of the Tigris‑Euphrates, Nile, and Indus valleys (c. 3500–3000 B.C.): Neolithic antecedents, urbanization, and core features of early state formation.
02: First Cities of Sumer (31 min)
Examine Sumerian economic, social, and religious life; the rise of city‑states, long‑distance exchange, and the emergence of writing as an administrative and cultural tool.
03: Mesopotamian Kings and Scribes (30 min)
Survey the institutional roles of kings, scribes, and soldiers; how these social groups built wider political structures from regional kingdoms to early empires.
04: Hammurabi’s Babylon (31 min)
Study Hammurabi’s career and legacy: the consolidation of Babylonian rule, the famous law code, and the cultural underpinnings that shaped Mesopotamian civilization thereafter.
05: Egypt in the Pyramid Age (31 min)
Explore early dynastic Egypt and the Old Kingdom: Nile ecology, royal ideology, monumental tomb architecture (pyramids), and the political order of pharaonic rule.
06: The Middle Kingdom (31 min)
Analyze Egypt’s Middle Kingdom revival, its expansion beyond the Nile, literary and administrative developments, and parallels with contemporary Mesopotamian polities.
07: Imperial Egypt (30 min)
Follow Egypt’s imperial phase (New Kingdom): military reach, diplomatic networks, wealth, and the eventual stresses culminating in external incursions (Sea Peoples).
08: New Peoples of the Bronze Age (31 min)
Look beyond core river valleys to the Levant, Anatolia, and the Aegean: cultural contacts, trade networks, the rise of new polities, and cross‑regional influences.
09: The Collapse of the Bronze Age (30 min)
Examine the fragmentation of late Bronze Age imperial orders—migration, invasions, economic disruptions, and the transition to Iron Age political landscapes.
10: From Hebrews to Jews (30 min)
Trace the transformation of Canaanite groups into the Hebrews and eventually Jews: religious innovations, monotheistic developments, and the emergence of a distinct ethical tradition.
11: Imperial Assyria (31 min)
Study Assyrian imperialism: military organization, administrative techniques, provincial governance, and the institutional foundations that influenced later empires.
12: The Persian Empire (31 min)
Conclude with the Achaemenid Persian Empire—its imperial administration, policy of governance over diverse peoples, and the scale and order that distinguished it until conquest by the Greeks.

