ARTH2710 History of Art to the Renaissance Lecture04 Ancient Near East Part I - The First Cities Travis Lee Clark Utah Valley University Summer 2020 Block 1
Hoping you'll see this, and know that I am wanting to follow in your footsteps and become a professor of the arts and give this type of knowledge and insight to others in the future. This was always my favorite subject and now that I'm finally earning an art degree and looking forward to doing research I can say that the beauty of learning art and its value is just as powerful as the pieces themselves. Great lectures!
I'm incredibly impressed by how entertaining a professor can be. You have an incredible type of narration and makes it very casual yet informative. Loving your videos, keep it up! :)
Thank you for the lecture. At around 1:07:00 you mention Jackson Crawford's videos on law systems amongst vikings. Which video(s) are you talking about? I can't seem to find them.
I used to work in a foundry and yep it’s hot, dirty and dangerous and it was one of the best places I’ve ever worked in. Not surprising that there are parallels with the Old Testament as the Jews were taken into captivity by the Babylonians and absorbed a lot of their myths and laws into their own book.
Hello, your content is awesome. I am a School History teacher in Colombia (not Columbia) and I wanted to know if you have any of the references where you take your information and your images especially? Anyway, thanks for the content, it has helped me a lot.
Even though you tried to say that 'civilized' and 'uncivilized' just means whether someone lived in a city or not. You still couldn't help to bring 'morals' into your description. 8:46 what does living in a city have to do with someone's morals? Why even use 'civilized' and 'uncivilized' when you clearly think it is more than whether you live in a city or not?
Hoping you'll see this, and know that I am wanting to follow in your footsteps and become a professor of the arts and give this type of knowledge and insight to others in the future. This was always my favorite subject and now that I'm finally earning an art degree and looking forward to doing research I can say that the beauty of learning art and its value is just as powerful as the pieces themselves. Great lectures!
Thanks!
I'm incredibly impressed by how entertaining a professor can be. You have an incredible type of narration and makes it very casual yet informative. Loving your videos, keep it up! :)
I love your videos and you really do have a thing for giving very informative lectures, thank you for the effort, it's well received.
Interesting that the Cherokee have a a similar creation story. It's a water spider that brings up dirt to form the firmament, not Anu.
I'd love to see you learn and document your journey to make Lost Wax sculptures!
THIS IS A FANTASTIC IDEA!
@@arthistorywithtravisleecla6343 As an aspiring artist myself, i would definitely watch this!
Thank you for the lecture. At around 1:07:00 you mention Jackson Crawford's videos on law systems amongst vikings. Which video(s) are you talking about? I can't seem to find them.
I really appreciate your relaxed and detailed insight
these videos are gold! thanks
Great teaching. 👍🏼👍🏼
I used to work in a foundry and yep it’s hot, dirty and dangerous and it was one of the best places I’ve ever worked in.
Not surprising that there are parallels with the Old Testament as the Jews were taken into captivity by the Babylonians and absorbed a lot of their myths and laws into their own book.
Hello, your content is awesome.
I am a School History teacher in Colombia (not Columbia) and I wanted to know if you have any of the references where you take your information and your images especially? Anyway, thanks for the content, it has helped me a lot.
Thank you
Wonderful lecture. Interesting, if this Ur is the Ur of the Chaldees, biblical Abraham's birthplace. Wikipedia is somewhat confusing about it.
it is the same
Huh that diorite looks nothing like the minecraft version. I have been living a lie.
The Sumers actualy did not speak a semitic language and one is not sure about their origin.
Even though you tried to say that 'civilized' and 'uncivilized' just means whether someone lived in a city or not. You still couldn't help to bring 'morals' into your description. 8:46 what does living in a city have to do with someone's morals? Why even use 'civilized' and 'uncivilized' when you clearly think it is more than whether you live in a city or not?
Travis Lee is a pretty boring lecturer.