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Sumer Podcasts

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Dr Sumer Sethi is a Unique blend of academic excellence and entrepreneurship, heading leading firms in India- Including DAMS (Delhi Academy of Medical Sciences) Premier test preparation institute in India for NEETPG prep
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Oldest Stories

James Bleckley

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History and myth of the Cradle of Civilization, bronze age Mesopotamia, beginning with the dawn of writing. The show will cover the full history of Mesopotamia, from Gilgamesh to Nabonidas, a span of some 2500 years, with myths of heroes and gods, and tales of daily life peppered throughout. Sumer, Akkad, Old Babylon, Hittites, and Israel have all been covered in depth, current episodes get deep into the Assyrian Empire. New episodes every other Wednesday. Online at oldeststories.net.
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Married 2 Murder

Clint & Sumer

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A Southern true crime podcast where a true crime obsessed wife tells her husband all about her favorite cases and he gives his honest reaction to hearing the story for the first time. We hope y'all enjoy!
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Do you need a few minutes to just be? To be present with yourself and with God? Are you looking to develop a rhythm of stillness and contemplation? Then join Sumer as she creates a space through the short readings of scripture, sometimes a story or two from her own life, where you can just be, held by Love, right where you are. May these ancient words be kind companions along your journey wherever you are.
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Step into the cradle of civilization and discover the secrets of ancient Mesopotamia. This podcast delves deep into the rich history, groundbreaking innovations, and profound cultural legacies of the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. From the rise of Sumer and the grandeur of Babylon to the enigmatic stories of Assyria and Akkad, *Mysteries of Mesopotamia* explores how this ancient region shaped the world as we know it. Discover how the Mesopotamians revolutionized human progress ...
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This is a podcast discussion on political topics. Join Josiah Anderson as he speaks with worldwide friends on their political thoughts. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ianderson-tv/support
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Sumersingh Show

Sumersingh Show Podcast

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Hello Everyone , My name is Sumer from India i create podcast because i love to share stories and document my life. i also create youtube videos on personal development, Nofap ,Beatboxing ,Engineering , Digital marketing and self help you can follow me on Instagram if you find my Podcast or Youtube Videos helpful Thanks you
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Poetry For All

Joanne Diaz and Abram Van Engen

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This podcast is for those who already love poetry and for those who know very little about it. In this podcast, we read a poem, discuss it, see what makes it tick, learn how it works, grow from it, and then read it one more time. Introducing our brand new Poetry For All website: https://poetryforallpod.com! Please visit the new website to learn more about our guests, search for thematic episodes (ranging from Black History Month to the season of autumn), and subscribe to our newsletter.
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Captains of History Podcast

Captains of History

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Welcome to the Captains of History Podcast, where we explore the lives of the remarkable leaders who have shaped our world. Once, the Great Man Theory dominated historical discourse, with Thomas Carlyle declaring, ”The history of the world is but the biography of great men.” Today, many emphasize the power of economic, social, and political trends and forces over individual actions. But the truth lies in between. While trends shape history, the impact of extraordinary individuals cannot be i ...
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The Sourdough Podcast

Michael Hilburn

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Inspiring conversations from leaders and innovators throughout the sourdough community. Hear the stories behind the bakers, authors, growers, millers, artists, and other creative minds that you've always wondered about.
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A podcast dedicated to discussing all things foreign affairs and military conflict and the histories thereof. Join me as I present today’s headlines and give you the “so what” that comes from decades of military intelligence and law enforcement investigative experience. We will even have interviews with military leaders, historians, and educators along the way. If you want more than the evening news, but less than a college course, you’ve come to the right podcast. Be sure to visit our websi ...
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The World of Unicellular

Oleg Seriy and MaRiCaBo on Podiobooks.com

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It is the next book of an author of apocalyptic books. It may be said that this book is an adapted version of "Book of Rescue from the Doomsday 2012-2013" for the World of Unicellular. Moreover, it is a span-new book. Are you still waiting for Armageddon? Doomsday has already come… You needn't waiting for it neither in 2012, nor in some other year. People should be deleted. Critique: It is about the connection of Anunaki and the Earth for the first time. By the way, by this fact "The World o ...
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This isn't your average podcast This is the podcast that will make you put your phone down and listen intently!! We are a whole lifestyle and mood. Chatting about everything from current events, small businesses and of course music. We love interviewing and supporting all walks of life. It's YOUR VOICE. We're just here to give you the platform.
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Behind The Community

Michelle Sims

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Let's take a deep dive into the ‘behind the scenes’ of community building. On this podcast, Michelle Sims sits down with community leaders for an honest conversation about the success, struggles and decisions that have shaped their careers. Together we dig into the true stories of their growth strategies that have inspired innovation, creativity and leadership, so that you can apply their lessons to your own community --> Thanks for listening and don't forget to subscribe, review and share y ...
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SumerSports Show

SumerSports

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SumerSports aims to provide the best-in-class quantitative analysis aimed at creating precision in player acquisition and roster management in the NFL. The SumerSports Show is led by Thomas Dimitroff, a former NFL GM who has won NFL Executive of the Year twice. Thomas brings his unique insight as a general manager to topics in the NFL, college football, business, and more.
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Patti is intuitive. She hears frequency. She downloads the information and translates it into a language in a physical realm. Patti serves as a conduit to others. Patti utilizes her gift of clairaudience to help by bridging people to the universal truth. She coaches people with her soul coaching method to help them find their truth so they can live their lives authentically and joyfully. Patti also facilitates The Quantum Healing Hypnosis Technique (QHHT), Which is the method of the master, ...
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The night had settled across the Roman hutment like a heavy cloak, suffocating the usual meter of dogfaces’ breaths and the murmurs of insomniac men who generally set up solace in quiet discussion. On this night, still, serenity had been replaced by a profound, nearly spiritual pressure, a pressure that hung in the air as though the darkness itself…
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[NOTE: This new version features improved audio] Synopsis: The impacts of the Aridification Event lead to Akkadian collapse. Gudea of Lagash asserts independence and shepherds the south through the aftermath. The brief period of Guti domination is terminated by theElamite invasion of Kutik-Inshushinak and the Sumerian revolt of Utu-Hegal of Uruk. “…
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The battleground of Beneventum still dallied in Rome’s collaborative memory as a strange admixture of triumph and apprehension. Pyrrhus had withdrawn, defeated not by a single decisive blow but by prostration, by the stubborn grind of Roman adaptability, and by the stirring runs of Italian politics that deprived him of abettors . Yet indeed as the …
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With the appearance of early spring, the denes and plains of southern Italy exfoliate their downtime silence, awakening with the restless murmurs of renewed conflict. The wind that swept across the Ionian seacoast carried with it the smell of blooming vineyards and damp soil, yet beneath this pledge of renewal lay the heavy shadow of war. Farmers r…
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The ocean, calm and deceptive beneath the rising sun, stretched from the southern tip of Italy to the distant props of Sicily, a liquid trace that would soon carry Rome’s intentions beyond the promontory. For decades, the Italian Republic had concentrated inward, conquering Samnites, subduing Lucanians and Bruttians, and integrating the Greek metro…
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Today we attempt an immersive historical reconstruction of Dur-Sharrukin, the short-lived but astonishing capital built by Sargon II of Assyria in the late eighth century BCE. Set primarily in 706 BCE, this episode takes the listener on a guided tour of the city at the height of its splendor, using a fictional Urartian envoy as a narrative lens to …
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The steps coming down the stairs were n't simply loud; they were incredibly heavy, each one making the rustic way creak as though bearing the weight of commodity far larger than a mortal being. Tarek felt the climate through the floorboards, pulsing up through his shoes and into his bones, each step sounding like it belonged to a critter sculpted o…
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The voice that rumored her name was n’t loud. It was n’t hanging . It was n’t distorted like the critter’s icy, concentrated speech. rather, it sounded soft — far too soft — like a breath pressed gently against her observance, a private murmur meant only for her. The impropriety of its tenderheartedness stupefied Maya’s blood more deeply than any m…
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Send us a text Coins did what speeches couldn’t: they moved power across seas. We follow the rise of Greek silver as it financed fleets, paid jurors and rowers, and turned owls and gods into portable propaganda. Along the way, we pull apart the messy mechanics—clashing standards, missing denominations, and the birth of bankers who priced trust at s…
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The bottom bucketed with a metrical shiver, each earthquake deep enough to rattle their bones as though commodity beneath the old structure had awakened from a centuries-long slumber. Dust sifted down from the ceiling in soft argentine wastes, drifting through the fluttering dim light like falling ash. Maya artificially stepped back, nearly trippin…
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By the launch of the fourth century BCE, Rome was no longer the fragile youthful Republic fighting for survival. It was tougher, more systematized, and more ambitious. But it still was n’t dominant. Latium the region south of the Tiber and east to the Apennines was a patchwork of independent megacity- countries, lines, leagues, and shifting allianc…
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The chamber palpitated around them, alive in ways that defied sense. The walls palpitated like breathing meat, rising and falling in an implacable meter that resounded through Maya’s bones, through the soles of her bases, through the veritably gist of her cranium. Every palpitation shook the bottom beneath them, forcing her to hold the tablet tight…
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The silence after the collapse of the heart was absolute, yet it pressed down on them like a palpable weight, thick and stifling, as if the structure itself exhaled its final judgment. Maya, Arman, and Tarek lay on the bottom of the massive chamber, cases heaving, sweat running in streamlets down their faces, the tablet still gripped tightly agains…
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The air outside the chamber felt different, sharp and smelling against their exhausted lungs, carrying with it a weight that was both real and cerebral. Maya stepped cautiously over the cracked, pulsating bottom of the patio’s final platform, the tablet held near to her casket, its sanguine gleam now faint, nearly a twinkle in quiet alignment with …
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The vale stretched before them, scarred and uneven, remnants of the collapsed structure sprawled like the cadaverous remains of some unconceivable beast. The morning air was cool, crisp, carrying the faint scent of rain and earth, a transitory memorial that the world outside the agony still was, still breathed. Maya, gripping the tablet tightly aga…
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The first shafts of morning strained over the crest, washing the vale below in muted gold and casting long murk that twisted across the jagged terrain like faint echoes of the night. Maya pressed the tablet to her casket, feeling its gentle, metrical palpitation beneath her fritters, a quiet twinkle that sounded to attend with her own. Each subtle …
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Dawn broke over the vale with a pale, reluctant light, discovering across jagged terrain and shattered modes like the first conservative strokes of a painter’s encounter. Maya stood at the edge of the crest, tablet pressed to her casket, sanguine gleam faint but steady, illuminating her determined face. The remnants of the structure below lay silen…
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Synopsis: The science behind the 4.2 kiloyear BPE Aridification Event. “The great farming tracts brought forth no grain, The irrigated farming tracts brought forth no fish, The well-watered orchard brought forth neither syrup nor wine. The gathering clouds brought no rain, not even weeds would grow.” – The Curse of Agade Map of the Near East c. 220…
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The vale was cloaked in a pale morning mist, tendrils of fog entwining over shattered modes and jagged debris, softening the harsh edges of destruction while amplifying the quiet pressure in the air. Maya stood at the crest, tablet pressed to her casket, sanguine palpitation faint but pertinacious, illuminating the faint outlines of modes and murk …
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The morning mist rolled over the jagged vale like a restless drift, winding through fractured modes and crooked debris, softening the harsh edges while casting long, fluid murk that sounded nearly alive. Maya squinched at the crest, tablet pressed to her casket, its sanguine gleam pulsing noiselessly in meter with the subtle climate she could feel …
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The vale was shrouded in a thin, restless mist, entwining through the shattered modes and jagged terrain, casting murk that moved like silent, observing realities. Maya squinched at the edge of a collapsed crest, tablet pressed tightly to her casket, its sanguine gleam pulsing noiselessly, in meter with the residual temblors she could feel through …
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Apologies for my voice and the lack of graphics. Been sick again and barely got this out today. Episode 179 examines the founding, construction, abandonment, and rediscovery of Dur-Sharrukin (Khorsabad), the short-lived royal capital built by Sargon II of Assyria in the late eighth century BCE. The narrative begins with the history of early Mesopot…
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The vale lay shrouded in the argentine hush of early morning, the shattered modes and jagged terrain etched in murk that sounded nearly alive. Mist wound through crannies, entwining over debris and bumps, softening the edges of destruction while revealing subtle beats of residual energy. Maya squinched at the edge of a collapsed crest, tablet press…
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A thin robe of mist floated over the vale, entwining through the shattered modes and jagged terrain like liquid murk. The faint hum of residual energy threaded through the crevices, wobbling noiselessly beneath Maya’s bases as she squinched near a tertiary knot. The tablet pressed to her casket palpitated sanguine, faint and steady, reverberating i…
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The vale lay shrouded in the pale argentine light of early dawn, mist entwining through fractured modes and jagged terrain, softening the edges of ruin while revealing subtle beats of residual energy. Maya squinched near a tertiary knot, tablet pressed tightly to her casket, its sanguine gleam pulsing noiselessly in meter with the temblors that ran…
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The vale awoke under a muted dawn, the mist entwining over jagged modes and fractured terrain as if the world itself breathed in quiet expectation. Maya squinched near a tertiary knot, tablet pressed to her casket, sanguine light pulsing noiselessly in sync with temblors that ran through the shattered ground. Indeed in dormancy, the structure’s int…
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The vale was bathed in the soft, argentine light ofpre-dawn, the mist entwining through jagged modes and fractured terrain like living tendrils, bruiting of secrets long held and troubles yet unseen. Maya squinched near a tertiary knot, the tablet pressed tightly against her casket, sanguine gleam pulsing in quiet harmony with the faint temblors ru…
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The vale lay shrouded in the argentine hush of early morning, the shattered modes and jagged terrain etched in murk that sounded nearly alive. Mist wound through crannies, entwining over debris and bumps, softening the edges of destruction while revealing subtle beats of residual energy. Maya squinched at the edge of a collapsed crest, tablet press…
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The first light of dawn stretched across the vale, casting a pale, ghostly gleam over jagged modes and fractured terrain. Mist dallied low to the ground, entwining around sharp jewels and fractured bumps, moving as if the air itself had memory. Maya squinched beside a tertiary knot, the tablet pressed forcefully to her casket, sanguine gleam pulsin…
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In this episode, Phillis Levin reads "An Anthology of Rain," the title poem of her newest poetry collection. She guides us through the philosophical underpinnings of her poem, how it informs the book as a whole, and how the surfaces of things can tell us so much about their substance. Phillis Levin is the author of six poetry collections, including…
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Send us a text Ships got faster, markets thickened, and stamped silver began doing political work that speeches couldn’t. We follow how Greek city-states turned metal into money and money into power—financing fleets, paying jurors and rowers, and turning owls and gods into portable propaganda. Seigniorage became public revenue, the Agora became a h…
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Sargon II of Assyria faces a crisis of legitimacy after a humiliating defeat, but transforms potential disaster into triumph through military genius and calculated brutality. This episode chronicles his desperate 720 BCE campaign from Mesopotamia to the Levant, where he perfects combined arms warfare and decimates Samaria so thoroughly that ten tri…
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By the early months of 339 BCE, the political air across Latium bucketed with suppressed urgency. Every agreement, from the fortified hilltowns of Praeneste and Tibur to the lower agrarian communities near the plains, tasted that the delicate balance that had held the region together was drawing to a close. Rome, now stronger both in association an…
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Send us a text Ships got faster, roads stretched farther, and fear did the rest. We follow Greece from the ashes of the Late Bronze Age collapse to a world where stamped silver didn’t just buy grain and oarsmen—it built fleets, financed wars, and rewired how people thought about law, status, and freedom. Lydia may have minted first, but Ionia made …
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By the dawn of the final decade of the fourth century BCE, Rome stood at a crossroads unlike any it had ever faced. The Latin League had been disassembled, the Volsci and Aequi pushed back into impertinence, and the Etruscan trouble, though moping to the north, had been kept in check through tactfulness and occasional intervention. Yet despite thes…
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By the morning of the fourth century BCE, Rome had fought so numerous small wars that discipline and continuity had come alternate nature. But up to this point, Rome had n't yet faced a rival truly equal in wealth, size, or ambition. That changes with Veii. The long, exhausting conflict with this Etruscan hustler — and the catastrophe that followed…
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Listen all the way to the end for a special musical feature about Sargon II. This episode explores one of the most pivotal and least understood turning points in Neo-Assyrian history, examining the rise of a king whose origins, motives, and very name remain contested even after a century of scholarship. These are the Oldest Stories, available at Ol…
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This episode opens "Someday I'll Love" poems through the vivid imagery of a young poet's connection with their grandmother, remembering in love as memory begins to slip. Emerald ᏃᏈᏏ GoingSnake is an Indigenous poet from the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation in Oklahoma. Winner of the 2024 Maureen Egen Writers…
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By the launch of the fourth century BCE, Rome was no longer a fragile democracy fighting for survival. It had survived internal class conflict, reorganized its political system, and proven its adaptability after the trauma of being sacked by the Gauls. Now it was ready — nearly fated — to rise beyond Latium. But the path to getting the dominant pow…
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Send us a text Forget the tidy tale of Athens inventing everything. We follow the harder, richer path: who counted as a citizen, who powered the mines and fleets, and how alphabets, temples, and trade shaped a world that learned to finance risk before it learned to praise democracy. We trace the consonants of Phoenicia becoming Greek vowels, the sp…
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When the Roman Empire split in the late fourth century CE, many could have prognosticated that the eastern half — embedded in Greek culture — would not only survive the coming centuries of chaos but outlive its western binary by nearly a thousand times. The intricate Conglomerate, as after chroniclers called it, was in substance the Greek world rev…
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When the Renaissance faded into the 17th century, Europe stood on the threshold of commodity new. The detection of ancient Greek wisdom had done more than revive art and gospel it had tutored humanity to suppose else. The Greeks had asked questions that no conglomerate, no church, no monarch could silence What's verity? What's justice? What's the g…
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When the last Roman legions marched down from the borders and the Western Empire began to deteriorate, utmost people allowed the age of Greece had eventually ended. The tabernacles were quiet. The seminaries closed. The marble statues stumbled or were buried under centuries of dust. But then’s the thing — ideas do n’t die the way conglomerates do. …
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Pythagoras and Vitruvius. Rome erected monuments to power, but the arrangements were Greek ideals of beauty. 4. Education The Greek Curriculum of Rome By the first century BCE, a Roman child’s education was nearly entirely Greek. From alphabet to rhetoric, the system followed the structure created by Greek proponents centuries before. Boys from nob…
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