What the Ancients Did for Us explained
Genre: | Documentary |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Num Episodes: | 9 |
Editor: | Roger Dacier |
Runtime: | 60 minutes |
Channel: | BBC Two |
What the Ancients Did for Us is a 2005 BBC documentary series presented by Adam Hart-Davis that examines the impact of ancient civilizations on modern society.
Production
The series was produced in conjunction with the Open University and is a departure from the previous series not only in that each episode is an hour long rather than half an hour (though heavily edited half-hour versions have also been shown), but also in that it does not concentrate on a single period of history but rather one ancient civilization per episode including the Chinese, the Indians and the Greeks.
Episodes
Episode one: The Islamic World
This episode features reports from Zain in Egypt, Spain and France elaborated by demonstrations from Adam Hart-Davis, Marty Jopson and expert guests that examine the ideas and inventions that emerged from the Islamic Golden Age.
- The Astrolabe, demonstrated to Hart-Davis, was used by Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi and Abu-Mahmud al-Khujandi to develop Islamic astronomy and Islamic geography.
- Optical science was developed using a camera obscura, demonstrated by Hart-Davis, created by Ibn al-Haytham, an Iraqi physicist, while under house arrest.
- The windmill, demonstrated by Jopsom, originated in Afghanistan and was brought back to the West by the Crusaders.
- The House of Wisdom founded by al-Ma'mun translated and preserved the science and philosophy of the ancient Greeks.
- The grab, demonstrated by Jopsom, was designed by the Banū Mūsā brothers to pick things up from the seabed.
- The Elephant clock and Multiculturalism by the Kurdish engineer al-Jazari.
- The Alhambra, visited by Zain, features magnificent gravity-driven fountains in the finest example of early Islamic architecture.
- Etiquette, fashion and fine-dining were introduced in Andalusia, visited by Zain, by a freed slave Ziryab.
- Lusterware, demonstrated to Hart-Davis, was developed by early Muslim alchemists to create beautiful porcelain.
- Distillation, demonstrated by Jopsom, was developed by ibn Hayyan using the alembic to make perfume, petrol and alcohol.
- Soap making, demonstrated by Hart-Davis, introduced hard soap to the bathhouses of the Islamic World.
- The reciprocating piston suction pump, incorporating a crankshaft-connecting rod mechanism, invented by Al-Jazari, is demonstrated.
- The torpedo by the Syrian inventor Hasan al-Rammah is demonstrated.
Episode two: The Chinese
This episode features reports from Darling in China and demonstrations from Hart-Davis and Jopsom that examine the ideas and inventions that emerged from Ancient China.
- Canals linked the Yellow River and the Yangzi River in the 3rd century BC for transport and communication across the vast empire.
- The segmented arch bridge demonstrated by Hart-Davis in a potted history of bridge design was developed in the 7th century AD.
- Silk developed in China from the cocoons of silkworms is demonstrated to be weight-for-weight stronger than steel in a tug-of-war.
- The seismograph recreated by Jopsom based on the pendulum principal of its modern equivalent was developed in the 2nd century AD.
- Noodles developed as early as 5000 BC were taken back to Italy by Marco Polo in the 13th century.
- Tuned bells developed around 600 AD and are demonstrated by Hart-Davis to be the basis of a standardised system of measurement.
- The double acting piston bellows used in the early iron industry and in the development of the first flamethrower is recreated by Jopsom.
- Kite making goes back a thousand years and demonstrates a basic understanding of aerodynamics.
- Paper first made around 100 AD was used in the art of calligraphy demonstrated to Darling and as toilet paper demonstrated by Hart-Davis.
- Block printing was used by Monks for the distribution of the Buddhist sutras with the earliest known printed book dated to 868 AD.
- Paper money originally developed by private businessmen to confound highwaymen was taken up by the state in the 11th century.
- Gunpowder accidentally discovered by alchemists over 1,000 years ago was used in fireworks and bombs as demonstrated by Davis.
Episode three: The Aztecs, Maya and Incas
This episode examines the ideas and inventions that emerged from the Aztec, Mayan and Incan peoples of Pre-columbian America.
Episode four: The Romans
This episode examines the ideas and inventions that emerged from Ancient Rome.
Episode five: The Indians
This episode features reports from Darling in India and demonstrations from Hart-Davis, Jopson and other experts that examine the ideas and inventions that emerged from Ancient India.
- Water clocks to regulate Buddhist meditations are discovered by Darling and recreated by Jopson for demonstration.
- Observatories, like the 18th century Jantar Mantar visited by Darling, precisely monitored the sun for more accurate measurements of time.
- Harappan cities, like the 4,000-year-old Dholavira visited by Darling, were built to a grid-plan and boasted the world's first sewage system.
- Indian numerals, including the number zero discovered by Darling in a 9th-century temple, revolutionised modern mathematics.
- Cotton cultivated, woven and coloured with traditional techniques taught to Darling by local workers for export all over the world.
- Metalworking resulted in wonders like the iron pillar visited by Darling and Wootz steel.
- Yoga as demonstrated by Darling developed 4,000 years ago to unite the spiritual and the physical.
- Herbal remedies, using ingredients such as cocoa butter, ginseng and ginger, have been adopted into Western medicine.
- Surgery, including early plastic surgery, developed some 2,500 years ago.
- Inoculation against smallpox, as demonstrated by Davis on Jompson, emerged centuries before Edward Jenner.
- Chess is a simplified version of the ancient Indian game of military strategy chaturanga.
- Rockets demonstrated at the Royal Artillery Museum were first deployed against the British Army by the Tipu Sultan in 1780.
Episode six: The Mesopotamians
This episode features reports from Cockburn in Syria and Bahrain elaborated by demonstrations from Hart-Davis, Jopson and a variety of experts that examine ideas and inventions of the Mesopotamians.
- Wooden frames demonstrated by Cockburn for the mass production of mud bricks used in building the first cities.
- Irrigation devices, including the Archimedes' screw demonstrated by Jopson, improved agricultural yield and protected against flooding.
- Liver omens demonstrated to Davies used systemically recorded observations to understand the world in a primitive science.
- The Zodiac and horoscopes gave priests the astronomical know-how to accurately predict the coming of the seasons.
- Farming developed around 10,000 years ago with inventions such as the plough, the sickle, demonstrated by Cockburn.
- Yeast used in recipes for bread and beer, demonstrated by Cockburn and Davies, first recorded around 4,000 years ago.
- Cuneiform characters impressed into soft clay tablets with a stylus as demonstrated by Cockburn was the first writing system.
- Literature such as the Epic of Gilgamesh related by Davies was first written down some 4,000 years ago.
- Diving and Sailing, demonstrated by Cockburn and Davies, are first recorded in the Epic.
- Organised warfare with uniformed soldiers carrying standardised weapons is first recorded 4,500 years ago on the Standard of Ur.
- Buoyancy aids made from inflatable goatskins, demonstrated by Cockburn, allowed armies to cross rivers.
- The wheel used on war chariots and siege engines recreated by Cockburn and Jopsom was developed over 4,000 years ago.
Episode seven: The Egyptians
This episode features reports from Zain in Egypt elaborated by demonstrations from Adam Hart-Davis, Marty Jopson and expert guests that examine developments of the Ancient Egyptians.
- Boat building, like the sewn-plank vessel reconstructed by Jopsom, allowed trade along the Nile and beyond.
- Mass-production, using the foot-bellows reconstructed by Jopsom, supplied the tools used to construct the great monuments.
- Early dam building, like the Dam of the Pagans reconstructed by Jopsom, failed to control flooding and was abandoned.
- Mummification techniques, demonstrated by Hart-Davis, indicate an advanced understanding of human anatomy.
- Propaganda, like that visited by Zain at Luxor Temple, was carved to demonstrate the power of the Pharaohs.
- Hieroglyphs, decoded from the Rosetta Stone explained to Hart-Davis, were used to record the civilisation.
- Glass making, using core-forming demonstrated to Hart-Davis, provided a material now taken for granted.
- Craftsmanship, demonstrated by the treasures of Tutankhamun visited, is still greatly admired.
- Furniture making, using techniques and tools demonstrated by Jopsom, are little changed today.
- Recreational fishing, demonstrated by Hart-Davis, originated with the Ancient Egyptian nobility.
- Astronomical observations, demonstrated by Hart-Davis, allowed for the perfect alignment of the pyramids.
- Wooden sledges, reconstructed by Jopsom, transported the blocks used to construct the Pyramids.
Episode eight: The Greeks
This episode features reports from Cockburn in Greece and Italy elaborated by demonstrations from Hart-Davis, Jopson and expert guests that examine the ideas and inventions that emerged from Ancient Greece.
- Geometry allowed for advances in engineering such as the Tunnel of Eupalinos visited by Cockburn on Samos.
- Musical scales were invented by Pythagoras in a process explained by Hart-Davis that he applied to the universe.
- The water organ was invented by Ctesibius of Alexandria using a device reconstructed by Jopsom that was the first to use compressed air.
- Mirrors were used by Archimedes in a process demonstrated by Jopsom to set fire to an enemy ship at Syracuse.
- Belly bow, demonstrated to Hart-Davis, was the first mechanical weapon and more powerful than a standard bow.
- Communication devices, such as those reconstructed by Jopsom, allowed the secure transmission of messages.
- Democracy was originally developed in the city of Athens visited by Cockburn.
- The kleroterion, reconstructed by Jopsom, secured the fair and democratic selection of juries.
- The high-tech stagecraft of Heron of Alexandria, reconstructed by Jopsom, included the first robot, steam engine and automatic doors.
- Ethylene was inhaled by the Oracle at Delphi, visited by Cockburn, prior to her predictions.
- Advanced astronomical theories, explained by Hart-Davis, were put forward by Pythagoras, Aristarchus of Samos and Eratosthenes.
- The antikythera mechanism, demonstrated to Hart-Davis, was the world's first computer.
Episode nine: The Britons
This episode features reports from around the British Isles by Hart-Davis and Darling elaborated by demonstrations from Jopson and a variety of experts that examine the ideas and inventions of the Ancient Britons.
- Flint tools, like the 700,000-year-old flint hand-axe found on the Norfolk coast, are the earliest man-made tools.
- Settlements, like the 5,000-year-old Skara Brae visited by Hart-Davis, are the earliest known in Europe.
- Henges, like Woodhenge visited by Darling, indicate a rich spiritual life connected to the seasons.
- Solar observations, demonstrated by Hart-Davis, allowed the accurate charting of the passing seasons for agriculture.
- Bronze making, introduced by the beaker people and demonstrated by Hart-Davis, was the first man-made alloy.
- Roundhouses, demonstrated to Darling at the Peak Moors Centre, Sommerset Levels, were unique in Europe.
- Gold artefacts, like those at the National Museum of Ireland visited by Darling, are amongst the finest in Europe.
- Sewn plank boats, such as the Dover Bronze Age Boat visited by Darling, could carry large cargos.
- Navigational techniques, using tools such as the Lead and Line demonstrated to Darling, allowed trade with Europe.
- Iron working, demonstrated to Darling, allowed the construction of weapons used in the first organised warfare.
- Coin making, introduced from Europe and demonstrated by Jopsom, records the earliest samples of writing in Britain.
- Chariot making, demonstrated to Darling by Robert Herford, provided a powerful weapon against the invading Romans.
See also
External links