#Iran #Persia #DariusTheGreat #Thermopylae

Episode 1
Through Persian Eyes
Episode 1 of 3

Many in the west have described Iran as a rogue state. Yet this so-called rogue state has a recorded history that tracks back more than 3000 years. It is a civilization that has given rise over the millennia to philosophies and religions, to science and medicine, to architecture and the arts.

But these are contributions that are often overlooked. We tend to construct history through the prism of the Greek and Roman empires. We see their influences on contemporary western civilisation. But the Persians fought the Greeks to a standstill and successfully withstood the might of the Roman Empire. Embracing the teachings of the prophet Zoroaster, they built a culture in 500 BC that helped shape the Near East and beyond. In the 11th century AD, Iran was home to the golden age of Islam.

From that great age we recognize the Persian polymath Omar Khayyam. But there are others that few in the West know, poets and thinkers like Avicenna, Hafiz, Saadi and Ferdowsi who continue to have pride of place with Iranians today.

In this three-part series Professor Ali Ansari argues that world history takes on a different hue when seen through Persian eyes, as he takes the listener on a grand journey from ancient past to immediate present.

Professor Ansari is one of the world's leading experts on Iran and its history. Professor Ansari's books include Iran, Islam and Democracy: the politics of managing change, Confronting Iran and The Politics of Nationalism in Modern Iran.

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28 minutes


On air

Today
09:30
BBC Radio 4
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Broadcasts

Mon 25 Jun 2012
20:00
BBC Radio 4

Today
09:30
BBC Radio 4 FM

Tomorrow
21:30
BBC Radio 4 FM

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01k1ngy

BBC Radio 4 - Through Persian Eyes, Episode 1

Ali Ansari takes us on a Persian grand tour from 3000 BC to the present.

BBC

Classic BBC imperialist propaganda .. subtle and with a glove, altering history and erasing the Anglo-imperial crimes and resource theft

@miguelpergamon

@iriyan

I suppose that's a way of looking at it.

The series is "old" and has three parts.
The first episode covers from sbout 3000BC to early hundreds AD discussing Zoroastrianism and state craft as well as the technical bureaucracy of Darius.

There's not even an "English" in those periods.

I don't expect any programme to be an all encompasing view of any topic.

then the turkottomans came and the party was over ... .. enough with this "civilization" crap!

@miguelpergamon