The Reformation is handled with characteristic balance. Rather than a purely theological drama, it is presented as a political and media revolution. The printing press, the rise of territorial states, and the resentment of papal taxation are given equal weight to Luther’s doctrine of justification by faith alone. The course excels at tracing the unintended consequences: how the search for religious purity led to the Wars of Religion, which in turn led to the exhausted embrace of toleration and the modern state system (exemplified by the Peace of Westphalia in 1648).
A key strength of the TTC approach is showing how economic and intellectual changes feed each other. The revival of long-distance trade in Italian city-states like Venice and Genoa created not just wealth, but a new social class—the burgher or merchant—whose values (individualism, thrift, calculation) clashed with the feudal ethos of hereditary nobility. The Renaissance, then, is not just a “rebirth” of classical art; it is the cultural superstructure of a commercial economy. The lectures on Machiavelli, for example, brilliantly connect his ruthless realism to the competitive environment of Renaissance Florence. TTC Video Development of European Civilization
This essay explores the core themes, pedagogical structure, and historiographical significance of The Development of European Civilization as a TTC Video course. It argues that the course’s primary achievement is its ability to weave a coherent “master narrative” of progress and crisis, moving from the fall of Rome to the European Union, while consistently highlighting the tensions between continuity and rupture, faith and reason, and the center and the periphery. The course typically begins not with Greece or Rome, but with their collapse. The traditional starting point is Late Antiquity, specifically the 4th and 5th centuries CE. This is a crucial pedagogical decision. By opening with the “barbarian” invasions and the disintegration of Roman imperial unity, the lecturer immediately establishes the central problem of European history: how to rebuild order, law, and culture from the ashes of a fallen giant. The Reformation is handled with characteristic balance
In the vast landscape of educational media, The Teaching Company (now Wondrium) has carved a unique niche by offering university-level courses to lifelong learners. Among its most enduring and foundational series is The Development of European Civilization , a sprawling narrative typically spanning dozens of lectures by distinguished historians. More than just a chronological survey, this course attempts to answer one of history’s most ambitious questions: How did a peripheral, fragmented, and “backward” region of the Eurasian landmass come to dominate the globe, define modernity, and then grapple with the catastrophic consequences of its own success? The course excels at tracing the unintended consequences: