Tales from the Caspian Sea
Professor Bettany Hughes travels to Azerbaijan to investigate the rich cultural history of the Caspian, the ancient 'land of fire'.
Alexander the Great, it was still asserted into the early 19th century, had built the gates that separated East and West at the eastern edge of the Caucasus: what is now Azerbaijan lay beyond.
In 鈥楾ales from the Caspian Sea鈥, Bettany Hughes investigates the rich cultural history of the Caspian, a region which nourished the ancient world鈥檚 oldest theocracy, in the form of a Zoroastrian state, and pioneered an early Muslim-majority democracy in 1918. Her investigation of Azerbaijan - 鈥渢he land of fire鈥 - begins in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains with visits to the archaeological sites that are actively reanimating the history of the region.
Hughes discovers the landscape of Azerbaijan, which has been a centre of ancient trade on the Silk Road, inspired the poetry of the acclaimed poet Nizami Ganjavi and is a land that has been at the forefront of the development of civilisations and geopolitics to this day.
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- Sun 2 Dec 2018 18:45麻豆社 Radio 3
- Sun 3 May 2020 18:45麻豆社 Radio 3
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