SE
Oct 6, 2022
This was an excellent course in the history of ancient Egypt. I have always been fascinated by their culture & this course taught me many things that i was not aware of. I really enjoyed this course.
AB
Jan 3, 2025
I always been intrigued with egypt history, and I wanted to start somewhere, After completing this, it gave me a complete walkthrough of ancient egypt which allows me to do better research in future
By Antonio N L
•Feb 3, 2018
Excellent
By Antonio G
•Dec 31, 2017
very good
By Grace
•Aug 24, 2023
非常有意思的课程
By jorge c
•Jul 6, 2020
NOTA DEZ
By Jovan S
•Oct 7, 2019
Great!!!
By 秦铭蔚
•Aug 4, 2019
great!!!
By Matias P
•Jun 21, 2019
Nice! :)
By Roohi N
•Jun 1, 2022
awesome
By Omar O
•Dec 16, 2022
thanks
By kohn
•Nov 19, 2016
Great
By Fatimah A S A
•Dec 27, 2024
Good
By Akshaya
•Jun 13, 2020
Nice
By Hyejin P
•Dec 5, 2018
good
By 王佑誠
•Jan 6, 2018
good
By kholuodmohamed
•Jul 21, 2022
👍
By Farzad S
•Mar 22, 2023
.
By Darlene S
•Jun 11, 2022
By Anastasia V
•May 6, 2022
G
By elaine c
•Feb 7, 2017
G
By Tarık T
•Dec 4, 2022
This is a nice introduction to Ancient Egypt and there is a lot of good information. The length of the videos are very good but you do not need the introductory clip and the music every time. It gets boring after listening to it 10 times.
I would like to make a few additional suggestions
1- The speaker Prof Silverman is certainly a world expert in this field, but he is simply reading from a script in the most uninteresting and driest possible way. It is simply boring to listen to him but individuals who love to learn more about this topic will endure anyway. Is there a way to make the speeches more interesting and lively?
2- I think there needs to be more substantive information and more data presentation as to how we know what we know. It is critical to mention where the information is obtained during the videos, not as recommended reading at the end. XYZ publications demonstrate that xxxx was recognized as the king in yyy tomb. etc.
3- It is also helpful to provide more context by referring to what is happening in different parts of the world at the same time. Especially for middle and new kingdoms and certainly afterwards, Egypt's history is much more connected to the surrounding countries.
In summary, I would like to say I enjoyed this course and I am glad to have taken it. Thank you.
By Benjamin B h
•Jul 19, 2021
Overall the course was really great, flexible and an easy way to learn about Egyptian History. We are living in a time where a lot of the current idea's are being challenged in regards to Ancient Egypt, in the most part I thought David did a great job of just sticking to the facts, but also pointing out where things are current beliefs or assumptions based on the evidence at hand. Example he states the Pyramids were 'most likely built the the Egyptians' in the first Dynasty under its 2nd King - Khufu. I like this approach, I think we need to be open minded and flexible so we can go where the evidence takes us, not try and manipulate which evidence is put forward and mock other ideas that might seem somewhat far fetched. So the ancient astronaut theory is extreme and somewhat far fetched, but not impossible. I don't believe that the Pyramids were built by Ancient Astronauts but the current evidence to support them being built by Khufu is in no way air tight and convincing. Therefore the AA theory has space to breed and grow, so I guess my point is perhaps David should just say he doesn't believe that theory and there is no solid evidence to support it.
By Mischa R
•May 23, 2021
This course was a lot of fun. Professor Silverman visibly enjoys talking about this subject and he is very knowledgable. The course is a good overview of Ancient Egyptian culture, detailing the most important aspects. It is clearly an introduction to Ancient Egypt, not an all-encompassing course.
The book Ancient Egypt by professor Silverman et al was extremely useful throughout the course, and I highly recommend finding a copy or consulting an online resource. Each week corresponds to 1 or 2 chapters from this book, so it's the ideal companion guide.
My only points of criticism are the tests. Each test contains at least 1 question that I did not find the answer to in the videos or accompanying book, and it's a bit unclear to me where we would've found the answer to these questions. Nevertheless, this is fairly limited and the tests are perfectly doable if you've followed along.
By Susan E B
•Oct 22, 2017
As I was going through the course, it struck me that I was hearing almost the same thing I studied in my courses in the early 1970's in which the material for the sphinx and Giza pyramids was based on determinations by "scholars" from the 1880's and early 1900's. I was also surprised that no consideration was given for more recent re-interpretations of the timeframe for the sphinx, in view of studies done on the possible water erosion, possible reshaping of the head and so on. To me, these theories are worth mentioning as possibilities; thus, I felt some disappointment.
Nevertheless, I enjoyed the course overall and enjoyed seeing so many different artifacts that helped define different eras in the history of Egypt. I also enjoyed learning about the dig in which the university is involved. Thanks!
By Val R
•May 31, 2020
Very good material, very well presented and paced. The opportunity to see the artifacts in the Penn museum is well worth your time. The instructor is engaging and knowledgable without being tiresome, and many of the same concepts or reinforced from lesson to lesson so you get a better idea of how all this information fits together.
I took off one star for the quizzes (note that they cover both the videos and supplemental readings, which of course if fair, but it doesn't tell you that). You cannot see what answer you gave when you check your score, so you're left guessing. A layout showing your answer vs. the correct one woud be a helpful learning reinforcement.
Also question #9 on the Week 6 quiz has two possible correct answers, according to the video.
By Richard F
•Dec 29, 2021
A very clear introduction with a highly knowledgeable guide. He is not the most enthusiastic guy and could seem quite boring, but he is highly informative. The quiz questions don't work all that well. The spacing is odd at times. The balance of questions is very hard to predict. Also I wasn't able to check up on my mistakes, so as to find the correct answers, but this might be my incompetence. Somehow I wasn't able to access the discussion until I had posted my own contribution, which meant that what I had to say did not take account of what others had already said. However, these problems apart it was a good introduction to the subject.