Eurasia (TV series)
Eurasia | |
---|---|
Also known as | Eurasia: The Conquest of the East Eurasian Empires |
French | Eurasia : À la conquête de l'Orient |
Genre | Documentary |
Written by | Alain Moreau |
Directed by | Patrick Cabouat[1] |
Narrated by | France: Maryse Lefebvre Pierre Sciama Japan: Sanae Ueda Shinichi Taketa |
Composers | France: Marc Hillmann Bernard Becker Japan: Takefumi Haketa |
Country of origin | France Japan |
Original languages | French Japanese |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 8 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producers | NHK Point du Jour |
Running time | 48 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | NHK France 5 |
Release | 20 April 14 December 2003 | –
Eurasia: The Conquest of the East (French: Eurasia : À la conquête de l'Orient; Japanese: 文明の道, romanized: Bunmei no Michi, lit. 'Road of Civilisation'), also known as Eurasian Empires or simply Eurasia, is a documentary TV series about the Eurasian civilisations, which ran in eight episodes on NHK (2003) and France 5 (2004).[2] It started on 20 April 2003, with the final episode broadcast on 14 December 2003.[3][4] The series has been dubbed into English and Spanish.
Synopsis
[edit]New discoveries and studies have shown that Central Asia, a region located in the centre of Eurasia, played a significant role as a "cradle of civilisation". The civilisations brought to the vast Eurasian continent by conquest and trade continued to collide and fuse, affecting each other and developing new civilisations. Computer-generated imagery is used to recreate the historical scenes of Ai-Khanoum, Babylon, Baghdad, Persepolis, Rome, etc., representing the rise and fall of a dynamic civilisation that took place over 2000 years.[5]
Episodes
[edit]# | Title | French title | Japanese title | Directed by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alexander the Great | Alexandre le Grand | アレクサンドロス大王 ペルシャ帝国への挑戦 | Patrick Cabouat, Atsushi Ogaki, Atsushi Murayama, Satoru Nagai, Masakazu Taniguchi | 20 April 2003 |
2 | The Forgotten Alexandria | L'Alexandrie oubliée | アレクサンドロスの遺産 最果てのギリシャ都市 | Patrick Cabouat, Noriaki Hashimoto, Atsushi Murayama | 18 May 2003 |
3 | Ghandhara: The Renaissance of Buddhism | Gandhara, l'envol du bouddhisme | ガンダーラ・仏教飛翔の地 | Patrick Cabouat, Kazuko Oka | 15 June 2003 |
4 | The Romans in China | Des Romains au cœur de la Chine | 地中海帝国ローマ・東方への夢 | Patrick Cabouat, Atsushi Ogaki | 20 July 2003 |
5 | The Caravaneers of the Silk Road | Les Maîtres des caravanes | シルクロードの謎 隊商の民ソグド | Patrick Cabouat, Noriaki Hashimoto | 14 September 2003 |
6 | Baghdad in the Year 1000 | Bagdad, an 1000 | バグダッド 大いなる知恵の都 | Patrick Cabouat, Kaoru Kawada, Atsushi Murayama | 12 October 2003 |
7 | Jerusalem 1227: The Excommunicated Peace | Jérusalem 1227 : la paix excommuniée | エルサレム 和平・若き皇帝の決断 | Patrick Cabouat, Kazuko Oka | 16 November 2003 |
8 | The Mongol Conqueror: Kublai Khan's Dream | Le Rêve mongol | クビライの夢 ユーラシア帝国の完成 | Patrick Cabouat, Masakazu Taniguchi | 14 December 2003 |
DVD
[edit]The series has been released on DVD by TF1 vidéo in 2004.[6] A new edition titled Eurasia : Orient et Occident, 2500 ans d'histoire et de conquêtes, has been released in 2006.[7] The Japanese DVD box has been released in 2004, by NHK software.[8]
Adaptation
[edit]The series has been adapted into two comic books and a book series consisting of five volumes, published between 2003 and 2004 by NHK Publishing .[9]
- Comic books
- 文明の道1:アレクサンドロス 〜世界帝国への夢〜 ('Alexander: Dream of the World Empire')
- 文明の道2:クビライ 〜世界帝国の完成〜 ('Kublai: Completion of the World Empire')
- Book series
- 文明の道1:アレクサンドロスの時代 ('Era of Alexander the Great')
- 文明の道2:ヘレニズムと仏教 ('Hellenism and Buddhism')
- 文明の道3:海と陸のシルクロード ('The Silk Road on Land and Sea')
- 文明の道4:イスラムと十字軍 ('Islam and the Crusades')
- 文明の道5:モンゴル帝国 ('Mongol Empire')
References
[edit]- ^ "À la conquête de l'Orient". catalogue.bnf.fr (in French). 2006. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "Eurasia: The Conquest of the East". pointdujour-international.com. 2004. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "文明の道 第1集 アレクサンドロス大王 ペルシャ帝国への挑戦". nhk.or.jp (in Japanese). 20 April 2003. Archived from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "文明の道 第8集 クビライの夢 ユーラシア帝国の完成". nhk.or.jp (in Japanese). 14 December 2003. Archived from the original on 20 December 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "NHKスペシャル 文明の道". nhk.or.jp (in Japanese). 2003. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "Eurasia - À la conquête de l'Orient". rakuten.com (in French). Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ Richter, Jean-Luc (2006). "À la conquête de l'Orient". dvdcritiques.com (in French). Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "文明の道 DVD-BOX". amazon.co.jp (in Japanese). 2004. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ "検索ワード NHKスペシャル 文明の道". nhk-book.co.jp (in Japanese). NHK Publishing. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
External links
[edit]- Official website (in English and French)
- NHK original programming
- France Télévisions original programming
- French documentary films
- French documentary television series
- 2003 Japanese television series debuts
- 2003 Japanese television series endings
- 2004 French television series debuts
- 2004 French television series endings
- Japanese documentary television films
- Japanese documentary television series
- Books based on television series
- Television shows adapted into comics
- Films about Alexander the Great