Terry Jones' Barbarians

Terry Jones' Barbarians

Terry Jones' Barbarians
List Price: $29.98
Our Price: $26.99
You Save: $2.99 (10%)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Buy Used: from $13.74 (click here)
Category: DVD
See more DVD details


(Click here)
Buy this DVD movie at online store in your country
Canada

DVD details

Actor: Terry Jones
Brand: Koch International
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Original Language)
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC, Widescreen
Picture Format: 1.78:1
Running Time: 205 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2008-01-08
Audience Rating: Unrated
Studio: Koch Vision

DVD Reviews of Terry Jones' Barbarians

DVD Review: Barbarians (Terry Jones)
Summary: 5 Stars

I had already watched this program on television and really enjoyed it so I decided to purchase it for my husband to see as well. Terry Jones narrates in a way that makes history, which can be sometimes a dry topic for some, entertaining and enjoyable.

DVD Review: History without all the dust
Summary: 4 Stars

I can understand that a "serious" historian might find plenty to fault in a book or DVD about a historical topic by an uncertified historian. And it's nice to be referred to references by more scholarly sources.

BUT - most people find serious history books to be so dry and stodgy that they don't read them. I love history, but get so bored trying to read books that are overloaded with citations and footnotes - in fact I kept one of my history books around for years as a surefire sleep aid. Two or three pages and I would be snoring.

So, making history interesting and entertaining is a welcome thing. And many of the stories and people I learned of in this book were completely new to me - and gave me some different points of view than the currently accepted version.

The point is: if people find material like this fascinating, they may then go on to dig deeper and decide for themselves. Even to the point of wading through all that dust

GM California


DVD Review: Zero Stars For Revisionist Hit Piece.
Summary: 1 Stars

Koch Vision & the BBC presents Terry Jones Barbarians. It is a 205 minutes long in color, a 2 disc 4 part series TV documentary that was first aired on BBC2 in 2006. The episodes are as follows.
The Primitive Celts: 1.Celtic Barbarians, 2.Caesar's Gallic Wars.
The Savage Goths: 1.Arminius, 2.Dacian wars, 3.Alaric's Sack Of Rome.
The Brainy Barbarians: 1.Antikythera, 2.Archimedes & Syracuse, 3.Parthians, 4.Sassanians
The End Of The World: Mainly about the leaders Geiseric & Attila.

Terry Jones is a has been comedian from Monty Python fame & has no credentials to lecture on history, let alone produce such a 1 sided documentary. Even the so-called experts he uses are highly suspect. The clear goal from the very first minutes of this series is to reverse the historical records we have to fit his thesis. Which clearly is that the Romans were 90% evil & their enemies were 90% humane, advanced, folks who were just on the losing side of history. There was no mention that much of the history of this period was lost, nor did he ever mention that much of the information we have on Rome came from their enemies. Example: he mentions the Roman author Polybius to berate him, the problem is that he was a Greek writing some positive things on Rome. That is a big error in itself.

This series also makes 2 lame implications, that the ancient Romans views of other cultures remained constant over a period of 1,200 years, & that history is always written by the winners. That in itself builds this series on sand.

1.Celtic Barbarians; The brehon laws he spoke of with Donnchadh O'Corrain did not even exist during the Roman period. These laws allowed men to beat their wives so long as they did not leave a mark. That should please the women dont you think? The Greeks, Etruscans, & Romans never sold their women into slavery which the Celts certainly did. As late as the Viking period the church in Ireland condemned this practice. So much for the matriarchal leaning Celts treating their women well. Also, Roman law was first codified in 451BC centuries before the Celts wrote their laws down. Even an ardent Celtophile like Frank Delaney in his series "The Celts," stated that after the initial conquest the Romans did indeed bring protection, order, & stability.

Another false claim was his stating without any proof{DNA, etc} that most modern day Europeans are descended from Celts. The term celtic was a linguistic tradition, not an ethnic or racial one, it did not even become common until Edward Lhuyd popularized it in 1707AD. The fact is these Celts were warlike, practiced human sacrifice{June-July 2002 issue of Archaeology magazine}, head hunting, & started the wars against both Greece & Rome{Their is no definitive proof that the Romans started it at Clusium-Bryan Garrett-archaeologist & scholar}. Thus, his portrayal of these people as being flowery, humane, just, & innocent victims is simply a lie.

2.Caesar's Gallic Wars: he turns Caesar into a Genghiz Khan figure which is a gross exaggeration. Does he truly believe that his tiny army killed a million Gauls? Where is the archaeological proof? He just uses Caesar's quote as fact in this case while disbelieving just about everything else in his Gallic Wars book. Mr.Jones barely mentioned the long period of the Celts in N. Italy{not Gaul as he wrongly stated} had attacked the Romans constantly from 390BC to 225BC until they were crushed at Telamon. Nor did he mention their genocidal behavior at the Etruscan city of Melpum 396BC or at the Greek city of Delphi 279BC. Ancient scholars like Pausanias & Strabo, & modern ones like Tim Newark in his book "Ancient Celts" pages 6,10, & 14 state that the Celts committed genocide. Another blatant omission was his failure to mention that had Caesar not conquered the Gauls the even more ruthless Germans were doing exactly that, he stopped them.

The Savage Goths: The Cheruscan German leader Arminius{Hermann} was no hero, if he had been his own people would not have killed him, just like Caesar he went to far. He had been a Roman citizen & swore an oath to Rome. This was a very short sighted part. If Germania had been Romanized
there would not have been a French-German problem, 2 world wars, Hitler, or the Holocaust. Does anyone truly believe that once the Roman empire became Christian that it was or could be as bad as Hitler's third reich? The Romans did not have insane racial theories, religious crusades, concentration camps, or religious wars of conversion. The latter was done by the church, not the Roman empire. It should be mentioned that both slavery by Trajan's time & the blood bath games had been declining long before the Emperor Constantine outlawed them.

4.Dacian wars: these people had been attcking the Romans for decades. what was the emperor trajan to do? he even set his dacian prisoners free nor did Mr.Jones prove that any genocide took place. If the Romans had been so bad, why do modern day Romanians{rightly or not?} consider themselves to be descended from Roman colonists?

5.Alaric's Sack Of Rome: this was the only actual truthful part in the 2 disc series, Alaric-Visigoth & Geiseric's-Vandal sacks of Rome were mild. But, Mr.Jones bashing the catholic church for spreading pro=Roman propaganda was totally false. The church is largely responsible for almost all of the negative information we have on ancient Rome. Most of our history books on this era were translated & written by people in the church. Remember, the church was seeking Christian converts by demonizing the whole Pagan world. Michael Grant's book "Fall Of the Roman Empire" part 6, chapter 13 gives plenty of proof how the church helped undermine the Roman state while adopting some of the administrative qualities that made the empire work. There was also no mention of Jordanes the Goth who wrote the history of his people. So much for the victors always writing the history books.

The Brainy Barbarians: 1 & 2 the Antikythera mechanism & Archimedes' genius does not prove that the greeks were on the verge of an industrial revolution. If that was the caes, it still could have occurred under Rome or the later Byzantine empire. He totally failed to prove that the Romans were suppressing knowledge. In fact Michael Woods book "Ancient Machines:
Wedges To Waterwheels" shows how the Romans advanced technology like the Mill at Barbegal in S.France which provided the 12,000 people of Arles with a huge surplus food supply. Mr.Jones also failed to prove{sources?] that the Romans ever called their eastern neighbors Greece, Persia, etc barbarians. It should be common knowledge that when people are at war they tend to demonize each other.

7&8 Parthians & Persians: these peoples were no more humane than the Romans. In fact the Greeks learned about crucifixion from these peoples after having it done to them. The Romans learned it from the human sacrificing Carthaginians. Contrary to the claim in this series it was the Romans who were the first people to give citizenship to the conquered, which is something even the Greeks never did until the Byzantine era. The mini-industrial revolution occurred under the Roman-Benedictine order in the middle ages, as was stated in James Burke's book "Connections."

9.The End Of The World: here is where he & his experts failed to mention many of the real causes of Rome's decline & fall. Things like constant civil wars between aspiring emperors, outbreaks of disease & famine, political insatbility, & invasions. All of which helped caused a massive decline in trade & population. His claim that the loss of the north african tax base was short sighted. it was the loss of the grain supply from there that led to starvation in parts of Europe. the true loss of the tax base was the occupation & often destruction of the european cities by the Huns. They were the worst of the barbarians since for this reason & their extorting from both halves of the empire which fatally weaked the western half.

If Attila was the gentler leader that Mr.jones portrayed him to be, why did so many Germans fight with Rome to defeat him at Chalons in 451AD? shortly after his death in 453, the Germans in his empire revolted & destroyed it. Lastly, the Vandals did persecute the non-Arian Christians in north africa. Once again Mr. jones failed to give any sources to try & prove his thesis that the Vandals had been more humane than the Romans. The bishop Quodvultdeus was exiled, Saint Augustine & Procopius' books describe in detail how many fled from Vandal persecution.

I recommend reading the scholarly books by JPVD Balsdon "Romans & Aliens," G.K.Chesterton's "Everlasting Man," Saint Aquinas' "Dumb Ox, Catholicism & Conversion," Henry Adams "Montsaint Michele & Chartre," Hillaire Belloc's "The Crusades," & any books by Michael Grant & John Keegan. I'm very glad I rented this from the library rather than having wasted twenty dollars.

DVD Review: Superb
Summary: 5 Stars

This is a wonderful video. The historical analysis is cutting-edge and the data is sound. The production is entertaining. Highly recommended.

DVD Review: Change of perspective
Summary: 4 Stars

This series completely changed my perspective of world history. Which I believe was the point of the series. Having an interest in history and having little formal education in it I found the information presented by Terry Jones makes more sense then what little history I was taught in school. It was also entertaining and defiantly not boring.

Description of Terry Jones' Barbarians

So you think you know everything about the Romans?
Monty Python's Terry Jones invites you on an entertaining expedition through Roman history from an entirely different perspective - that of the Barbarians. Far from the uncivilized savages they have been believed to be, many of these "non-Romans" were not barbaric at all. They were, in fact, highly organized and intelligent societies that had no intentions of overthrowing Rome or its Empire. A rare blend of scholarly research and archaeological evidence along with Jones' familiar brand of irreverent humor gives this fascinating series a unique insight into the Barbarians, the Romans and the creation of the modern world.

Includes the episodes:
(Disc One) The Primitive Celts - The Brainy Barbarians
(Disc Two) The Savage Goths - The End of the World

General DVDs

DVD Video
Bestsellers in General DVDs
Man on Wire ImageMan on Wire
Release date: 2008-12-09; DVD
Best price: $13.37
Price in other shops: $26.98
Blue Planet: Seas of Life (Special Edition) ImageBlue Planet: Seas of Life (Special Edition)
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2007-10-02; DVD
Best price: $17.59
Price in other shops: $59.98
Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed ImageExpelled: No Intelligence Allowed
Release date: 2008-10-21; DVD
Best price: $8.44
Price in other shops: $26.99
Planet Earth & The Blue Planet Seas of Life (Special Collector's Edition) ImagePlanet Earth & The Blue Planet Seas of Life (Special Collector's Edition)
Planet; Release date: 2007-10-02; DVD
Best price: $52.97
Price in other shops: $119.98
The Beales of Grey Gardens - Criterion Collection ImageThe Beales of Grey Gardens - Criterion Collection
Image Entertainment; Release date: 2006-12-05; DVD
Best price: $13.60
Price in other shops: $19.95
A Haunting in Connecticut ImageA Haunting in Connecticut
Release date: 2008-09-30; DVD
Best price: $3.53
Price in other shops: $6.99
Grey Gardens - Criterion Collection ImageGrey Gardens - Criterion Collection
Image Entertainment; Release date: 2001-08-14; DVD
Best price: $25.20
Price in other shops: $39.95
Religulous ImageReligulous
Lions Gate; Release date: 2009-02-17; DVD
Best price: $10.20
Price in other shops: $29.95
The BBC Natural History Collection featuring Planet Earth (Planet Earth/ The Blue Planet: Seas of Life Special Edition/ Life of Mammals/ Life of Birds) ImageThe BBC Natural History Collection featuring Planet Earth (Planet Earth/ The Blue Planet: Seas of Life Special Edition/ Life of Mammals/ Life of Birds)
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2008-04-01; DVD
Best price: $85.99
Price in other shops: $199.92
Planet Earth - The Complete BBC Series ImagePlanet Earth - The Complete BBC Series
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2007-04-24; DVD
Best price: $19.49
Price in other shops: $79.98
Similar DVDs, VHS Video, Audio CDs
Barbarians (History Channel) ImageBarbarians (History Channel)
A&E; Release date: 2004-02-24; DVD
Best price: $11.65
Price in other shops: $19.95
Michael Palin - New Europe ImageMichael Palin - New Europe
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2008-03-11; DVD
Best price: $33.48
Price in other shops: $49.98
Who Murdered Chaucer?: A Medieval Mystery ImageWho Murdered Chaucer?: A Medieval Mystery
by Terry Jones, Robert Yeager, Alan Fletcher, Juliette Dor, Terry Dolan
St. Martin's Griffin; Published: 2006-06-13; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.71
Price in other shops: $19.95
The Dark Ages (The History Channel ) ImageThe Dark Ages (The History Channel )
A&E; Release date: 2007-05-29; DVD
Best price: $10.12
Price in other shops: $24.95
Chaucer & the Canterbury Tales ImageChaucer & the Canterbury Tales
Release date: 2009-03-31; DVD
Best price: $11.85
Price in other shops: $19.95
Terry Jones' Medieval Lives ImageTerry Jones' Medieval Lives
by Terry Jones
BBC Books; Published: 2005-05-01; Paperback; Book
Best price: $7.43
Price in other shops: $14.95
Terry Jones' Barbarians: An Alternative Roman History ImageTerry Jones' Barbarians: An Alternative Roman History
by Terry Jones, Alan Ereira
BBC Books; Published: 2007-11-01; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.92
Price in other shops: $16.95
The Story of 1 ImageThe Story of 1
Release date: 2006-05-21; DVD
Best price: $17.37
Price in other shops: $29.98
Crusades ImageCrusades
A&E; Release date: 2002-01-02; DVD
Best price: $16.65
Price in other shops: $39.95
Terry Jones' Medieval Lives ImageTerry Jones' Medieval Lives
Warner Brothers; Release date: 2008-04-01; DVD
Best price: $18.35
Price in other shops: $29.98
Compare prices and read customer reviews for more than one million DVD titles.
Oscar 2005 Winners