YSJ Events
YSJ Events
  • 223
  • 169 591

Відео

Professor Lorna Hamilton Inaugural Lecture 16th January 2025
Переглядів 73День тому
Professor Lorna Hamilton Inaugural Lecture 16th January 2025
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Balcony Sessions
Переглядів 10228 днів тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Balcony Sessions Balcony session can be accessed here: www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p09mksmm/clips?page=1
The U.S Presidential Election: Where Do We Go From Here?
Переглядів 108Місяць тому
The U.S Presidential Election: Where Do We Go From Here?
The Year That Broke Politics: The Presidential Election of 1968 - and implications for 2024
Переглядів 28Місяць тому
The Year That Broke Politics: The Presidential Election of 1968 - and implications for 2024
Words Matter Lecture 2024 with Dr Zoe Enstone
Переглядів 46Місяць тому
This year’s Words Matter Lecture- ‘Witch; sorceress; fairy; fay; goddess? Magical women in the literature of the fifteenth century and today’, was delivered by Dr Zoë Enstone, who shared her research on the magical women of fifteenth-century literature and their ongoing impact on contemporary culture. As modern readers, we are often familiar with the tropes of Arthurian romance such as brave kn...
The 1984 U.S. Presidential Election in retrospective
Переглядів 402 місяці тому
The 1984 U.S. Presidential Election in retrospective
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - John Ridley
Переглядів 4602 місяці тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - John Ridley
Ebor Lecture Relaunch with Dr Hannah Barham-Brown
Переглядів 683 місяці тому
Ebor Lecture Relaunch with Dr Hannah Barham-Brown
Black History Month 2024: Bishop Rose Hudson-Wilkin
Переглядів 1063 місяці тому
Black History Month 2024: Bishop Rose Hudson-Wilkin
Professor Sarah Lawson Welsh Inaugural Lecture - 10/10/24
Переглядів 893 місяці тому
Professor Sarah Lawson Welsh Inaugural Lecture - 10/10/24
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Farah Jumat
Переглядів 1003 місяці тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Farah Jumat
We Are Listening
Переглядів 185 місяців тому
We Are Listening
Disability Inclusion: Building a Better World
Переглядів 115 місяців тому
Disability Inclusion: Building a Better World
The Power of Not Winning the U S Presidency
Переглядів 766 місяців тому
The Power of Not Winning the U S Presidency
Alumni Music Production Panel 2024
Переглядів 738 місяців тому
Alumni Music Production Panel 2024
Ebor Lecture with Rupert Read
Переглядів 5918 місяців тому
Ebor Lecture with Rupert Read
Polarization: A Theological Challenge, Professor Sebastian Kim
Переглядів 408 місяців тому
Polarization: A Theological Challenge, Professor Sebastian Kim
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Lauren Cook
Переглядів 638 місяців тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Lauren Cook
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Connor Crowley
Переглядів 429 місяців тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Connor Crowley
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Jenna Houston
Переглядів 10710 місяців тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Jenna Houston
LGBTQ+HM: Can You Adam and Eve It? Queering Heterosexuality in Genesis
Переглядів 7911 місяців тому
LGBTQ HM: Can You Adam and Eve It? Queering Heterosexuality in Genesis
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Ros Denby
Переглядів 17111 місяців тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Ros Denby
Breastfeeding Webinar Series: 9 - Medication and Breastfeeding
Переглядів 179Рік тому
Breastfeeding Webinar Series: 9 - Medication and Breastfeeding
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Ozzie Pullin
Переглядів 145Рік тому
Alumni Journeys: Creativity, Careers and Community - Ozzie Pullin
Professor Garry Tew Inaugural Lecture - 2/11/23
Переглядів 46Рік тому
Professor Garry Tew Inaugural Lecture - 2/11/23
York Disability Week - Working With A Chronic Illness Tips & Tricks From The Frontline Pippa Stacey
Переглядів 140Рік тому
York Disability Week - Working With A Chronic Illness Tips & Tricks From The Frontline Pippa Stacey
Ceremony Eight - York St John University Graduation, Friday 17 November 2023
Переглядів 675Рік тому
Ceremony Eight - York St John University Graduation, Friday 17 November 2023
Ceremony Four - York St John University Graduation, Wednesday 15 November 2023
Переглядів 227Рік тому
Ceremony Four - York St John University Graduation, Wednesday 15 November 2023
Centre for Religion in Society - Religion and Violence Against Women and Girls
Переглядів 645Рік тому
Centre for Religion in Society - Religion and Violence Against Women and Girls

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @anvarmirrakhimov8935
    @anvarmirrakhimov8935 5 місяців тому

    Я люблю смотреть секс ❤

  • @anvarmirrakhimov8935
    @anvarmirrakhimov8935 5 місяців тому

    Здравствуйте яки😅

  • @FelixFortunaRex
    @FelixFortunaRex 7 місяців тому

    The spoils of judea built coliseum and the thousand and thousand of Jews taken captive built it also. Prolly where the idea of Jews built pyramids during slavery in Egypt. Many connections with Flavian dynasty and Bible.

  • @badfairy9554
    @badfairy9554 7 місяців тому

    Severus had a Roman bath made in Carlisle the north of England. It has two floors.

  • @Purple_Wellies
    @Purple_Wellies 9 місяців тому

    Wow this video didn't age well did it

  • @jg90049
    @jg90049 Рік тому

    Excellent talk. Sounds like the rebuilding after the Great Fire and rhe damage done during the "Year of the Four Emperors" was finally completed under Domitian. Another fire broke out in 80, didn't it?

  • @brucevilla
    @brucevilla Рік тому

    Thanks for Uploading.

  • @stconstable
    @stconstable Рік тому

    You view these detailed presentations and don't want them to end.

  • @erinaltstadt4234
    @erinaltstadt4234 Рік тому

    Thank you very much, that was very informative

  • @stconstable
    @stconstable Рік тому

    Suetonius's, The Twelve Caesars, is astounding, regardless of him not always mentioning a source. He clearly canvased widely, as he states, aswell as accessing now lost surviving testimony, letters and the like. (Frequently casting doubt as far as I can see.) His era was a time of signs and omens and fate. If a modern reader fails to understand that from the outset, after even a couple of paragraphs, they obviously lack common sense.

  • @scottlaurimore3698
    @scottlaurimore3698 Рік тому

    LoL you so called “scholars” incessantly dispute everything written by those who were there and injecting your own nonsensical views. Idiocy. Now Nero was a great guy. Caligula another wonderful emperor. They were both evil and perverted vile people. Please don’t rewrite history to promote your liberal bias.

  • @WorthlessWinner
    @WorthlessWinner Рік тому

    I dunno why Suetonius gets this bad rep. Tacitus has just as many gossipy stories that we have to think about with just as much skepticism. They both have so many instances of actual magical spells and prophecies too, if anything is going to make you scratch your head about what to believe it is the statues knocking on peoples doors and giant goddesses leading armies across rivers, not the mad king thinking about maybe making his horse a consul

    • @_NDC
      @_NDC Рік тому

      I think it's about his propensity for the salacious. To illustrate, I would invite you to imagine what kind of picture of, say, Caesar we had if Suetonius was our only source on his life.

  • @nguyennga3174
    @nguyennga3174 2 роки тому

    This video may intensify my choice to Dr Wendy Dossett. See u next 2 years, my supervisor

  • @johnstevenson1709
    @johnstevenson1709 2 роки тому

    I can't believe there are no comments, Sheffield thinks of itself as a small provincial city that has never done anything of interest to anyone else because we have forgotten our history of radical agitation

    • @johnstevenson1709
      @johnstevenson1709 2 роки тому

      Non conformism, abolitionism, Chartism, women's suffrage, trade unionism Sheffield's contribution is almost forgotten

  • @mumfymam
    @mumfymam 2 роки тому

    It was so good to watch again. It was a pleasure to be there on the night, it was quite hard to hear some of the speaking in parts of the video which is a shame. It was a great night. Congrats Nick, thanks for all you've done and the seeds you've planted along the way. You rock!!

  • @thewiseperson8748
    @thewiseperson8748 2 роки тому

    ,., Dear Rev XXX My friend and I were feeling ecclesiastical yesterday and decided to do Anglicanism this weekend. We were delighted to come to YYY Church where you kindly provided a very excellent sermon. During the discussions during the service, I suggested that a way for the Church of England to progress is to merge with the Catholic Church, as both the Anglican church and the Catholic church are supposed to be worshipping the same God.. I work near Westminster Cathedral and therefore regularly do Catholicism during the working week (midday mass services). In Westminster Cathedral, there is a mosaic in a side chapel dedicated to Catholic martyrs (just like Cambridge has a church dedicated to "The Church of our Lady and the English Martyrs" to remember with respect the martyrs who were so brutally killed by the Anglicans). The Anglicans have certainly been very wicked in the past and need to give up their former naughty life. The Church of England was a consequence of King Henry VIII's nuptial problems and Henry's tiff with the then Pope (Clement VII or Paul III - my friend and I are unsure which pope was in office at the time, although Clement VII is more likely to be the person). Thus, the Church of England is an organisation founded for King Henry VIII's personal political reasons and not for the spiritual benefit of England. King Henry VIII's tiff subsequently brought great cruelty and wickedness, including dissolution of the monasteries that performed effective social support in society by giving alms to the hungry and homeless at the time. The contemporary problem that we now face is that the Church of England is soon progressing to marry gay and lesbian couples. Such gay and lesbian weddings, namely "gay marriages", have already been allowed in the Church of Wales and the Church of Scotland. We have now had two recents vicars at ZZZ Church who turned out to be gay and ran off with their respective boyfriends. I am just waiting for a lesbian vicar to be installed at some date in the future to add colour to the situation. With such developments within the Church of England regarding marital issues, desired reunification of the Church of England with the Catholic Church will be more difficult to achieve, thereby missing an opportunity for economies of scale when teaching Bible knowledge, evangelising and maintaining England's cultural heritage. As Archbishop George Carey said a few years ago: "The Church of England is one generation away from oblivion". Thus, my friend and I considered that it was important to do Anglicanism today in order to feel ecclesiastically refreshed. With kind wishes AAA

  • @weareallbornmad410
    @weareallbornmad410 2 роки тому

    He went to uni 20 years ago??? Looking good for an old man, ABK :D

  • @thetree2044
    @thetree2044 2 роки тому

    ABK

  • @markwilson3419
    @markwilson3419 2 роки тому

    Outstanding perspective. I was a soundman at Metairie Church where you preached. (Mark) I feel honored to thehave learned under your leadership.

  • @carittaaustell8700
    @carittaaustell8700 2 роки тому

    քʀօʍօֆʍ ?

  • @beelove9910
    @beelove9910 2 роки тому

    There is no such thing as 'sizeism' and the bored, worthless academics that keep abusing the language of social justice to justify their fat fetish are disgusting and evil.

  • @dionisioperricciruis3118
    @dionisioperricciruis3118 3 роки тому

    This talk is amazing. I can only thank you two for all the information. Congratulations!

  • @EveOwenMusic
    @EveOwenMusic 3 роки тому

    this is amazing

  • @deenk990
    @deenk990 3 роки тому

    Well done Alex, excellent insight.

  • @tristanmccoy1466
    @tristanmccoy1466 3 роки тому

    I never understood why Augustus forced Tiberius to name Germanicus as his heir instead of Augustus simply naming Germanicus as his own heir. Germanicus was in his late 20’s when Augustus died.

  • @tristanmccoy1466
    @tristanmccoy1466 3 роки тому

    It would have changed so much but if there is one thing about history I could change is that Germanicus would have became emperor.

  • @dianagable3349
    @dianagable3349 3 роки тому

    I always thought Caligula was the worse of the Emperors.

  • @zayaricon
    @zayaricon 3 роки тому

    Thanks😃😃

  • @gregoryjones1426
    @gregoryjones1426 3 роки тому

    Thank you so much! Great narration!

  • @The9littlebigplanet
    @The9littlebigplanet 3 роки тому

    This lecture is about the image and idea of foreigners that Romans had, their accounts of them, their society and how in general how the Romans viewed these barbarians. It's especially important for the Romans to define themselves and define the barbarians as to distance Romans from barbarians but also as the speaker points out; how some barbarians like the Germanic people were more similar to the Romans than the Britons were to the Romans. The speaker is working with various depictions of Romans and Trajans with images taken from wikipedia and the University of Oxford, also Julius' Caesar's account of conquest of Gaul and the book Tacitus Germania. This was a very interesting lecture about something that you don't normally read a lot about, namely the differences in appearance and culture of the Roman people versus the variety of distinct barbarian groups.

  • @matthewbirchenough2930
    @matthewbirchenough2930 3 роки тому

    Dr doffenstmirtz

  • @spetrie2325
    @spetrie2325 3 роки тому

    Excellent and illuminating ..thank you

  • @lindahampton1274
    @lindahampton1274 3 роки тому

    vaw.fyi lovely

  • @GodwardPodcast
    @GodwardPodcast 3 роки тому

    Really excellent lecture! -- thanks!

  • @steveplattify
    @steveplattify 3 роки тому

    An excellent talk and, I think, a fair attempt to disentangle the (necessarily limited) facts from the fiction of one of the most important people in mid-first century Rome. What wouldn't I give for a copy of her own memoirs to turn up in in some dusty monastery store or future excavation!

  • @SimonHaslett1
    @SimonHaslett1 3 роки тому

    Excellent lecture from Erik

  • @SimonHaslett1
    @SimonHaslett1 3 роки тому

    Very interesting lecture. Full of detail and well presented.

  • @mireillelebeau2513
    @mireillelebeau2513 3 роки тому

    What would have been the advantages of murdering his mother for Nero? and how The romans explains that they knew the last words of Agrippina?

  • @jamesbuchanan8392
    @jamesbuchanan8392 3 роки тому

    Can do without the pathetic Trump reference.

    • @steveplattify
      @steveplattify 3 роки тому

      He makes it to ask the question (that has often been mooted) how much insight to modern rulers can we get from an understanding of Roman emperors. To which his answer is not much, though we might be able to understand Roman emperors - and the way Suetonius related their lives - better by looking at what happens in the modern world. A fair point, I thought, and certainly not "pathertic".

    • @Ken_Scaletta
      @Ken_Scaletta 3 роки тому

      I could have done without the pathetic Trump Presidency.

    • @Buch0u_1
      @Buch0u_1 2 роки тому

      @@Ken_Scaletta this aged well lmao.

    • @Ken_Scaletta
      @Ken_Scaletta 2 роки тому

      @@Buch0u_1 Trump looks even worse now than he did then. It looks like he even managed to steal the right to privacy two years after he was voted out of office in disgrace.

    • @tophat762
      @tophat762 10 місяців тому

      There's been a few historians who have been trying to compare Trump with tyrants of the past. They lose a lot of credibility when they do that.

  • @henkstersmacro-world
    @henkstersmacro-world 3 роки тому

    👍👍👍

  • @drraoulmclaughlin7423
    @drraoulmclaughlin7423 3 роки тому

    Greetings from Belfast - Fascinating Lecture Penny :-) I wonder how the Map of Agrippa displayed in the Porticus Vipsania publicly promoted the Augustan World View? - (Pliny, ‘Natural History’, Book 6)

    • @henkstersmacro-world
      @henkstersmacro-world 3 роки тому

      Thank you Dr McLaughlin for guiding me to this lecture👍

    • @PennyGoodman
      @PennyGoodman 3 роки тому

      Hi Raoul! It's hard to say, as Pliny doesn't give us much to go on. Was it a cartographic map, a list of information about the empire (like the coastline lengths which he took from it), or what? I guess the key thing we can say is that it was yet another method of making Rome feel like the centre of the world and the master of all knowledge about the world.

  • @weepingcross
    @weepingcross 3 роки тому

    Thank you, Penny, good stuff! Ave atque vale

  • @paulwww33
    @paulwww33 3 роки тому

    Interesting and entertaining, as always... well done everybody !!!

    • @mumfymam
      @mumfymam 3 роки тому

      Thank you, we had fun filming 😊

  • @davidtomlinson7946
    @davidtomlinson7946 3 роки тому

    Complete cherrypicking as a conclusion. Establishing a dynasty and putting your relatives and friends on foreign thrones is a continuation of monarchy, not revolution. Establishing a police state is taking the Ancien regime's aims to new heights. Serfdom and feudalism is replaced by conscription and internal controls. Reinstating the Black Laws and slavery was not just repressive but recessive and squarely betrayed the rights of man. The murder of Toussaint Louverture by starvation is the darkest stain on his reputation, and goes unsung by a largely biased academia.

    • @graemecallister6426
      @graemecallister6426 3 роки тому

      Thanks for the comment. All of this was, as I'm sure you noticed, addressed in the talk - including the term 'cherry picking'. As the talk said, the early Revolution envisaged a constitutional monarchy (note that it's important not to confuse revolution and republic). The 'police state', such as it was, was developed under the Revolution; conscription was introduced by the Loi Jourdan of 1798, under the Directory; internal controls were (re)introduced during the Revolution. As the talk said, the reintroduction of slavery was a departure from revolutionary practice and principle - although racism was still very much alive and well during the revolutionary years. The murder of Toussaint Louverture was awful - but not much worse than what was done to some people under the Revolution. All of this (aside from the last point) was touched upon. None of this is meant to defend Napoleon, incidentally. It is more an indictment of revolutionary failures.

    • @ningen7736
      @ningen7736 Рік тому

      Cry about it lol

  • @michaelalpert5019
    @michaelalpert5019 4 роки тому

    This was a wonderful, intelligent, deeply-felt presentation. Thank you from Bangor, Maine, U.S.A.

  • @toddpowers3085
    @toddpowers3085 4 роки тому

    50/50 Custody needs to become the Norm. Women having the majority of child custody is sexism against men.