本帖最后由 浅龙勿用 于 2014-3-18 13:43 编辑
$ Y! O3 [% I5 z( O/ N6 O& Q. ~0 X# w6 `9 z: |, G
: R% N( ^: k; ]$ J/ E4 D
# A7 q/ I) n, s9 U
: P# c7 B3 Z4 O5 [5 i: @
6 U( s$ i, |9 t3 ~
& J1 A5 r8 R, T" Y2 l- u! M0 o" D
( Z0 ?" x! a0 Q2 A
) T' i/ x$ E; i1 a2 RInformation
7 |' d- s4 {' P1 l' S. y pAndrewMarr sets off on an epic journey through 70,000 years of human history. Usingdramatic reconstructions, documentary filming around the world and cutting-edgecomputer graphics, he reveals the decisive moments that shaped the world welive in today, telling stories we thought we knew and others we were nevertold. $ A# R8 d8 z" p. L
7 O9 Y4 q( `+ N9 `6 H
Part 1: Survival
- P8 t5 _" T& \8 ^Starting with our earliest beginnings in Africa, Marr traces the story of ournomadic ancestors as they spread out around the world and settled down tobecome the first farmers and townspeople. He uncovers extraordinary hand-printsleft in European caves nearly 30,000 years ago and shows how human ingenuityled to inventions which are still with us today. He also discovers how thefirst civilisations were driven to extremes to try to overcome the forces ofnature, adapting and surviving against the odds, and reveals how everyday lifein ancient Egypt had more in common with today's soap operas than might beimagined. . X9 {; g# F# `+ ]) Y/ q Y2 N
' f: P- h* d3 t8 Y5 w! Q. c
Part 2: Age of Empire$ \1 |8 m5 i, [$ T! U
Andrew Marr tells the story of the first empires which laid the foundations forthe modern world. From the Assyrians to Alexander the Great, conquerorsrampaged across the Middle East and vicious wars were fought all the way fromChina to the Mediterranean. But this time of chaos and destruction also broughtenormous progress and inspired human development. In the Middle East, thePhoenicians invented the alphabet, and one of the most powerful ideas in worldhistory emerged: the belief in just one God. In India, the Buddha offered aradical alternative to empire building - a way of living that had no place forviolence or hierarchy and was open to everyone. Great thinkers from Socrates toConfucius proposed new ideas about how to rule more wisely and live in a bettersociety. And in Greece, democracy was born - the greatest political experimentof all. But within just a few years, its future would be under threat frominvasion by an empire in the east...
# \1 T l$ Y, e9 A* a: T: |- Z. y" R4 a" X
Part 3: The Word and the Sword
! J! t. v3 G w% VAndrew Marr plunges into the spiritual revolutions that shook the world between300 BC and 700 AD. This was an age that saw the bloody prince Ashoka turn toBuddhism in India, the ill-fated union of Julius Caesar and Egypt's Cleopatra,the unstoppable rise of Christianity across the Roman Empire and the dramaticspread of Islam from Spain to Central Asia. But the most potent human force onthe planet came from the combination of faith and military power as bothChristianity and Islam created new empires of 'the word and the sword'.
& M1 w/ Z8 ~7 r, R5 K* x* x
2 ] j) ~* y4 Z% `: z/ {
Part4: Into the Light
- W5 W( P! B1 u! x$ K! SAndrew Marrreaches the Middle Ages. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, Europe waslittle more than a muddy backwater. Vikings explored and pillaged from NorthernEurope to North America. But they also laid the foundations of powerful newtrading states - including Russia. This was also the Golden Age of Islam, andthe knowledge of ancient civilisations from India, Persia and Greece was builtupon by Islamic scholars in Baghdad's House of Wisdom. By exploring theconquests of Genghis Khan, the adventures of Marco Polo and the extraordinarystory of an African King - the wealthiest who ever lived - Marr finds out howEurope emerged from the so-called 'Dark Ages' and used influences from aroundthe world to rise again with the Renaissance. & u+ }2 R3 r) y0 N( U
: b$ [4 A9 m: g. U. v: P
Part 5: Age of Plunder
7 A3 o, {7 ]6 `3 {AndrewMarr tells the story of Europe's rise from piracy to ** enterprise. Theexplosion of global capitalism began with Christopher Columbus stumbling acrossAmerica while searching for China. While Europe tore itself apart in religiouswars after the Reformation, the Spanish colonised the New World and broughtback 10 trillion dollars' worth of gold and silver. But it was Dutch andEnglish buccaneer businessmen who invented the real money-maker: limitedcompanies and the stock exchange. They battled hand-to-hand to control theworld's sea trade in spices, furs and luxuries like tulips. In the 145 yearsfrom 1492 to 1637, European capitalism was born and spread across the globe. ~! @, ^# b; P9 @# G5 Z
" W/ g2 s3 i6 c2 L( M
Part 6: Revolution' G) ^: n* l9 b- u5 U
AndrewMarr explores the Age of Revolution. In the 17th and 18th centuries, peopleacross the world rose up in the name of freedom and equality against the powerof the church and monarchy. In America, people fought a war to be free fromBritish rule. In France, bloody revolution saw the king and aristocracydeposed. And in Haiti, the slaves revolted against their masters. The world wasalso gripped by a scientific revolution, sweeping away old dogmas andsuperstition. Galileo revolutionized the way we saw humanity's place in theuniverse, while Edward Jenner used science to help save the lives of millions. 1 T3 x6 C8 Y: m- Y2 g& j
" U' x! W8 U# j. S/ Q1 _( T2 U
Part7: Age of Industry; j/ N, ?6 d$ ?, f& d9 p1 d) m! o0 I+ R
AndrewMarr tells how Britain's Industrial Revolution created the modern world. Theold agricultural order of aristocratic landowners, serfs and peasant farmerswas replaced by a new world of machines, cities and industrialists. Across theworld, many resisted this sweeping change. From China to America, Russia toJapan, bitter battles were fought between the modernisers and those whorejected the new way of life. In Europe, new industrial powers competed witheach other to create vast empires which dominated the world. But this intensecompetition would lead to the industrial-scale slaughter and destruction of theFirst World War.
) B, r9 A5 _3 Y5 y0 D. p/ I! R; v1 m4 `; Q3 u
Part8: Age of Extremes) F6 T5 P, j C% C
Andrew Marr brings the story right up to date with the twentieth century. Marrsuggests that humanity found itself propelled forward by our technologicalbrilliance but limited by the consequences of our political idiocy. Thedecisions we make in the next 50 years, he argues, may well decide our fate.For Marr, the most interesting part of human history lies just ahead.
+ e7 n# v/ R! s, D) c4 h: o7 J8 a3 T- M$ O% b
5 M4 C; l1 Y% N x
In theopening episode of a major new eight-part series, Andrew Marr sets off on anepic journey through the explosive events, changes, conflicts and triumphs thatshaped 70,000 years of human history. From our earliest beginnings in Africa,Marr traces the story of our nomadic ancestors as they spread out around theworld and settled down to become the first farmers and townspeople. He uncovers extraordinaryhandprints left in European caves nearly 30,000 years ago and shows how humaningenuity led to brilliant inventions that are still with us today. Marrdiscovers how the first civilisations were driven to extremes to try toovercome the forces of nature. And he reveals how day-to-day life in ancientEgypt had more in common with today’s soap operas than might be imagined. It’sall part of an incredible human story about adapting and surviving – againstthe odds.
6 w% Q* ^* j5 ?2 S! ^3 zFromour origins in Africa, global colonization and battles with nature to the firstfarmers and the emergence of religion and philosophy; from the rise of empires,brutal wars, revolutions in blood and iron to astonishing discoveries and thewonders of the digital age, Marr charts the major turning points, decisivemoments and pivotal questions – questions with which we’re still grappling now.
0 ~& h7 i" l- ^3 q9 h“We can’t hope to know all of the human story, but it does help to have the bigpicture because it’s really the story of who we are now,” says Marr. “We'vebeen brilliantly clever at reshaping the world around us – almost as clever aswe think we are – though not perhaps as wise. Therewill be challenges, triumphs and surprises – all theessentials of the story, except, of course, how it ends…”' T& t/ i+ Y* E& t2 E
With spectacularimages, compelling characters and incisive narration, this is an epic journeythrough human history and the story of the world we live in today, featuringdramatic reconstruction, documentary filming around the world and cutting-edgecomputer graphics.0 a. m6 B, X) E+ x; ^; A, B
. }% L7 X5 r7 }1 t: g
( s7 _2 g, n: V: a5 K
General * Y3 M! E5 p' B& D- ^- e* ^
Unique ID : 255106397656928543015409465604547528743(0xBFEBB47C88766A8B9C4892D9A707C827)
: |7 a& z! _/ ?Completename : andrew.marrs.history.of.the.world.s01e08.720.hdtv.x264-ftp.mkv
$ T; v5 ]0 L7 o6 f, E+ ]( xFormat : Matroska
# c8 e3 U0 W1 ^& J: J6 pFormat version :Version 2 % W# s% v3 X& Q: f6 V' t( Q) {2 w
File size : 1.18 GiB
Z. {, Q, [. w! w) g6 n( T% y/ |" YDuration : 59mn 6s
- A- x! a6 p8 D; FOverall bit rate : 2 867 Kbps
) ?8 o* L/ O" x+ UEncodeddate : UTC 2012-11-11 23:02:19
2 h ?6 O1 T- rWriting application : mkvmerge v4.3.0 ('Escape from the Island') built on Sep 52010 10:30:51
( `. h& E, C6 C4 \8 v6 k7 w' J9 tWriting library : libebml v1.0.0 + libmatroska v1.0.0 1 T9 }5 ]" {3 d3 [8 T: s0 f" e
/ g9 E4 Y/ m$ X' B6 Z
Video
5 ]1 w+ [- \$ a" l) OID : 1 ( q* D% Y2 t f" k; X
Format : AVC
- G u5 t ?+ F) wFormat/Info: Advanced Video Codec N0 c- g4 C$ c' d* f0 y# i( G5 P
Format profile: High@L4.1- F9 Y$ Q! I) F2 }: O% M0 k) c9 Y
Formatsettings, CABAC : Yes
7 R: j' q2 l7 Q/ S0 p6 jFormat settings, ReFrames : 5 frames
; c7 r2 B# h) Y, VCodec ID : V_MPEG4/ISO/AVC 0 `2 {2 m$ }- ?/ v: v
Duration : 59mn 6s
* E! h' w7 y2 sBitrate : 2 618 Kbps 2 k# n$ A8 Y* j% q: R
Width : 1 280 pixels
5 o: m2 o: l$ W" a. L9 A. _$ z7 J: MHeight : 720 pixels
) Z6 O) s4 q* F+ h0 k+ I* BDisplay aspect ratio : 16:9 * ~3 P0 {4 K5 P* c# _3 a
Frame rate : 25.000 fps 5 |& y) M' d! Q! n8 @9 y
Color space : YUV * v5 P0 J, H0 |
Chromasubsampling : 4:2:0
( J3 Y1 a) ?$ y, q6 J/ IBit depth : 8 bits 5 O9 Z* ?2 i6 i: b) m( X
Scantype : Progressive
* _& i( v D- g \; u! z) x& ABits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.114 . t$ e0 X* Y2 g+ y2 }0 r! o( K
Stream size :1.08 GiB (91%)
0 I- O" }6 R# g3 gWriting library : x264 core 129 r2230 1cffe9f $ @, _& J j' @$ n" D, O" O
Encodingsettings : cabac=1 / ref=5 / deblock=1:-1:-1 / analyse=0x3:0x113 / me=umh /subme=8 / psy=1 / psy_rd=1.00:0.15 / mixed_ref=1 / me_range=16 / chroma_me=1 /trellis=1 / 8x8dct=1 / cqm=0 / deadzone=21,11 / fast_pskip=1 /chroma_qp_offset=-3 / threads=18 / lookahead_threads=3 / sliced_threads=0 /nr=0 / decimate=1 / interlaced=0 / bluray_compat=0 / constrained_intra=0 /bframes=3 / b_pyramid=2 / b_adapt=2 / b_bias=0 / direct=3 / weightb=1 / open_gop=0/ weightp=2 / keyint=250 / keyint_min=25 / scenecut=40 / intra_refresh=0 /rc_lookahead=50 / rc=crf / mbtree=1 / crf=21.0 / qcomp=0.60 / qpmin=0 /qpmax=69 / qpstep=4 / ip_ratio=1.40 / aq=1:1.00
! \5 W$ Y, v3 @% s8 |Default: Yes & E7 H. I3 `0 |7 I" A. H2 Z3 y
Forced : No
9 E, j6 i2 ^: f" V3 L) u/ ]; I* x" y5 r' |8 ~! v! k. K2 k
Audio 6 y- a5 ?# {) k; w: R7 N, ?8 e3 H
ID : 2
, {) G u; x% {3 z4 j$ c5 KFormat :AC-3
3 |" D$ u6 r+ d& ^Format/Info: Audio Coding 3
6 j* S: J% d9 Q+ ^8 TModeextension : CM (complete main) % b @, j' f/ E2 g
Formatsettings, Endianness : Big
: R- h7 T8 E$ H) B- S0 oCodec ID : A_AC3
, l7 a0 y! \" l0 i7 aDuration : 59mn 6s ( u u7 ?- z- N* ?7 f4 Y
Bitrate mode : Constant 7 }6 z4 Y: z2 A: n7 \
Bit rate : 192 Kbps
8 s- u. r, T) x+ \5 sChannel(s): 2 channels
* s4 P- R7 L0 eChannelpositions : Front: L R ' P! {* f. r, K
Samplingrate : 48.0 KHz * w% X+ s% \4 f& F. l' e" `: I
Bit depth : 16 bits ( z+ I4 n0 p7 f4 c3 F6 q
Compression mode : Lossy 6 x( v+ b0 O/ q/ C* i7 X- Z
Delay relativeto video : 11ms # b7 ~, O1 q7 N" a
Stream size : 81.2 MiB (7%)
2 D$ \0 `, P5 Q5 P+ sTitle :English q' J" k0 e0 L" D) O% j. ^
Language : English * \) S2 v, L6 [# e
Default : Yes
/ A8 I/ V6 n' X; CForced : No 3 K \1 n1 Q' `$ d) f+ d l$ V
% A0 K* S# h% P; Q1 ~+ O01: http://dl.vmall.com/c0ko76d85w# Q% N; w u* ` Q/ y8 c8 ?
02: http://dl.vmall.com/c0p4ekzn57
) Y, d( h1 |- Z6 t b1 _03: http://dl.vmall.com/c0aaeawhlj6 f# `, @- Y7 c. n D/ ?
04: http://dl.vmall.com/c08elxnmbu
9 T R" k; H! d+ X05: http://dl.vmall.com/c0ttqo3sry
( g# `/ q: t2 C06: http://dl.vmall.com/c0vselmywl5 B1 v& T1 X9 E% P5 i
07: http://dl.vmall.com/c0y4hkimm2
( ^: I8 `! Y% A. P+ s8 A$ B+ A08: http://dl.vmall.com/c0t368ffro
- R5 E$ z9 i/ l, z$ z/ F
- g& a% y6 G1 `8 G
BBC-安德鲁玛尔的世界史-8集全-720P.torrent
(28.93 KB, 下载次数: 5)
i4 p) F: a7 K/ f8 A
|