Instructional Video3:20
Curated Video

The Tigua and Mission Ysleta in El Paso

3rd - 12th
Travel to El Paso to learn about the Tigua people and the Ysleta Mission, the oldest settlement in Texas.
Instructional Video3:39
Curated Video

Comanche

3rd - 12th
Travel to the Lawton, Oklahoma and learn about the Comanche Nation the Comanche National Museum and Cultural Center.
Instructional Video12:41
PBS

Did Europeans Enslave Native Americans?

12th - Higher Ed
Here in the United States, when we think about the term "slavery" we think about the transatlantic slave trade and the institution of chattel slavery. But this wasn't the only type of enslavement that took place in the Americas and the...
Instructional Video10:07
PBS

Concentration Camps Are Older Than World War II

12th - Higher Ed
We're all familiar with the haunting images of the concentration camps of World War II. But the history of those concentration camps extends back to the late 19th. century and the invention of barbed wire and repeating rifle [see...
Instructional Video8:48
Curated Video

The Knight who Stole a Kingdom | The Life & Times of El Cid

12th - Higher Ed
This video provides a detailed and engaging account of the life of El Cid, a Spanish folk hero and chivalric icon of the Reconquista. It delves into his rise to fame, his loyalty to his lords, and his eventual conquest of Valencia....
Instructional Video10:23
Curated Video

He Ran 4,000 Miles to Reclaim his Kingdom | The Life & Times of Abd Al-Rahman

12th - Higher Ed
He Ran 4,000 Miles to Reclaim his Kingdom | The Life & Times of Abd Al-Rahman
Instructional Video10:00
Curated Video

Why the English Knighted a Convicted Pirate | The Life & Times of Henry Morgan

12th - Higher Ed
Yo ho ho and a bottle of rum! Usually when a pirate who's plundered numerous cities and exploded his prisoners is captured he's sent to the gallows, but for one Henry Morgan the guy was knighted by the king and sent back to Jamaica to...
Instructional Video12:38
Curated Video

Basque child refugees: untold stories from the archives

12th - Higher Ed
National Aarchives: This video explores primary sources looking at refugee Basque children in 1937.These were the last words that Loli Gomez ever heard from her father as he said goodbye to her at Bilbao port in May 1937. Just under...
Instructional Video5:29
Curated Video

Lady of Elche: The Mysterious Iberian Statue Reconstructed in the Past & Present, with History.

Pre-K - Higher Ed
I'm an artist that brings history back to life by creating famous figures from the past in the modern day. I think the modern-day creation brings them closer to us, reminding us that they were just people too. Today’s subject is the...
Instructional Video4:56
Curated Video

Francisco Goya's Third of May Painting

9th - Higher Ed
On May 2nd, 1808, Spanish citizens rose up against the occupying French forces. The next day, the French struck back at dawn. Hundreds of Spanish citizens were rounded up and shot. When Ferdinand VII regained power, Goya requested...
Instructional Video3:45
Curated Video

Political and Personal Struggle in Francisco Goya's Paintings

9th - Higher Ed
In the early 1800s, the French invaded Spain and overthrew Ferdinand VII. Goya initially supported the French invasion, hoping they would restore democracy and end the inquisition but the reality of living through war affected Goya...
Instructional Video1:50
Curated Video

Allegories of State Violence and Tribalism in Francisco Goya's Black Paintings

9th - Higher Ed
Judith and Holofernes depicts a story from the Bible in which Judith and her maidservant behead the tyrant Holofernes. By removing the peripheral iconographies and focusing only on the violent action, Goya brings this story into his...
Instructional Video3:53
Curated Video

Overview of the Disasters of War Series by Francisco Goya

9th - Higher Ed
Francisco Goya's series of aquatint prints, The Disasters of War are hard to look at. Rather than focus on the bombastics of usual war art, he depicts the suffering of regular people - the starving, assaults, executions. He does not...
Instructional Video4:30
Curated Video

Francisco Goya: From Light to the Dark Paintings

9th - Higher Ed
Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes began working as a court painter for King Charles III of Spain in 1786. He painted mainly portriats and was well-known for his romantic style. His artistic style turned darker, however, when his...