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First Ladies
- Dolley Madison’s Life before James Madison – Constitutional Conversations – VIDEO
- Dolley Madison’s Life before James Madison – Quiz
- Dolley Madison as First Lady – Constitutional Conversations – VIDEO
- Dolley Madison as First Lady – Quiz
- Dolley Madison and Slavery – Constitutional Conversations – VIDEO
- Dolley Madison and Slavery – Quiz
- Dolley Madison and Politics – Constitutional Conversations – VIDEO
- Dolley Madison and Politics – Quiz
- Dolley Madison and Constitutional Thinking – Constitutional Conversations – VIDEO
- Dolley Madison and Constitutional Thinking – Quiz
- Dolley Madison: A Model for Our Times – Constitutional Conversations – VIDEO
- Dolley Madison: A Model for Our Times – Quiz
- Eleanor Rosalynn Carter – Lesson
- Eleanor Rosalynn Carter – Quiz
- Abigail Adams – The Second First Lady – Lesson
- Abigail Adams – The Second First Lady – Quiz
- Dolley Madison – America’s First First Lady? – Lesson
- Dolley Madison – America’s First First Lady? – Quiz
- Elizabeth Monroe – the Fifth First Lady – Lesson
- Elizabeth Monroe – the Fifth First Lady – Quiz
- Louisa Adams: The First First Lady Born Outside the US – Lesson
- Louisa Adams: The First First Lady Born Outside the US – Quiz
- Anna Harrison – The First Lady Who Never Made It to the White House – Lesson
- Anna Harrison – The First Lady Who Never Made It to the White House – Quiz
- First Lady Julia Tyler – Started a Tradition Still in Use Today – Lesson
- First Lady Julia Tyler – Started a Tradition Still in Use Today – Quiz
- Sarah Polk – A Very Religious First Lady – Lesson
- Sarah Polk – A Very Religious First Lady – Quiz
- First Lady Rachel Jackson Never Made It to the White House – Lesson
- First Lady Rachel Jackson Never Made It to the White House – Quiz
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American Artists
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Veterans
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Founding Fathers
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Famous Women
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Poets
- Emily Dickinson – The Myth – Lesson
- Emily Dickinson – The Myth – Quiz
- Edgar Allan Poe – Inventor of Modern Detective Stories – Lesson
- Edgar Allan Poe – Inventor of Modern Detective Stories – Quiz
- Robert Frost – One of America’s Favorite Poets – Lesson
- Robert Frost – One of America’s Favorite Poets – Quiz
- T.S. Eliot – The Poet Who Gave Cats Secret Names – Lesson
- T.S. Eliot – The Poet Who Gave Cats Secret Names – Quiz
- Walt Whitman – America’s Poet of the People – Lesson
- Walt Whitman – America’s Poet of the People – Quiz
- E.E. Cummings – Making Poetry into Puzzles – Lesson
- E.E. Cummings – Making Poetry into Puzzles – Quiz
- John Keats and the Rise of Romantic Poetry – Lesson
- John Keats and the Rise of Romantic Poetry – Quiz
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow – The Most Famous American of His Day – Lesson
- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow – The Most Famous American of His Day – Quiz
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Poetry
- Renaissance Poetry and History’s Most Famous Poet – Lesson
- Renaissance Poetry and History’s Most Famous Poet – Quiz
- Epic Poetry: The Earliest Literary Art Form – Lesson
- Epic Poetry: The Earliest Literary Art Form – Quiz
- Neoclassical Poetry Favored Ancient Greek and Roman Styles – Lesson
- Neoclassical Poetry Favored Ancient Greek and Roman Styles – Quiz
- Romanticism – An Emotional Era of Poetry – Lesson
- Romanticism – An Emotional Era of Poetry – Quiz
- Victorian Poetry – Lesson
- Victorian Poetry – Quiz
- Modernist Poetry and Ezra Pound – Lesson
- Modernist Poetry and Ezra Pound – Quiz
- Postmodernism – A New Era of Poetry – Lesson
- Postmodernism – A New Era of Poetry – Quiz
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Inventors
Epic Poetry: The Earliest Literary Art Form – Lesson
The first poem was written thousands of years ago.
For millennia, writers have expressed themselves through poetry, an intimate literary art form that dates back to 2000 BC.
The earliest recognized form of poetry is called “epic,” a type of long narration that usually explores an ancient character’s adventures. The word “epic” is derived from the Greek word “epos,” meaning “story, word, poem.”
While the characteristics of epics vary across different cultures, they typically feature a formal style, third-person narration, an omniscient narrator, and a brave hero who embarks on a journey.
Epics also usually take place in the ancient world, address concerns about the future of civilization, and include obstacles – often supernatural – that the hero must face.
The First Epic Poetry
Epic of Gilgamesh, an ancient story about a Mesopotamian king, is credited as not only the first poem ever written but also the oldest piece of literature. Turkish Assyriologist Hormuzd Rassam discovered the ancient text on 12 Akkadian-language tablets in the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal’s library, which was in ruins at the time.
While the epic poem was incomplete when it was first found, many of the gaps have been filled in by fragments of the tablets located around Mesopotamia and Anatolia. Its author remains unknown.
For hundreds of years, no one could read the tablets, which were transcribed in the earliest form of writing known as cuneiform. This involved making wedge-shaped dents in soft clay using reeds.
In the mid-19th century, George Smith, a self-taught Londoner studying the ancient tablets in a British museum, figured out a way to translate the texts, and the Epic of Gilgamesh was revealed.
The story follows Gilgamesh, a king and son of a goddess who rules the city of Uruk, found in modern-day Iraq. He is a warrior who erects a spectacular city, but the gods are not happy with him because he is full of lust and behaves like a tyrant. As punishment, they create Enkidu, a wild man whose job is to stop Gilgamesh’s oppression.
More Famous Epics
Epic of Gilgamesh might be the oldest poem known to man, but Homer’s The Iliad and The Odyssey are often credited as the most well-known epics. Homer’s stories cover the Trojan War and Odysseus’ journey home after leaving Troy.
The two poems were written in Epic Greek, which is also called Homeric Greek. While it is unclear exactly when they were written, many believe Homer lived between 850 and 650 BC.
A second famous epic is the Mahābhārata, an ancient Indian story written in Sanskrit. Researchers believe the poem dates back to 400 BC, but some scholars disagree, insisting it was transcribed in the eighth or ninth century BC. The Indian poem has a remarkable 200,000 lines, making it the longest ever written.
Dante Alighieri wrote the epic poem The Divine Comedy over twelve years, finishing the work in 1320. It follows Dante as he travels through Hell, Purgatory, and Heaven. The poem is divided into sections called Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso.
Beowulf, another well-known example of epic poetry, was written between 975 and 1025 AD. The Old English poem tells the story of the hero Beowulf, a warrior who fights monsters and a dragon in a mythical Scandinavian setting.
“Do not grieve, wise warrior! It is better for each man that he avenge his friend than to mourn him much,” the poem reads. “Each of us must accept the end of life here in this world — so we must work while we can to earn fame before death.”

- The earliest form of poetry is called “epic poetry.”
- Epic of Gilgamesh is the oldest poem ever written.
- Epics usually feature a formal style, third-person narration, and a brave hero.