Great Houses

Great Houses

14. The Ancient City Part 2

56 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio 14. The Ancient City Part 2

Descripción

In this episode of the Great Houses Forum, Gregory Treat continues the Ancient City Series with a deep dive into the six gentes maiores — the great patrician houses of ancient Rome — and the systems they used to pass virtue and character across generations. Gregory breaks down three core mechanisms of intergenerational transmission: the imagines (ancestral death masks worn at funerals), the laudatio funebris (a rigorous, accurate funeral oration covering every honor and shame), and the cursus honorum (the structured ladder of offices from military tribune to consul). He also covers adoption as a character-first alternative to bloodline succession, and the patron-client web that kept aristocratic conduct under constant public scrutiny.

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12 episodios

episode 9. The Myth of Universal Agency artwork

9. The Myth of Universal Agency

In this episode, Gregory explores the concept of "agency" versus "domain mastery." He argues that the tech industry's popular concept of universal "agency" is actually a form of political anachronism—projecting 21st-century software engineering success conditions onto all domains and eras. Instead, he proposes "domain mastery" as a more accurate framework, explaining how skills become automated through practice, enabling higher-level thinking, but don't transfer efficiently to distant domains. Using examples from ancient generals to modern tech elites struggling in politics, he demonstrates that expertise in one area doesn't automatically translate to success in another. The episode concludes by distinguishing between technical domains requiring specific expertise and essential human domains (parenting, faith, marriage) where everyone must act with confidence, challenging listeners to map their own mastered skills rather than assuming universal capability.

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episode 8. Keeping the Covenant artwork

8. Keeping the Covenant

In this episode, Gregory Treat explores how to build multi-generational "great houses" by identifying and keeping family covenants—agreements with God or higher principles that define a family's purpose and produce unusual success. Using the tragic story of the Fitz William family, whose estate was deliberately destroyed by post-WWII British socialists despite their exemplary treatment of workers, Treat illustrates how covenant-keeping families have been unjustly punished by envious political forces. He challenges listeners to discover their family's purpose by looking for areas of unusual success, and argues that inheritance should be tied to duty—like inheriting a castle on the giant-infested border or a dragon-slaying lance—rather than given equally for simply existing.

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