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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 5.00 Credits
No course description available.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Explores important issues in U.S. history at the undergraduate level. Each semester, instructors select different topics of importance for political, cultural, social, ethnic, and/or gender history.
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to the discipline of history and how it is practiced professionally across the globe. Students examine historiography, methodology and the varying types of history, including social, cultural, political, biographical, gender, memory and interdisciplinary approaches. Throughout the course students will engage in the reading, research, and writing of history.
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3.00 Credits
Explores the formation of civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Mediterranean, the Indus Valley, and China from 3000 B.C.E. to 500 B.C.E. It focuses on the foundations of settled societies, trade networks between these peoples, and cultural borrowing.
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3.00 Credits
Explores Hellenic and Hellenistic history from the rise of the city-state to the decline of Alexander¿s empire, focusing on political and social developments, philosophical responses, and attitudes toward non-greeks as city-states move from defensive to offensive military stances and as Alexander spreads Hellenic culture throughout his empire.
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3.00 Credits
Explores political, social, and religious developments in the Roman Republic, the Principate, and the Dominate, emphasizing reactions to shifts in government, the creation of the empire, borrowing from previous and contemporaneous cultures, the rise of Christianity, and increasing challenges to state authority by the fourth century.
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3.00 Credits
Explores culture, government, and society in the Middle Ages, with special emphasis on religious movements such as the crusades, intellectual movements such as scholasticism and humanism, social responses to the rise of cities, and attitudes towards Jews and Muslims in Christian Europe.
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3.00 Credits
Explores the intense intellectual, religious, and social changes Europe experienced from the late Middle Ages through the Renaissance/Reformation era. Special attention will be paid to the rise of powerful monarchies, the breakdown of religious unity, reactions to the voyage of discovery, and the Scientific Revolution.
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3.00 Credits
Explores revolutionary agitation in Europe and the Western Hemisphere during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The course will examine the causation of the revolutions in America, France, and Haiti in the eighteenth century as well as the Industrial Revolution and the revolutions of 1820, 1830, and 1848.
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3.00 Credits
Explores political and social situations in Europe and the world from the Crimean War until the outbreak of World War I. The course will review imperialism in Africa and China, as well as the situation of women, workers, and minorities struggling for political rights in the late nineteenth century.
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