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HEB 99a: Tutorial - Senior Year
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Research and writing of the Senior Thesis.
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HEB 99a - Tutorial - Senior Year
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HEB 99b: Tutorial - Senior Year
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Research and writing of the Senior Thesis.
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HEB 99b - Tutorial - Senior Year
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Hebrew 160: The Origins and Development of the Classical Jewish Liturgy
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An examination of current scholarship and controversy on the origins of the classical liturgy and a consideration of the primary-source evidence. Related topics include: rabbinic liturgy and Second Temple sources, differences between the ancient Palestinian and Babylonian rites, the standard prayers and the origins of liturgical poetry (piyyut), the crystallization of the liturgy, and the emergence of local variations in the early Middle Ages.
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Hebrew 160 - The Origins and Development of the Classical Jewish Liturgy
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HINDI 101ab: Intensive Introductory Hindi
8.00 Credits
Harvard University
A complete first year course in one term. Provides an introduction to Hindi and Devanagari script, encompassing all four skills: speaking, listening, reading and writing.
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HINDI 101ab - Intensive Introductory Hindi
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HIS-STD B-18: The Protestant Reformation
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
In the 16th century hundreds of thousands of people surrendered religious beliefs, practices, and institutions that had organized and given meaning to daily life for the greater part of a millennium. The Protestant Reformation attempts to explain why this happened and how it changed history. Lectures, art, and readings present the movers and shakers of the Reformation; its development in representative cities and lands; its theologies and social philosophies; its impact on contemporary society and culture; the Catholic response; and its legacy to the modern world.
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HIS-STD B-18 - The Protestant Reformation
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HIS-STD B-45: The Darwinian Revolution
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
An examination of the intellectual structure and social context of evolutionary ideas as they emerged in the 19th and 20th centuries, with particular emphasis on Darwinism as a major transformation in Western thought. Topics include an introduction to origin stories in different cultures; the natural history tradition in the West; evolutionary thought before Darwin; key aspects of Darwin's ideas; the comparative reception of Darwinism in Britain, US, Germany, Russia and France; social Darwinism, eugenics and racial theories; early genetics and the search for the gene; religious controversy then and now.
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HIS-STD B-45 - The Darwinian Revolution
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HIST 1012: Identity in Classical Antiquity
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
What did it mean to be Greek, Athenian, or Roman in classical antiquity? We explore the different ways in which such identities were articulated from the archaic Greek world to the world of the Roman Empire, considering textual and archaeological evidence.
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HIST 1012 - Identity in Classical Antiquity
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HIST 1060: Europe and Its Borders, 950-1550
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Surveys an early phase of European expansion and colonial activity in areas including the Iberian Peninsula, Sicily, the eastern Mediterranean, eastern Europe, the Baltic lands, Wales, and Ireland. A major goal of the course is to explore how a European identity emerged in the process of contact and conflict in the new borderlands. Readings will include primary and secondary sources.
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HIST 1060 - Europe and Its Borders, 950-1550
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HIST 1070: Heresy and Religious Debate in the Middle Ages
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
The course explores controversies about heresy and orthodoxy within the medieval church, ranging from the persecution of heretical movements to clashes between the pope and European princes and between competing religious orders or academic communities. With an emphasis on (translated) source texts, the course examines how such heresy conflicts contributed to the emergence of religious identities and the development of enduring forms of religious debate.
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HIST 1070 - Heresy and Religious Debate in the Middle Ages
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HIST 1224: Britain Since 1760: Island, Europe, Empire
4.00 Credits
Harvard University
Survey history of Great Britain from the reign of George III to the administration of Tony Blair. These centuries witnessed Britain's spectacular emergence as the world's leading industrial and imperial power; and its dramatic decline in influence after World War II. How did Britons experience domestic and global change? Themes include political reform, social class, national identity, popular culture, rise and fall of empire, relations with Europe. Extensive use of written and visual primary sources.
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HIST 1224 - Britain Since 1760: Island, Europe, Empire
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