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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Political, cultural, economic survey of later medieval Europe. Reform movements in Church, Crusades, evolution of universities, 12th-century Renaissance, growth of national states.
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3.00 Credits
Political and social structure of cultural transformation. Italian city-states, their economies, populations, values. Humanism, art, religion, from Dante to Machiavelli.
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3.00 Credits
Protestant revolt, Catholic reaction, wars of religion. Renaissance culture in northern Europe. Science, witchcraft, absolutism, from Luther to Cromwell.
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3.00 Credits
Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries. Politics of social conflict under absolutism, enlightened despotism and constitutionalism. War as political and social catalyst. Rationalist critique and Enlightenment challenge; elite and popular culture; art and literature in history.
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3.00 Credits
Long-term processes of English growth to end of Middle Ages; Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Viking and Norman invasions; rise of kingship and national unity, law, origin and growth of Parliament.
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3.00 Credits
Economic, social and political change from dominance of landed aristocracy in 18th century, rise of industrial middle classes in 19th century, concluding in 1970s with creation, expansion and recent malfunctions of welfare state. Battle for political democracy, development of two-party system, rise of Labour Party, end of British rule inIreland, revolt of Edwardian women, careers of Gladstone and Churchill, Britain in two world wars.
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3.00 Credits
French history from 15th century to French Revolution. Culture and counterculture, structure of society and roots of social conflict; evolution of French government, growth of secularism, role of war, art and literature.
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3.00 Credits
Spain from Roman times to recent past, emphasis on period since 1700.
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3.00 Credits
Covers the major political, social and cultural developments that shaped Germany between 1871 and the present. Although designed as a general survey, it also addresses two more specific questions through readings and films: How have post-war Germans made sense of their own history? And how has the Nazi period been integrated and contextualized within modern German history and historiography?
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3.00 Credits
This course is a survey of Imperial Russia from 1682 to 1917. Students examine the legacy of Peter the Great, the evolution of autocracy, modernization, imperial power, the intelligentsia, the nationalities problem, the Great Reforms, revolutionary and women?s movements, the Revolution of 1905, and the last attempts to consolidate tsarist authority.
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