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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. From Alexander II; last imperial decades, world war, revolution and rise and fall of the Soviet Union.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. Europe, 1939-1945; military operations and occupations, the Holocaust, politics, diplomacy, technology, the Pacific Theater and the atomic bomb.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. Analyzes the American military policy that emerged after WWII in context of the American military experience from 1945 to 1975. Investigates how the Korean War and Vietnam War represent a break from the traditional American practice of war.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. Social, legal, political, religious and intellectual developments in England from the early Middle Ages through the Reformation.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. The British Isles from the accession of James I to the eve of the first Reform Act. Change and continuity amid the rise and fall of royal dynasties, civil war, scientific and commercial revolutions, revolt in the colonies and the politicization of groups traditionally excluded from government: religious dissenters, Irish Catholics, artisans and women.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. British political, social, economic, cultural and sexual history to the present.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. Political, economic and cultural trends in British history since the end of the Second World War.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. British global expansion from the 17th century; warfare, trade, and cultural exchanges; responses of colonized peoples; decline of empire in the 20th century; creation of the British Commonwealth of Nations.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. The political, social, economic and cultural history of Canada, from the early European voyages of exploration (1500) to the present.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours. A series of demographic, social, religious and political convulsions transformed England into a modern nation state during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. England was also transformed, during this time period, into the preeminent naval and military power of the Atlantic World (i.e. the Americas, the Atlantic, western Europe and the Mediterranean). By following the development and accomplishments of England's fighting forces, this course examines the role of the military in early-modern England, the effects of the aforementioned convulsions on the military and the process by which England established itself as the West's premier superpower.
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