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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(216) (Also offered as CAMS 3255.) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Caner From the beginning of Rome to the reign of Justinian. The growth of the Roman Republic and Empire. Roman civilization and its influence upon later history.
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3.00 Credits
(218) (Also offered as CAMS 3256, HEB 3218, and JUDS 3218.) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: CAMS 1101 or 1102 or CAMS 3253/HIST 3301 or HIST 3320 or 3325 or INTD 3260 or HEB 1103 or JUDS 3202 or instructor consent; open to juniors or higher. Taught in English. May not be used to meet the foreign language requirement. Miller The political, historical and religious currents in Greco-Roman Palestine. Includes the Jewish Revolts, sectarian developments, the rise of Christianity and the Talmudic academies.
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3.00 Credits
(257) (Also offered as CAMS 3250.) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Recommended preparation: HIST 3325 or CAMS 3255. Caner A critical approach to the evolution of Christian thought, social organization and institutions ca. 50- 450 C.E. Topics include gnosticism, apostolic succession, heresy, orthodoxy.
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3.00 Credits
(217) (Also offered as CAMS 3243.) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Caner The profound social and cultural changes that redefined the cities, frontiers, and economies of the classical world and led to the Middle Ages. Developments in the eastern and western Mediterranean lands between the second and seventh centuries, including neo-Platonism, the spread of Christianity, Rabbinic Judaism, and Islam.
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3.00 Credits
(250) Either semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. A survey of the major developments from the fourth through the fifteenth centuries: religious controversies, the theme system, the Crusades, Byzantine civilization, its law, art, literature, and its impact upon European and Russian civilization.
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3.00 Credits
(219) First semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Olson The decline of Rome, rise of Christianity, the barbarian invasions and kingdoms, culminating in the civilizations of the Carolingian Empire, of Byzantium, and of Islam.
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3.00 Credits
(220) Second semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Olson The history of Europe from the tenth through the fourteenth centuries. The development and expansion of European civilization, the revival of a money economy and town life, the development of feudal monarchy, the conflict of Empire and Papacy, the Crusades.
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3.00 Credits
(271) First semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Gouwens Europe in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
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3.00 Credits
(272) Second semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Europe in the sixteenth century with emphasis on religious developments, rise of the modern state, birth of science, expansion of Europe, and the Commercial Revolution.
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3.00 Credits
(273) First semester. Three credits. Prerequisite: Open to juniors or higher. Conflict of constitutionalism and absolutism, colonial expansion and rivalry, development of science, and the age of reason, the age of the baroque, the age of Louis XIV.
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