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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Detailed study of the social, political, and intellectual life of the Greeks; influences of Greek philosophy and culture upon modern civilization
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Origin and expansion of Rome, its political and cultural life, including rise of Christianity, technical achievements, government and laws, and the enduring influence of Rome on the civilization of Western Europe
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Institutions and ideals in the middle ages; feudalism, feudal monarchy, Holy Roman Empire, papacy, monasteries, towns, guilds, and universities. The classical revival, the rise of humanism, and the artistic innovations of Renaissance Europe will be emphasized
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Development of English political institutions, law, courts, legal practice, and traditions
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Course covers the period after Napoleon, during which successive revolutions erupted against the Old Regime, the Industrial Revolution brought on great changes, modern Italy and Germany were formed, and nationalism, militarism, and imperial rivalries moved Europe toward World War I. (Note--students who have already taken and received credit for either History 3613 formerly Europe, 1815-1870, or History 3913, formerly Europe, 1870-1919, may not take this course for credit.)
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Prereq.: Departmental approval. Eastern Europe since 1918. This course analyzes the important role Eastern Europe (Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and the Balkan nations) has played in Twentieth Century European and World History, especially as a key factor in the origins of both World Wars, the Cold War, and recent Soviet bloc politics. Special attention is given to nationality issues, the development of national consciousness, and state-building throughout the region.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--A survey of industrialization processes around the globe in modern times using a comparative methodology which analyzes the effects of industrialization on social, political, economic, intellectual, and diplomatic patterns and structures.
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3.00 Credits
n 3 hours--A seminar on various topics in United States, European and World History. It will be credited to one of those fields on the history major.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--A study of the principal European and Asiatic nations, and the international relations of these countries with each other and the U.S.; the rise and aims of the totalitarian states, particularly Hitler's Germany and Soviet Russia; conflicts between the democratic, fascist and communist states which serve as the background for World War II. (Note--students who have already taken and received credit for History 4113, formerly World History Since 1919, may not take this course for credit.)
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3.00 Credits
3 hours--Germany since the Thirty Years War, the rise of Prussia, formation of the German Empire, Germany in World War I, the Nazis, World War II, and divided Germany since World War II
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