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HIST 312: Roman History
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
See CLAS 312.
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HIST 312 - Roman History
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HIST 319: Geographical History
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This thematic course illustrates how geographic methods and approaches can further our understanding of past societies and civilizations. To do so, it uses the paradigm of the Atlantic World from 1400 to 1888. It analyzes the relationships of Western European, West African, and North and South American peoples to the places they inhabited and came to inhabit after 1400, as well as the intraregional, interregional, and transoceanic networks that existed and emerged after contact and colonization. It investigates how both regional and hemispheric geographical attributes affected social and cultural development and contributed to social, cultural, and political changes over time-this includes: climatic and environmental factors, trade and distribution, land use, demographic shifts, and perceptions of the physical geography of the land. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Bergmann.
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HIST 319 - Geographical History
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HIST 321: The Colonial Period ofAmerican History
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This course will emphasize the European background of the American colonies and the story of the settlements in North America during the 17th and early 18th centuries. Attention will be given to the social and intellectual aspects of colonial life as well as to the developments of colonial government. Speaking-intensive. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Bergmann.
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HIST 321 - The Colonial Period ofAmerican History
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HIST 322: The Revolutionary Period ofAmerican History
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
A continuation of HIST 321. The chief subjects of discussion will be the development of British colonial policy, colonial rivalries, the growth ofAmerican resistance to the mother country, the American revolution, and the struggle to define the Nation to 1789. Speaking-intensive. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Bergmann.
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HIST 322 - The Revolutionary Period ofAmerican History
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HIST 323: The Early Republic,1789-1824
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
The Constitution was only the starting point in the establishment of a national government; equally important were the precedents set by the first generation of men who held office. This course examines the origins of our present governmental system and explores the beginnings of the shift from an agrarian economy to a commercial and industrial one. Speaking-intensive. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Bergmann.
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HIST 323 - The Early Republic,1789-1824
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HIST 324: TheAge of Jackson,1824-1845
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This course surveys the history of the United States from the election of 1824 to the outbreak of the Mexican War in 1846. Primary emphases include: the rise of democracy, the growth of the market, and the ferment of social reform; Indian removal and territorial expansion; the Bank War and the Nullification Crisis; the growth of southern sectionalism; and the development of competing definitions of the Republic. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Malvasi.
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HIST 324 - TheAge of Jackson,1824-1845
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HIST 325: The Crisis of the Union,1845-1861
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This course surveys the history of the United States from the outbreak of the MexicanWar in 1846 to the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861. Primary emphases include: the debate over territorial expansion and the spread of slavery; the collapse of the Second American Party System; the general political upheaval of the 1850s; the election of Abraham Lincoln; the secession of the southern states; the formation of the Confederacy; and the outbreak of civil war. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Malvasi.
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HIST 325 - The Crisis of the Union,1845-1861
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HIST 326: The CivilWar and Reconstruction,1861-1877
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This course surveys the history of the United States from the outbreak of Civil War in 1861 to the end of Reconstruction in 1877. Primary emphases include: the military history of the war; the political and social history of the Confederacy and the Union; and the history of Reconstruction in the South. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Mr. Malvasi.
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HIST 326 - The CivilWar and Reconstruction,1861-1877
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HIST 327: The GildedAge,1879-1919
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This course surveys the history of the United States from the end of Reconstruction in 1877 to the outbreak of World War I in 1914. Primary emphases include: the rise of big business and the organization of labor; the growth of cities and the creation of urban politics; the agrarian revolt and the Progressive reform movement; the transformation of American manners and culture; and the emergence of the United States as a world power. Three hours. Mr. Malvasi.
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HIST 327 - The GildedAge,1879-1919
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HIST 328: The United States in the 20th Century
3.00 Credits
Randolph-Macon College
This course will narrate the changes in modern American economic, social, political and intellectual realms. Although HIST 212 is not a prerequisite, it is strongly recommended. Offered alternate years. Three hours. Staff.
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HIST 328 - The United States in the 20th Century
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