FOUNDATIONAL COURSE 2: RULERS AND RELIGION--TEXT AND CONTEXT

Similar documents
FOUNDATIONAL COURSE 2: RULERS AND RELIGION--TEXT AND CONTEXT

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY LIBERAL STUDIES PROGRAM SYLLABUS. THE FOUNDATIONS OF MODERNITY LSHV 442 Section 01 (Fall, 2015) Thursday 6:30 9:15 PM ICC 204A

Hist 304 Western Europe in the Middle Ages, Spring Sam Collins Robinson B377B Office hours M 2-3 and by appointment

HIST 311: Augustus Caesar to Charlemagne: Europe in the First Millennium (3 credit hours) Instructor: Craig M Nakashian Phone:

Zach Schulz, Office: REC 421. Office hours: Wednesdays, 9:45-10:45am and Thursdays, 2:00-3:00pm, or by appointment.

Faith and Reason in the Middle Ages (BLHS 105) Fall 2018

HIST5200 HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY: EARLY - MEDIEVAL New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary

Professor Edward Watts Humanities 2 HUMANITIES 2 SYLLABUS

HRS 131: MEDIEVAL CULTURE Professor Mary Doyno Fall 2015 Tuesdays 10:30-11:45am Calaveras 123 Thursdays (on-line)

E UROPE IN THE H IGH M IDDLE A GES ( AD)

Justo L. González. The Story of Christianity. Vol. 1. The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation. Revised and Updated. HarperOne, 2010.

Department of History University of Manitoba

G r e e k s, R o m a n s, K i n g s a n d C r u s a d e r s : E u r o p e a n H i s t o r y t o

BLHS-108 Enlightenment, Revolution and Democracy Fall 2017 Mondays 6:30-10:05pm Room: C215

THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY POLITICS, SOCIETY, AND SOCIAL THOUGHT IN EUROPE I: SYLLABUS

CHURCH HISTORY I CHURCH HISTORY TO THE REFORMATION

Medieval Italy Rutgers University Department of History 510:351(01) Tuesday/Thursday 2:50-4:10 Murray Hall 115

RCIA Significant Moments from the Past Session 25

HRS 126/HIST 126 (GE Area C4) FALL 2010 DR. NYSTROM 2 SECTIONS IN ARC 1011 (M 6-8:50) 2 ONLINE SECTIONS

FAITH AND REASON IN THE MIDDLE AGES (BLHS 105) Professors Paasch, McNamer and Ray Syllabus, Fall 2015

Spring 2013 HI 213 & RN 208 Sacred and Secular Power in Christianity and Islam Tuesday and Thursday, 11:00 AM 12:30 PM

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

S Y L L A B U S. Sept 19 Course Introduction: Modernity and the Pre-Modern West (J. Hankins) Graeco-Roman Antiquity

READINGS IN WORLD CHRISTIAN HISTORY

HISTORY 387 / RELIGIOUS STUDIES 376 A Global History of Christianity Spring 2017

History of Christianity I (to AD 843)

Medieval and Renaissance Europe

Humanities 102: The Search for Values in the Light of Western History and Religion (Spring 2008)

FAITH AND REASON IN THE MIDDLE AGES (BLHS 105) Professors Lamm, Paasch, and Ray Syllabus, Spring 2014 (Provisional)

Key Terms and People. Section Summary. The Later Middle Ages Section 1

SYLLABUS RELG 240, Introduction to Christianity University of South Carolina

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

HIST/HRS 126 (GE Area C2) HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY TO THE REFORMATION FALL 2017 DR. NYSTROM MW 1:30-2:45 MENDOCINO 2009 CONTACT INFORMATION

Assessment: The Roman Catholic Church in Medieval Europe

History 205: European History from Antiquity to 1700

Chapter 9 Reading Guide/Study Guide Section One Transforming the Roman World (pages )

CH 2030 History of Christianity I Working Syllabus Fall 2010

The Rise of Europe. Chapter 7

Chapter 12: Crusades and Culture in the Middle Ages, Lesson 2: The Crusades

HRS 126: HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY TO THE REFORMATION Professor Mary Doyno Summer 2016 On-Line

The Reformation. Context, Characters Controversies, Consequences Class 1: Introduction and Brief Review of Church Histoy

Spring 2019 Wed. 6:30-9:30 LSHV Jan. 16 April 23 Prof. Frederick Ruf. William James: Writings, Letters, Life

The Crusades. Chapter 9 2/1/13. The Fall of the Holy Land. A. The Fall of the Holy Land. The Crusades, Military Orders and The Inquisition

A. After the Roman Empire collapsed, western Europe was ruled by Germanic tribes.

+ To Jesus Through Mary. Name: Per. Date: Eighth Grade Religion ID s

Frederick Douglass Academy Global Studies

History of Western Civilization 1

History 3613/Medieval Studies 3610: History of the Crusades David Perry Course Description:

History of The Catholic Church Part II

University of Texas at Austin Western Civilization in Medieval Times Spring 2017 Syllabus (Subject to change)

1. What key religious event does the map above depict? 2. What region are the arrows emanating from? 3. To what region are 3 of the 4 arrows heading?

Office Hours are Tuesdays 1:15-2:30. If you cannot come at that time, please me to set up an appointment.

the road to Avignon B. BONIFACE VIII BONIFACE VIII A century of suffering: Plague, war and schism POPE ST. CELESTINE V Chapter 11

Ganado Unified School District (Social Studies/6 th Grade)

Preachers, Witches, Riots, and Diets: The Reformation and European Society,

Bentley Chapter 16 Study Guide: The Two Worlds of Christendom

HIST 1011: Greeks, Romans, Kings, & Crusaders: European History to 1600

Southern Methodist University. Christian Theology: Faith Seeking Understanding RELI January 2018

The Crusades. Summary. Contents. Rob Waring. Level Before Reading Think Ahead During Reading Comprehension... 5

Anti-Semitism and History HST Mon 6:30-9:15pm Morton 212 Instructor: Dr. Jarrod Tanny, Spring 2012

Chapter 6, lesson 3 CULTURE of the MIDDLE AGES

PMIN 225: CHURCH HISTORY

HTST : The History of Europe (Medieval Europe)

CONTENTS. Letters to the Students Letter to the Teacher A Classical Approach to Education

Chapter 12: Crusades and Culture in the Middle Ages

History 181 Europe Transformed: From Rome to the Renaissance. Office: Maxey Office Hours: Mon, Thus 1:30-3:00; Fr 10-10:50

Texts which you are required to buy: Williston Walker, et. al., A History of the Christian Church, fourth edition.

History 101: Introduction to Medieval and Early Modern Europe MWF King 341: Section 1 10:00-10:50; Section 2 1:30-2:20

Renaissance. Humanism (2) Medici Family. Perspective (2)

AH/RL/HS 253 FROM PONTIUS PILATE TO THEODOSIUS: THE ADVENT OF CHRISTIANITY IES Abroad Rome

THE RENAISSANCE

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

MEDIEVAL & REFORMATION CHURCH STUDY QUESTIONS

Name Class Date. MATCHING In the space provided, write the letter of the person that matches each description. Some answers will not be used.

THE CHURCH S MIDDLE-AGED SPREAD HAD NO LOVE HANDLES. Lesson 6: The Dark Ages When The Scriptures Are Ignored, The Light Goes Out

World History: Connection to Today. Chapter 8. The Rise of Europe ( )

1. Base your answer to the question on the cartoon below and on your knowledge of social studies.

Chapter 8: The Rise of Europe ( )

HISTORY 119: SYLLABUS THE CRUSADES AND THE NEAR EAST,

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

Catch the Spirit GRADE EIGHT UNIT 2: LESSONS 1-2. This week, your child learned that: Family Talk Time. Meditation for This Week:

Course Syllabus - Pierce College 2018 History 1 Introduction to Western Civilization. Office Hours: 3:00-3:40 pm M-TH or by appointment

History of Political Thought I: Justice, Virtue, and the Soul

THE PROTESTANT REFORMATION 500 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OCTOBER 31, OCTOBER 31, 2017

Church History. Title: Constantine's Influence on the Growth and Development of Christianity

I hope you enjoy this free printable from Feel free to print as many copies as you need for your own personal use.

History 101, Sections 1-3 Fall 2017 State University of New York at Stony Brook MW 12:00-12:50, PLUS section meeting Melville W4550

History 335 Crusades: Contact and Conflict in the Mediterranean World

University of Toronto Department of Political Science POL200Y1Y: Visions of the Just/Good Society Summer 2016

What is the difference between a monastic order and another religious order like a mendicant friar? Give an example for each.

Find the two remaining documents from yesterday s document packet. Let s look at Francisco Pizarro s Journal Turn in to homework box when finished

Christian Perspectives on War, Peace, and Revolution

FND101i Medieval Church History. Fall 2016 Course Outline

HISTORY 3305 THE ROMAN EMPIRE

European History Elementary Grades Syllabus

Knight Templar s being burned at the stake

Theology of the Human Person RLGR 6031 DRAFT SYLLABUS. Spring Semester Tuesday, 5:00-6:50

History of Islamic Civilization II

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY BACHELOR OF ARTS IN LIBERAL STUDIES PROGRAM

Name: Period: Date: Chapter 18 The Later Middle Ages Study Guide

Transcription:

This syllabus is subject to change FOUNDATIONAL COURSE 2: RULERS AND RELIGION--TEXT AND CONTEXT Georgetown University Liberal Studies Program LSHV-602-01 Spring, 2015 J.H. Moran Cruz Office: ICC 617A email: moranj@georgetown.edu The approach taken in the Foundational courses is primarily historical.their goal is to make the student aware of the complex historical dynamics of cultural evolution by careful analysis of selected episodes of important cultural conflict, continuity, and change, so as to identify the multiple interactions of the subject matters of traditional academic disciplines in such episodes Such interdisciplinary inquiry is designed to produce a style of questioning that more realistically corresponds to the actual dynamics of human cultural development throughout history. Handbook, p. 9 In this course we will focus on the relationship between text and context in Europe within a global framework. The discipline of history investigates the ways in which human society experiences change and continuity. It provides, through generations of historians, working, for the most part, in a collegial fashion, an increasingly complex context for understanding the human story. The thematic focus of the course will be on the interaction of rulers and religion, what is today called the relationship between church and state. The organization of the course is around texts and contexts between the time of the Roman Empire to the early modern period in European history as we approach the rise of religious toleration and the Enlightenment. Thematic foci of the Readings are: 1. The role of history and legend in shaping religious and political ideas. 2. Models of empire and rulership within the pagan, Christian and Islamic worlds 3. Early Christian resistance/accommodation to empire, sacral kingship, papal monarchy and reformation 4. Recurrent points of tension with the medieval, late medieval, and early modern relations of church and state 5. Early modern wars of religion, Divine Right kingship and the rise of religious toleration

Requirements: All participants are expected to attend class regularly, to read the assignments carefully and critically, and to come to class prepared to discuss them. Written work for the course will consist of seminar presentations, brief responses to the readings and a final paper. The grade for the course is based upon evidence of critical reading of the assigned texts, discussion, in-class presentations and paper assignments. Students are expected to adhere to the Georgetown University Honor System in all course assignments. Depending upon the size of the class, each person will be expected to give at least one and perhaps two in-class presentations on readings relevant to the assignments that week. Based on one of the primary texts assigned for each class, each person in the class is to hand in a one-two page description of: 1) who you think is the audience for each text, and 2) what are the main purposes that the author has in mind in writing this text. We will begin this exercise with the second class, on January 15. Finally, each student will present, at the end of the semester, a 15-20 page research paper on a topic relevant to the main themes of the course but not necessarily confined to Europe. The topic may be integrative with other courses you have had or with issues you have developed an interest in outside of academia. A guide to the paper will be mounted on Blackboard. Books at the bookstore and on reserve at the library: Virgil, Aeneid, trans. Robert Fitzgerald (Random House, Vintage Books) Early Christian Lives, ed. C. White (Penguin Books) Confessions of St. Augustine Boethius, Consolation of Philosophy Beowulf Two Lives of Charlemagne Song of Roland Deeds of the Franks Across the Seas Chronicles of the Crusades Songs of the Cathar Wars Dante, De Monarchia William of Ockham, Letter to the Friars Minor Machiavelli, The Prince Martin Luther, Political Writings John Locke, Treatise on Toleration Lessing, Nathan the Wise SCHEDULE January 8: Ideology and Empire: Rome under Augustus Virgil s Aeneid, books 1-6; Virgil s Fourth Eclogue (on Blackboard)

Letters of Pliny and Trajan (on Blackboard) January 15: Saints and Martyrs Martyrdom of St. Perpetua (on Blackboard) Life of St. Anthony and Life of St. Hilarion in Early Christian Lives Life of St. Macrina (on Blackboard) January 22: A Christian Roman Empire Constantine s Oration to the Saints; readings from Eusebius of Caesarea (on Blackboard) Confessions of St. Augustine, books 1-10 St. Augustine, City of God, book 22 (on Blackboard) Readings from St. Ambrose (on Blackboard) January 29: The Gothic Empire of Theoderic Jordanes, History of the Goths Boethius, Consolation of Philosophy February 5: Values of a newly-christianized Warrior Society Beowulf: An Illustrated Edition, trans. Seamus Heaney Liber Historiae Francorum (on Blackboard) Excerpts from Gregory of Tours, History of the Franks (on Blackboard) February 12: Charlemagne s Empire: History and Legend Einhard s Life of Charlemagne in Two Lives of Charlemagne Donation of Constantine (on Blackboard) Song of Roland February 19: The Ideal Ruler in a Muslim Context Nizam al-mulk s Book on Government (on reserve in the library; excerpts on Blackboard) February 26: The rise of Papal Monarchy Selected Letters of Pope Gregory VII (on Blackboard) Life of Pope Gregory VII by Paul Bernried (on Blackboard) Materials on Innocent III (on Blackboard) March 5: The Crusades Urban II s call for Crusades (on Blackboard) Deeds of the Franks Across the Sea

Bernard of Clairvaux, On the New Knighthood (on Blackboard) Chronicles of the Crusades March 19: Franciscans and Dominicans Writings of St. Francis (on Blackboard) Bonaventure s Life of St. Francis of Assisi (on Blackboard) March 26: Heresy and Inquisition Song of the Cathar Wars Margarete Porete, Mirror of a Simple Soul (on Blackboard) April 9: Critiques of Papal Monarchy Documents related to Boniface VIII s Unam Sanctam Dante s De Monarchia William Ockham s Letter to the Friars Minor April 16: Renaissance and Reformation Machiavelli s The Prince Machiavelli, Exhortation to Penitence (on Blackboard) Luther, Selected Political Writings April 23: The Rise of Toleration Locke s Letter on Toleration Lessing, Nathan the Wise Final paper due: Friday May 8, 2015, by email at the end of the day; N.B. If you would like me to read a draft, please send it to me by Wednesday, May 6, at the end of the day. However long it takes me to return the draft, you have additional days for handing in the final paper.

Academic Standards: MALS and DLS students are responsible for upholding the Georgetown University Honor System and adhering to the academic standards included in the Honor Code Pledge stated below: In the pursuit of the high ideals and rigorous standards of academic life, I commit myself to respect and uphold the Georgetown University Honor System: To be honest in any academic endeavor; and to conduct myself honorably, as a responsible member of the Georgetown community, as we live and work together. Disability Notice: If you believe you have a disability, you should contact the Academic Resource Center Suite 335, Leavey Center (arc@georgetown.edu) for further information. This office is responsible for reviewing documentation provided by students with disabilities and for determining reasonable accommodations in accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and University policies.