History 205: European History from Antiquity to 1700

Similar documents
Department of History University of Manitoba

Western Civilization Early Civilization to 1715

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

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

World Civilizations Grade 3

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

Student ID: MAKE SURE YOU BUBBLE THE STUDENT ID ON YOUR ANSWER SHEET. Unit 1: Europe Quiz

History of France: Middle Ages to Susan Mokhberi

Fiero, Gloria. The Humanistic Tradition (6th Ed.). Book 2: Medieval Europe and the World Beyond. McGraw-Hill, New York: 2010, ISBN #

History 103 Introduction to the Medieval World Fall 2007 UNIV 117 MWF 11:30 12:20

Cultural Encounters I. Fall 2018 Reader

Learning Goal: Describe the major causes of the Renaissance and the political, intellectual, artistic, economic, and religious effects of the

History of Western Civilization 1

Office: HumB 373; Tel ; Office Hours: M, W 12:00-2:00; T, Th 2:00-4:00; and by appointment

Wilfrid Laurier University Waterloo, Ontario. History 215 Anglo-Saxon England, c Fall 2009

Department of Classics

Medieval and Renaissance Europe

The Foundation of the Modern World

Higley Unified School District Social Studies Grade 6 Revised Aug Fourth Nine Weeks. Middle Ages (Two to Three Weeks)

EUROPEAN MIDDLE AGES 476 AD 1500 AD

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

Chapter 13. Reformation. Renaissance

Renaissance and Reformation Early Modern Europe:

2 Day 1: Mesopotamia and Sumer The Great Hymn to Shamash Hammurabi Code of Laws (Excerpts) Exodus 20-23

LYNDHURST HIGH SCHOOL HISTORY DEPARTMENT:WORLD HISTORY

HTST : The History of Europe (Medieval Europe)

World History Grade: 8

Chapter 13 Reading Guide: European Middle Ages

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

Contents Foreword 4 Important Events of the Late Middle Ages Introduction 8 Th e Defi ning Characteristics of the Late Middle Ages Chapter One

Oregon State University HST 327/REL 327 Fall Fall 2014

COURSE OUTLINE History of Western Civilization 1

Study Guide: The Middle Ages

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

Teacher Overview Objectives: European Culture and Politics ca. 1750

World History Exam Study Guide

World History Honors Semester 1 Review Guide

NEW YORK CITY COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY The City University of New York School of Arts & Sciences Department of Social Science Course Outline

LS 151L: Introduction to the Humanities Fall Semester 2011 Section 80 (71626): T Th 12:40 2:00 pm (DHC 117), Th 11:10-12:00 (NUULH)

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

Lahore University of Management Sciences. Fall HIST 126 Europe from the Neolithic to the 1600s

Western Europe Ch

HRS 131: MEDIEVAL CULTURE Professor Mary Doyno Fall 2017 Mondays and Wednesdays 3-4:15pm Alpine 218

Medieval / Early Renaissance Lesson Plans AD

V TEXTS AND IDEAS: ANTIQUITY/RENAISSANCE LECTURES: Mon-Wed 3:30-4:45 in 19 University Place, Room 102

Western Traditions before History 1300 (TTh 9:30-10:45) Office: Room 120/ Office hours: TTh 12-2

The Rise of Europe. Chapter 7

Dartmouth Middle School

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

Chapter 13 Reading Guide: European Middle Ages

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

Unit Questions: Religions, Renaissance & Reformation

What had life been like for Europeans during the Medieval period?

SYLLABUS. GE Area C2 Learning Outcomes: Students who have completed a GE sub-area C2 course should be able to:

OCR A Level Classics. H038 and H438: Information for OCR centres transferring to new specifications for first teaching in 2008

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?

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

SYLLABUS FALL 2009 HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION I TO 1300 AD MAY CHANGE AT ANY TIME!! BE ALERT!!

HISTORY 123: ENGLAND TO 1688 FALL SEMESTER, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 11-11:50, 1131 Humanities.

Renaissance The Rebirth of Europe

Western Civilization Chapter 13

Honors Global Studies I Syllabus Academic Magnet High School

GLOBAL HISTORY 9 HOMEWORK SHEET #2

Final Exam Review. Age of Reason and Scientific Revolution

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

Chapter 4: The Exchange of Ideas (Pg. 78)

European History Elementary Grades Syllabus

WORLD HISTORY. Mrs. Jackson.

HIS 510: AP European History

HISTORY 119: SYLLABUS THE CRUSADES AND THE NEAR EAST,

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

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

Table of Contents Part One: Social Studies Curriculum Chapter I: Social Studies Essay Questions and Prewriting Activities

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

McFARLAND SCHOOL DISTRICT SOCIAL SCIENCE GRADE SEVEN. Benchmarks One Two Three Four

World History Unit 6 Lesson 1 Charlemagne & Feudalism

Europe in the Middle Ages. Unit 6

Integrative Studies 5: History and Philosophy of Western Civilization (Ancient World to Middle Ages)

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

Greek and Roman Religions (01:190:326) Spring Semester 2008 Rutgers University MW 8:45-10:05 PM, LOR-020 D/C

!"#$%&'"##(&"' Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation History Schedule

New Visions Global History Curriculum 9th Grade Pacing Calendar Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3

7th grade Benchmark Study Guide Trimester 3

Bentley Chapter 16 Study Guide: The Two Worlds of Christendom

European Culture and Politics ca Objective: Examine events from the Middle Ages to the mid-1700s from multiple perspectives.

WHI SOL Review Packet: Part II

Professor Edward Watts Humanities 2 HUMANITIES 2 SYLLABUS

Chapter 8: The Rise of Europe ( )

3. Which institution served as the main unifying force of medieval Western Europe?

The Early. Middle Ages. The Rise of Christianity Charlemagne Feudalism The Vikings

HISTORY 312: THE CRUSADES

The Renaissance. A demystification of the world Max Weber

Class Period. Ch. 17 Study Guide. Renaissance- ( rebirth ) period of renewed interest in art and learning in Europe.

Religion and Ethics. Or: God and the Good Life

Unit III: Regional and Trans-Regional Interactions c. 600 C.E. to c. 1450

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

Phone: (use !) Dunbar 3205 Hours: TR , homepages.wmich.edu/~rberkhof/courses/his443/

Chapter 13 Notes. Western Europe in the Middle Ages

+TIP. M. The World 2011, fall semester ENAD. Office: Hours: Phone: .edu GOALS. Great". He. of Charlemagne. European.

Required Assignment! AP/IB Modern European History Shaker Heights High School Ms. Davis Dear Student:

Transcription:

History 205: European History from Antiquity to 1700 Dr. Carolyn Aslan Office: SOS 261, phone ext. 1511 e-mail: caslan@ku.edu.tr Office hours: Thurs. 3:30-5:00 or make an appointment In this course students will gain a broad knowledge of key developments in European History beginning from the Palaeolithic period to 1700 A.D. Students will practice analysis of different sources of information including historical texts, art, architecture, and archaeological evidence. Much of class time will be dedicated to the discussion of historical texts and other primary source evidence. We will be focusing on two broad themes this semester: social values and cultural encounters. During the first half of the semester, we will be discussing what the ancient texts tell us about social values and social roles. During the second part of the semester, we will be examining primary sources about different types of cultural encounters, such as trade, warfare, exploration, intermarriage, and intellectual sharing. We will especially be exploring the various types of cultural syncretism, blending and transformations that occur as a result of these encounters. Another important goal of this course is to give students help and guidance in improving their writing and research skills. Assignment: Percentage Date Research paper 25% Dec. 3 Midterm 20% Nov. 10 Final exam 20% exam period Class participation 15% throughout semester Reading response notebook 20% throughout semester Readings and Reading response notebook The textbook for the class is Western Civilization by Margaret King, which is available at the bookstore and on reserve at the library. There is an additional reading packet for the course that needs to be photocopied and brought to class each day. This semester you will be keeping a reading response journal and you need to write at least one page a week. Sometimes I will assign a specific question or topic that I would like you to write about, while other weeks you should pick some aspect of the readings that interests you. It does not have to be in the form of an academic essay, but rather should be more informal, expressing and exploring some of your thoughts and questions; the purpose is to help you think through writing. You should bring it to class on Tuesdays and I will be doing quick checks to see if you are keeping up with the journal. Several times during the semester I will collect your journal entries to read. Lectures and Class discussions During each class, part of the time will be spent on a lecture and part on discussion of the primary sources in the reading packet. The class participation grades will be based on your level of participation in the discussion. Even though some of you

may be shy about speaking in class, it is important that you try and say at least one comment or question during the discussion time. Exams There will be a midterm and final exam. The midterm will cover the ancient period and the final will cover the Medieval to Early Modern period. The format will be essays and short answers. Attendance Students are expected to attend all classes. If you miss 9 or more classes, you will fail the course. Please come to class on time. Students who are found doing non-class related activities during class (ex. using a cell phone, completing homework for other classes, talking incessantly with their friends, sleeping etc.) will be counted as absent on that day. Research Paper One of the main learning exercises in the course is a research paper. For your paper you need to choose a specific person in history to research. The person should have lived in Europe before 1700 A.D. and you should be able to find at least one primary source either about that person or by that person (in the case of a writer, artist etc.). You should research and examine this person within the context of their society and historical period. In what ways did they follow the values, expectations and traditions of their time period and place, or perhaps how did were they different and acted to transform their society (or both)? On Oct. 20, you need to submit a proposed topic and a preliminary bibliography of at least five sources that you have found about your person and their historical context. Do not limit your choice to famous historical people, but pick someone less well-known. In the following week, I will make a schedule for individual consultations with me about your paper. Final papers will not be accepted unless you have met with me to discuss your topic. The papers are due on Dec. 3. The paper should be 8-10 pages long (doublespaced, typed) with a bibliography of at least 8 sources, with at least one primary source. Use MLA format for bibliography and citations. There will be lessons during class on proper citations and bibliography as well as research methods. You will need to first submit the paper to turnitin.com and I will explain how to do this in class. After your paper has been corrected and graded, you have the option to revise your research paper in order to improve your writing and correct your mistakes. If there is significant improvement, the grade will be increased. Students can revise multiple times, but no revisions will be accepted after Jan. 7. If you do not submit your paper on time (Dec. 3), you will not be allowed to revise and resubmit the paper. Academic honesty Students are expected to do their own work on all the assignments and exams and to follow the university rules on plagiarism and cheating. Cases of cheating will result in failure of that assignment and be sent to the academic disciplinary council. Be very careful to properly paraphrase and give reference citations for all the information and

ideas in your papers. I will check your citations and paraphrasing when reading your papers. An accidental mistake in citations or paraphrasing can easily look like a case of deliberate cheating. We will discuss proper citations and paraphrasing in class. All of the work you do for this course should be originally completed for this course. For example, if you did a Com 102 paper on a similar topic, you cannot reuse parts of the paper. Instead you should pick a topic that you have never researched before. Schedule Sept 29 Oct. 1 Oct. 6 Oct. 8 Oct. 13 Oct. 15 Oct. 20 Introduction to the course, Palaeolithic and Neolithic periods Ancient Mediterranean: Bronze age cultures Reading: Margaret King, Western Civilization, ch. 1-2 Ancient Mediterranean: Bronze Age Ancient Greece: Iron Age Troy, Homer and the Trojan epics Reading: selections from Homer: the Iliad and the Odyssey Western Civilization, ch. 3-4 Ancient Greece: Archaic period Reading: Herodotus: Histories selections Ancient Greece: Classical period Reading: The Women of Troy, by Euripides (in reader or Turkish translation on reserve in library) Ancient Mediterranean: Hellenistic period Reading: Western Civilization ch. 5 Research topics and preliminary bibliography due Oct. 22 Oct. 27 Nov. 3 Nov. 5 Romans: early Roman period - Emperor Augustus, Reading: Virgil, The Aeneid Book 1 Roman Civilization: city life, art, architecture, literature, religion Readings: Plutarch Life of Cato the Elder, Livy History of Rome, book 34 selections Western Civilization ch. 6 Roman civilization Readings: Horace, Satires, Ovid, Amores Early Christianity

Readings: selections from the New Testament Bible St. Jerome, On the Education of Girls Western Civilization ch. 7 Nov. 10 Nov. 12 Nov. 17 Nov. 19 Nov 24 Midterm, in class Fall of Rome, invasions and new kingdoms Reading: Germania, Tacitus Western Civilizations ch. 8 Early Middle Ages, Charlemagne, Pope Gregory I Reading: The Burgundian Code, The Laws of Canute Western Civilization ch. 9 Medieval Christianity Reading: the Rule of Saint Benedict, Gregory I: Life of St. Benedict, Grant of an estate to the Monks of St. Denis Western Civilization ch. 10 Early Middle Ages, The Vikings Foundation legends of European kingdoms Reading: selections from the Snorri s Prose Edda, Beowulf (funeral description) Bayram holiday Dec. 1 Dec. 3 Middle Ages, Norman conquest of England Primary source: images of the Bayeux tapestry (in reader) Secondary source: W. Grape. The Bayeux Tapestry (in reader) Middle Ages, Feudalism, social structure, politics Reading: The Magna Carta Western Civilization ch. 11 Research Papers Due Dec. 8 Dec. 10 Crusades, Cultural Encounters and Trade Reading: selections from the Autobiography of Usama ibn Munqidh: the Frankish Cavalry, The Noble and Magnificent City of Hangzhou Marco Polo in China, Accounts of the Routes of the Jewish Merchants Western Civilization ch. 11, 12 Life in medieval towns and cities Interactions between Christians and Jews Reading: Ordinances of the Guild Merchant of Southhampton

Laws of Valladolid, Bishop of Speyer: Grant of Lands and Privileges to the Jews, Expulsion of the Jews from France Dec. 15 Dec. 17 Dec. 22 Dec. 24 Dec. 29 Dec. 31 Jan 5 Jan. 7 Medieval culture literature, art, architecture Reading: selections from Chrétien de Troyes, Lancelot, Late Middle Ages 14 th cent., The Black Death, Hundred Years War Reading: Jean de Venette on the Progress of the Black Death, Boccaccio: The Decameron Introduction Renaissance Reading: excerpts from Giorgi Vasari: Life of Leonardo da Vinci, Petrarch To Homer, Machiavelli The Ancients and Liberty Western Civilizations, ch. 13 Christian syncretism: Santa Claus, Witchcraft Witchcraft documents Aecerbot Ritual, Caesarius of Heisterbach The Eucharist as a Charm Protestant Reformation Reading: Raimon de Cornet, Poem Criticizing the Avignon Papacy, Martin Luther: Letter to the Archbishop of Mainz. Western Civilizations ch. 14 Age of Exploration Reading: Christopher Columbus, Extracts from Journal, Letter to the King and Queen of Spain Western Civilizations ch. 16 Society and economy in the 16 th -17 th centuries, Scientific Revolution Reading: Francis Bacon The New Atlantis Religious wars and State Building, 16 th 17 cent. Reading: Bossuet Work on Kingship Duc de Saint-Simon, Court of Louis 14 th Western Civilizations ch. 15 Final day to submit revised papers Final exam will be scheduled for the exam period