Europe in the Medieval and Early Modern World (201-1-20)
Instructors
Lydia Barnett
847/491-7421
Harris Hall - Room 305
Meeting Info
Kresge Cent. Hall 2-380 Kaplan: Mon, Wed 11:00AM - 12:20PM
Overview of class
This course surveys the history of Europe from the High Middle Ages through the early modern period to the Age of Atlantic Revolutions. These centuries changed the course of European and world history. The Renaissance, the Reformations, the Scientific Revolution, and the Enlightenment unfolded at the same time as European empires spread first into the Mediterranean and then across the Atlantic, spurring the growth of global capitalism and the transatlantic slave trade. Political and religious freedoms emerged alongside new forms of persecution, control, and oppression. A divided Europe grew increasingly connected to the rest of the world as commercial goods, people, ideas, and diseases traveled across land and sea. Among the major themes we'll explore are a) how individuals who lived through these tumultuous centuries experienced their changing world and b) how changes in health, disease, and environment - including the Black Death, the Columbian Exchange, and the climactic cooling period known as the Little Ice Age - drove the religious, political, social, and economic upheavals of the late medieval and early modern periods.
Evaluation Method
Participation, Exams, Short Writing Assignments
Class Notes
History Area of Concentration: European
Class Attributes
Historical Studies Foundational Discipline
Historical Studies Distro Area
Global Perspectives on Power, Justice, and Equity
Associated Classes
DIS - University Library 4722: Fri 10:00AM - 10:50AM
DIS - University Library 4722: Fri 11:00AM - 11:50AM
DIS - University Library 3370: Fri 1:00PM - 1:50PM