HISTORY 393: MEDIEVAL CHURCH AND STATE





COURSE DESCRIPTION

        This course explores the rich legacy of Medieval Europe.  Scholars generally agree that the Middle Ages  lasted from the collapse of the Roman Empire in the west (around 500 AD) until the so-called Renaissance (14th to 16th centuries AD).  This is an enormous time span, and I have no intention of trying to cover every event and every aspect of the Middle Ages.  Rather, we will focus on several themes examined over three sub-periods of the Middle Ages.  We begin with the ancestors of the Middle Ages: the civilization of Rome, its Christian overlay, and the arrival of the Germanic tribes.  From there we will look in turn at the Early (c.500-950), High (c.950-1250) and Late Middle Ages (c.1250-1500).  Within each of these mini-periods we will examine the following themes: the nature and effectiveness of government (primarily kingship), the role of Christian belief and Christian institutions in shaping medieval life, the shape of everyday life, and the capacity of women to exercise power.
        The process of our trip through the Middle Ages, however, will not merely be one of mastering names and dates (although you certainly must do a fair amount of memorization).  Indeed, a major purpose of the class is to demonstrate to you the methods by which historians approach the past.  Thus we will be interested in learning about the nature of the sources available to us, and, above all, in learning how to interpret them.  Interpretation, after all, is the keystone of the historian’s craft, and it will be one of our purposes in this course to subject all of the material at our disposal to careful prodding, questioning, and criticism.
 
 

STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
A student who successfully completes this class should expect to:

 -acquire broad knowledge of the political, religious, and social history of the European Middle Ages
 (c.500-1500)

 -learn how to interpret primary sources from the period under study and using both written and oral skills
to analyze them
 -learn how to synthesize material read from a variety of sources to produce a larger analytical conclusion
 
 -understand some of the methods used by historians to analyze the past (chronology, periodization,
comparison/contrast, continuity/change, and some theory, including gender)

 -practice writing analytical prose of a variety of different sorts
 
 
 

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