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Your search for courses for 23/WI and with code: HISTANCNT/MDVL found 3 courses.
CLAS 240.00 Rome: From Village to Superpower 6 credits
Closed: Size: 25, Registered: 20, Waitlist: 1
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:50pm3:00pm | 1:50pm3:00pm | 2:20pm3:20pm |
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This class will investigate how Rome rose from a humble village of outcasts and refugees to become the preeminent power in the entire Mediterranean. We will trace Rome's political evolution from kings to the Republic, alongside their gradual takeover of the Italian peninsula. We will study how Rome then swiftly overpowered what had been the most powerful kingdoms in the Mediterranean and established themselves as dominant. Who were these Romans and what were their political, military, religious, and social systems that enabled them to accomplish so much? What critical events shaped their development and ultimately led to total political control of the Mediterranean world?
HIST 231.00 Mapping the World Before Mercator 6 credits
Closed: Size: 18, Registered: 18, Waitlist: 5
M | T | W | TH | F |
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8:30am9:40am | 8:30am9:40am | 8:30am9:30am |
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Extra time is required for a one-time map show in the library during 6a which we will schedule at the beginning of term.
HIST 289.00 Gender and Ethics in Late Medieval France 6 credits
Open: Size: 25, Registered: 12, Waitlist: 0
M | T | W | TH | F |
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1:50pm3:00pm | 1:50pm3:00pm | 2:20pm3:20pm |
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Acknowledged by contemporaries as one of the leading intellects of her time, Christine de Pizan (ca. 1364-ca. 1431) became an author of unusual literary range, personal resilience, and perceptiveness in a time of ongoing warfare, civil strife, and intellectual ferment. In addition to composing romances, poetry, quasi-autobiographical works, royal biography, and political theory, she became an articulate critic of the patriarchy and misogyny of her world, contemporary patterns and cultures of violence, and a critical voice in defense of female capability. Using Christine's writings together with other contemporary voices, we will examine how contemporaries confronted fundamental questions of identity, status, violence, ethics, and love in domestic and public spheres in late medieval France.
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