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Department of History 1 DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY Amy Pflugrad-Jackisch, Department Chair Charles Beatty-Medina, Undergraduate Advisor Advanced Placement Program Refer to the University of Toledo s Registrar page at https:// www.utoledo.edu/offices/registrar/student_records/advan_credits.html for specific information on minimum scores and credits awarded for Advanced Placement examinations administered by the College Board Advanced Placement Program. Degrees Offered B.A. in History (http://utoledo-public.courseleaf.com/undergraduate/ arts-letters/history/ba-history) Minor in History (http://utoledo-public.courseleaf.com/ undergraduate/arts-letters/history/minor-history) HIST 1010 Europe To 1600 A survey of western Europe, including its ancient Jewish, Greco-Roman and Christian roots; the Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation. HIST 1020 Europe From 1600 A survey of European history from the 17th century to the present with emphasis on the major political, economic, social and cultural trends. HIST 1050 World History To 1500 A survey of the ancient world from the stone age to around 1500. Cultural and political topics are treated so as to compare the major civilizations. HIST 1060 World History From 1500 A survey of world history from 1500 to the present. Cultural and political topics are treated so as to draw comparisons between the most significant modern societies. HIST 1070 The Contemporary World This thematic survey of the 20th century from a historical and global perspective emphasizes the origins of the world in which we live and discusses some of our alternative futures. HIST 1080 East Asia To 1800 Multidisciplinary introduction to traditional East Asia (origins-1800) with emphasis on the historical development, political traditions, socioeconomic patterns, religious and philosophical values, and cultural accomplishments of China and Japan. HIST 1090 East Asia From 1800 Multidisciplinary introduction to the history, civilization, political organization, international relations, social and economic patterns, and cultural trends of China and Japan since 1800. HIST 1100 Latin American Civilizations A thematic survey from pre-columbian times to the present. Covers Native American cultures, European colonial policies and institutions, independence movements, the emergence of new nations and twentiethcentury problems. HIST 1110 African Civilization General cultural and historical survey of Africa south of the Sahara from earliest times to the 20th century. Includes topics on art, literature, philosophy, religion and society., Summer HIST 1120 Middle East Civilization General cultural and historical survey of the Middle East and Islam from 600 to the 20th century. Includes topics in historical movements, literature, religion, and social and intellectual history. HIST 1130 Introduction To Historical Thinking [3-4 credit hours (0-3, 0, 0-1)] (Not for major credit) An introduction to the nature, concepts and skills of the discipline of history designed to improve historical awareness and the ability to think historically. Occasionally offered as a writing intensive course. Core Arts & Humanities HIST 1200 Main Themes In American History This thematic survey introduces students to historical theory, methods, and the primary sub-fields of American history from colonial conquest to the present day. Core Arts & Humanities Department of History 1

2 Department of History HIST 2000 Methods Seminar [4 credit hours (3, 0, 1)] Research techniques, writing of term papers and book reviews. Introduction to historiography. Offered as a writing intensive course. HIST 2010 America To 1865 The development of the United States from its Native American and immigrant roots through the Civil War. HIST 2020 America From 1865 Survey of American history since the Civil War, with special attention to political, social, economic and cultural developments. HIST 2030 Great Americans The careers of selected Americans in politics, business, science, religion and literature. HIST 2040 Ancient Near East Survey of the Sumerian, Babylonian, Hittite, Assyrian, Egyptian, Palestinian and Persian worlds. HIST 2050 Ancient Greece Survey of the Greek and Hellenistic world. HIST 2060 Ancient Rome Survey of the Roman Republic and Empire. HIST 2170 Great Britain To 1714 An introductory course on English history from the Roman conquest to 1714. Emphasis on the Norman conquest, social and political life in medieval England, the monarchy, and common law. Term Offered: Summer, Fall HIST 2180 Great Britain From 1714 To The Present An introductory course on British history from the Hanoverian dynasty to the present. Emphasis on English maritime power, the industrial revolution and two world wars. HIST 2190 Britain And Ireland From the 17th to the 20th century, the mutual influences in literature and history of colony and colonizer are examined. HIST 2250 World War I World War I from origins to conclusion and its effect on the course of the 20th century. Political and diplomatic background, conduct, termination, technology, and the war's effect on society and the 20th century. HIST 2260 World War II On Film Analysis of contemporary and retrospective documentary film treatments of major aspects of World War II, with emphasis on their historical accuracy and authenticity. HIST 2280 Toledo: Emergence Of A City, 1750-1880 Early history of Toledo and the Maumee River Valley, including Indian settlement, imperial rivalries, Maumee Valley towns, economic growth, immigrant arrivals and the creation of neighborhoods. HIST 2290 Toledo: Metropolitan Era, 1880-1980 The growth of Toledo in the 20th century, including suburbanization, the city's leadership in the national Progressive Movement, Depression and New Deal, organized labor, individual suburbs, and recent problems. HIST 2340 American Indian History An introduction to Indian-White relations from pre-columbian times to present. Emphasizes tribes of the United States, Mexico and Canada. HIST 2450 Canada To 1867 Canadian history from before European contact to Confederation. Considers European-Native contact, Canada as an extension of Europe and the beginnings of Canadian identities. HIST 2460 Canada Since 1867 Canadian history since Confederation. Considers expansion westward, constitutional development, continuing British vs. French, and European vs. Native tensions. Canada and the U.S., modern society, economy, politics. HIST 2640 Medieval Russia Russia from the 9th century to 1700, including Kievan and Moscovite Russia. Department of History 2

Department of History 3 HIST 2650 Modern Russia Russia from 1700 to the present, including Imperial and Soviet Russia. HIST 2700 Japan And World War II A study of the factors behind Japan's entry into World War II with the United States and the Allied Powers and an in-depth treatment of Japan at war. HIST 2710 Postwar Japan This course examines the development of Japan since the war. It focuses on the political, economic, social and cultural changes since 1945 and relates these factors to Japan's international relations. HIST 2720 History Of Tokyo An examination of Japanese urban social and cultural history. Treats the foundations of Edo, transition to Tokyo, the modern rise, the great earthquake, the war, the Olympics and the present. HIST 2730 The Chinese Revolution This course examines the process by which Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communist Party came to power. It treats the political, economic and social forces behind the Chinese revolution (1900-49). HIST 2980 Special Topics [1-4 credit hours (0, 0, 0-4)] Topics selected by various instructors. May be repeated when the topic varies. HIST 3100 European Middle Ages I The history of Western Europe from its beginnings to the eve of the First Crusade. HIST 3110 European Middle Ages II Europe from the First Crusade to the late fifteenth century. HIST 3120 Women in Medieval Europe [3 credit hours (3, 0, 3)] Women s lives in medieval Europe from a range of perspectives, including noblewomen, townswomen, peasant women, religious women. Students will gain an appreciation of how medieval women s lives were different from and similar to those of modern women, as well as a broader understanding of the European middle ages. HIST 3130 Tudor England Tudor England from 1485 to the end of the reign of Elizabeth I, emphasizing political, economic and social developments. HIST 3160 The American West Settlement since the Civil War; mining rushes and Indian wars; violence and outlaws; farming and cattle ranching. Twentieth-century politics; ethnicity; and economics. Growth of California and the Sunbelt states. HIST 3190 Britain From 1763 To 1832 An intensive examination of the slave trade, factory system, radicalism, Parliamentary Reform, insurrection, by means of reading primary sources such as Tom Paine. HIST 3200 Colonial Latin America Latin American history to 1825. Covers pre-columbian Indian civilizations including Aztecs and Incas; Spanish and Portuguese conquests and Africans in the Americas; colonial policies and institutions; colonial society and independence movements. HIST 3210 Modern Latin America Major economic, political and social developments from independence to the present. Covers the export boom, neocolonialism, nationalism, and revolutions in Latin America. Considers how, In spite of the region's tremendous diversity, there is a shared "Latin American" experience., Summer HIST 3230 Early Caribbean History This course covers the history of the early Caribbean through emancipation in the mid-nineteenth century. Topics include: The Carib and Taino Indians, European exploration and colonization, the Atlantic slave trade, and the golden age of piracy. HIST 3240 Modern Caribbean History This course examines Caribbean history in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Topics include: history of Caribbean culture and music, migration, tourism, and social, political, and economic challenges of the twentieth century. HIST 3250 African-American History To 1865 An examination of the historical experiences of African-Americans in the United States from 1619 to 1865. Department of History 3

4 Department of History HIST 3260 African-American History From 1865 An examination of the historical experiences of African-Americans in the United States since 1865. HIST 3270 The City In American History, 1607-1850 Examination of early American urban development and culture. Topics include the development of urban infrastructure, crime and disorder; moral reform; religious revival; immigration; prostitution; the development of commercial entertainment. HIST 3280 City And Metropolis In Modern America, 1850 To The Present The growth of the 19th-century city and the emergence of the 20thcentury American metropolis. Urban problems of the 20th century. HIST 3290 Ohio History From colonial times to the present. HIST 3310 Ethnic America American ethnic diversity from the colonial era to recent decades. A study of individuals and groups. Topics include American identity and Americanization, migration, legislation, nativism. HIST 3320 Indians In Eastern North America Native Americans in Eastern North America from prehistoric times through Jacksonian Indian Removal. Emphasis on intercultural interactions. HIST 3330 Western American Indians Native Americans of the Far West from prehistoric times through recent years. Emphasis on European contact and governmental policies. HIST 3360 American Intellectual History I Development and influence of major ideas from the colonial period to 1865. Topics include Puritanism, the Enlightenment, Democracy and Transcendentalism. HIST 3370 American Intellectual History II Major developments in American thought from 1865, including Social Darwinism, pragmatism, ideological conflict, modern science, education. HIST 3380 Business And American Society The growth of American business from the eighteenth century to the present. Examines enterprise and its relationship to culture, politics, technological developments and economic change. HIST 3410 American Social And Cultural History, 1850-The Present American social and cultural patterns, institutions and forces from the mid-19th century to the present. HIST 3420 American Military History The development of the strategy, tactics, organization, operation and policies of the armed forces of the U.S.; the interaction with technological factors, foreign policy goals, international problems and American society. HIST 3430 American Military History In The 20th Century Intensive examination of the history of land, sea, air and intelligence factors. Emphasizes the historical development of the strategy and tactics of wars, peacetime planning, technological developments and military-societal relationships. HIST 3440 American Radicalism Origins and development of radical social movements and their ideologies from the American Revolution to the New Left of the 1960s. Abolitionism, Feminism, Communitarianism, Marxism, Anarchism, Populism, Communism and the Peace Movement are among the topics to be studied. HIST 3470 U.S. Disability History Provides a historical overview of the lived experiences of people defined as disabled and changing historical definitions of disability in the region that became the United States HIST 3480 American Labor And Working Class History Development of working class communities, cultures, organizations and ideology from colonial era to the present. Topics include industrialization, unionization, labor law, gender and race constructions. HIST 3500 European Diplomacy 1648-1815 The foreign policies and foreign relations of the great powers from 1648 to the Congress of Vienna, 1815. HIST 3530 20th Century Germany Germany's development from the end of World War I to the present with emphasis on the rise of Nazism, World War II, and the division and new unification of Germany. Department of History 4

Department of History 5 HIST 3540 History Of The Middle East From 600 To 1500 A survey of Middle East history from the emergence of Islam and the formation of Islamic states until the establishment of the Ottoman and Persian empires in the 15th-16th centuries. HIST 3550 History Of The Middle East Since 1500 History of the Middle East from the collapse of the Medieval Muslim States and the rise of the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century through the period of European intervention to the development of independent Middle Eastern states in the 20th century. HIST 3560 Early Modern France A survey of early modern French history from c. 1600-1789. HIST 3600 Women In American History This course presents American history from early settlement to the present by examining the contributions of women, in interaction with men, to the immensely complex fabric of American life. HIST 3870 Junior Honors Research I Independent research on specific historical topics. HIST 3880 Junior Honors Research II Independent research on specific historical topics. HIST 3980 Special Topics [1-4 credit hours (1-4, 0, 0)] Topics selected by various instructors. May be repeated when the topic varies. HIST 4010 Greek History Selected topics on the political and social institutions of Greece in the classical and Hellenistic periods. HIST 4020 Roman History Selected topics on the political and social institutions of Rome during the Republic and Empire. HIST 4030 Europe In The 14th-15th Centuries The late Middle Ages and the development of the Renaissance in Western Europe. HIST 4060 Age Of Absolutism The growth and decline of the absolute monarchies in Europe and the development of a world market economy, c.1550-1715. HIST 4080 Age Of Revolution [4 credit hours (4, 0, 0)] The age of the French Revolution and Napoleon, c.1785-1848. HIST 4100 Europe Since World War I Internal and international development of the major European states from World War I to the end of the twentieth century. HIST 4150 Critics Of Victorian Society Principal critics of society like Ruskin, Carlyle, Cobbett, Marx, Engels, Morris, Mill are read with a view to understanding capitalism, industrialism and England. HIST 4170 The British Empire: For And Against The emergence of England as a maritime power, as an empire, and as a financial force, with emphasis upon resistances and decolonization. HIST 4180 Topics In English Social And Economic History Selected topics on English society and economy will be covered, such as urbanization, family and gender relations, enclosures, work and crafts. HIST 4200 Colonial Foundations Of U.s. Colonial America from early settlement to the eve of the American Revolution. Examination of the American Colonies from an Atlantic perspective, focusing on European motivation for settlement, European- Native American relations, the origins and development of slavery, religious and economic change, and the creation of early American culture. HIST 4210 Women In Early America Examination of the evolution of women s experience in the United States from colonization to the Civil War era. HIST 4220 The American Revolution Examination of the decades surrounding the American Revolution and America s transformation from British colony to independent republic. Political and social origins of the Revolution; formation of the republican state; changing notions of citizenship and equality; the role of political leaders in society; social and cultural consequences of the Revolution. HIST 4230 United States Early Republic History of the ratification of the United States Constitution; Growth and expansion of federal authority; development of financial and judicial institutions and the first political parties; early American foreign policy; and the creation of American identity and democratic political culture. Department of History 5

6 Department of History HIST 4240 The Age Of Jackson Exploration of the major social, economic and political developments in the United States in the decades leading up to the Civil War. The creation of a market society; religion and reform; westward expansion; slavery and abolition; the origins and development of the second-party system; the politics of slavery HIST 4250 Civil War And Reconstruction Slavery and the Constitution in the sectional controversy, the political and military events of the Civil War, and the impact of the war on American society, 1848-1876. HIST 4260 Emergence Of Modern America, 1876-1919 American society in the late 19th and early 20th centuries including industrialization, urbanization, immigration, agrarian and labor revolts, politics, economic expansion, overseas initiatives, Progressive reform and involvement in World War I. HIST 4270 20th Century America, 1920-1945 Social, political and economic development of the United States, 1920-1945. The Republican ascendancy, the car culture, Great Depression, New Deal and World War II. HIST 4280 U.s. Since 1945: Affluence And Anxiety Social, economic and political development of the United States since 1945. The Cold War, McCarthyism, Eisenhower Equilibrium, the New Frontier and the Great Society, civil rights, Watergate and the Reagan Revolution. HIST 4290 US Women from 1865 A survey of women in the United States from 1865. Covers women's political, economic, and social participation in American life. Particular attention is given to the life experiences of women from a diversity of racial, ethnic, sexual, and socio-economic backgrounds. HIST 4310 History Of Native American Religious Movements History of Native American revitalization movements as a response to European colonization and Indian dispossession. HIST 4340 Far Western Frontier Native Americans; Spanish conquistadors and missionaries; American scientific and military exploration; mountain men and fur trade; international rivalries and Mexican War; gold rush of '49. HIST 4430 Slavery In America Stresses the African continuum among slaves within the context of variations in goals and policies of slaveowners, slave trade, slave economics, demographics, slave labor and formation of slave culture., Summer HIST 4450 The United States And Latin America Examines the 19h and 20th centuries: emphasizing events and movements defining political, economic, migratory, military, and cultural relations and the emergence of Latinos as largest minority group in the US. HIST 4470 People And Politics In Mexico Mexican history from pre-hispanic times to the present. Emphasis on the political, social and economic changes imposed by the Spaniards; the legacy of colonialism on the modern nation; the Mexican Revolution and the "Mexican Miracle." Term Offered: Summer, Fall HIST 4490 Witchcraft And Magic In Medieval And Early Modern Europe Witchcraft, religion and magic in western Europe from the 12th through 17th centuries, focusing on the origins of witchcraft belief, diabolical magic, the witchcraze and its decline. HIST 4620 Central Europe Central Europe from medieval times to the present. The Habsburg Empire, Poland, the Balkans, twentieth-century changes. HIST 4660 Imperial Russia, 1700-1917 Rise and fall of the Russian Empire. Politics and society from the time of Peter the Great to the 1917 Revolution. HIST 4680 20th Century Russia Russia from the 1917 Revolution to the present. Topics include Marxism, Communism, Stalinism, Cold War. HIST 4720 Modern Chinese History China in transition under the impact of the West; forces leading to the revolution of 1911, the Nationalists' struggle, the emergence of the People's Republic of China and aspects of post-revolutionary China. Department of History 6

Department of History 7 HIST 4740 Modern Japanese History Japan in transition under Western influence, forces leading to the Meiji Restoration, the modernization of Japan, Japan's rise as a world power, war and postwar developments. HIST 4750 Europe And Asia: Exploration And Exchange, 1415-1800 Motivation and process of European expansion to Africa and Asia from 1415-1800. HIST 4790 The Holocaust This advanced course deals with selected aspects of the history and memory of Nazi genocide against the Jews of Europe, with special emphasis on visual and survivor sources. HIST 4830 Theory Of Public History The definition, philosophy and evolution of public history as well as the current literature and debates within the field. Public history is the application of historical knowledge and methodology beyond academe. HIST 4840 Public History Practicum Course provides students with hands-on experience in the practice of public history by completing a project using specialized techniques, client-oriented research and teamwork. May be repeated for credit. HIST 4870 Senior Honors Research I Open to College Honors students, to History Honors students and to Honors students from other departments. Independent research in specific topics. HIST 4880 Senior Honors Research II Open to College Honors students, to History Honors students and to Honors students from other departments. Independent research in specific topics. HIST 4940 Public History Internship [0-8 credit hours (0, 0, 0-8)] Supervised experiential learning in history. Prerequisites: (HIST 2000 with a minimum grade of D- and HIST 4830 with a minimum grade of D-) HIST 4980 Special Topics [1-4 credit hours (0-4, 0, 0)] Topics selected by various instructors. HIST 4990 Independent Studies [1-4 credit hours (0, 0, 0)] Research and writing on topics designed to meet individual needs. Honors in History Qualified students are invited to work for the degree citation honors in history. 1. Admission: History majors who demonstrate unusual promise in the study of history are invited by the department to enroll in the University Honors Program; departmental honors may be pursued concurrently. Admission to departmental honors is based on the following: a. Sophomore standing b. Overall minimum GPA of 3.0 c. A minimum GPA of 3.3 in all history courses (a minimum of 10 hours) d. Recommendation from two professors e. An interview with the Advisor 2. Requirements: To earn departmental honors in history, each student will satisfactorily complete the following. The required credit hours are included among the 33 hours necessary for the major in history. a. Honors recognition in two history courses. Honors recognition courses are regularly scheduled 3000 to 4000 level courses in which special recognition is achieved by reading and research in addition to the normal requirements of the course. b. Three hours of independent research under Junior Honors Research (HIST 3870). c. Six hours of thesis under Senior Honors Research (HIST 4870, HIST 4880) leading to the completion of a senior thesis. d. Oral examination covering the area of the senior thesis. Department of History 7