Advanced Placement

European History

Course Syllabus

Knightdale High School

100 Bryan Chalk Lane

Knightdale, NC 27545

Telephone (919) 217 – 5350

Teacher

William Brian Phillips

Room 814-09

Course website: http://wbphillipskhs.pbworks.com

Advanced Placement European History Purpose Statement

The study of European history since 1450 introduces students to the cultural, intellectual, economic, political, diplomatic, and social developments that played a fundamental role in shaping the world in which we live today. Without this knowledge, we would lack the context for understanding the development of contemporary institutions, the role of continuity and change in present-day society and politics, and the evolution of current forms of artistic expression and intellectual discourse. In addition to providing a basic narrative of events and movements, the goals of the Advanced Placement program in European History are to develop an understanding of some of the principal themes in modern European history, develop an ability to analyze historical evidence and historical interpretation, and develop an ability to express historical understanding in writing.

It is strongly encouraged (but not required) that students enrolled in this course plan to take the Advanced Placement European History exam in May, and all coursework will be designed to prepare students for that examination. Students not planning to take the Advanced Placement European History exam will still be expected to complete all coursework, including Document Based Question (DBQ) and Free Response Question (FRQ) writing assignments.

Texts & Other Readings

Basic Text: Western Civilization, (Sixth Edition), Jackson J. Spielvogel, 2006 and accompanying ancillary materials

In addition to daily assigned readings from the textbook, there will be a variable number of primary source reading and visual selections designed to flesh out each daily topic and offer students the opportunity to practice independent source analysis; these selections will be distributed as hard-copy by the instructor and/or made available online.

Tests and Essays

Tests will consist of a time-limited multiple-choice section (completed on-line on the student’s own time) and an essay section (which will initially be completed at home, but will transition to a time-limited, in-class format as students become more skilled in their abilities to write in the AP style). Each test is likely to cover a significantly greater volume of material than many students have previously experienced. These tests will emphasize factual information, multiple causation / multiple outcome, and the concept of change over time. Tests will require students to interpret and evaluate events of history and support their conclusions with relevant, specific factual information. There are likely to be no more than 12 major grades per quarter (one multiple-choice test, one full-scale DBQ, and one full-scale FRQ per unit, with 4 units per quarter); the limited number of grades means that each major grade has a significant impact on the student’s overall performance in the course.

Homework

Homework will consist primarily of reading assignments and on-going writing assignments. The reading requirements for this course are quite intense, often requiring students to read, comprehend, and take notes on 15 or more pages of material per night; this is in line with the reading demands of a typical college history course. Students will have assigned readings every night and will need to have completed those readings in order to take part in the daily discussions that are critical to mastering the content of the course. On-going writing assignments will consist of “miniature” versions of DBQ and FRQ assignments which students will use as practice to better develop their writing skills; students may be asked to write, revise, and rewrite such assignments multiple times in order to master the requirements of a successful AP essay.

Make-up Work

Attendance in class is absolutely essential to the successful completion of the course and to the attainment of a passing grade on the National Advanced Placement Examination. Students returning from an excused absence are responsible for completing missed in-class assignments promptly, following Wake County Public School System (WCPSS) guidelines. Out-of-class assignments, such as tests, should be submitted electronically either through the course’s testing website or via the instructor’s e-mail; therefore, acceptable excuses for failing to complete such assignments will be limited only to extreme circumstances. Be aware that the instructor is under no obligation to accept late-work beyond the guidelines spelled out by WCPSS and Knightdale High School policies.

Honor Code

Students will abide by the honor code statement “I have neither given nor received help on this assignment” for all course work, unless specifically exempted by the instructor. Violations of the honor code pledge will result in a zero for the assignment and a referral for discipline in accordance with school and WCPSS policy; additionally, all violations of the honor code will be reported to all relevant athletic coaches, school-related honor societies, and scholarship organizations.

Grading System

The grading system for this course shall be as follows:

Tests (45%): All multiple-choice tests are administered online through the Quia website as out-of-class assignments

Seminar Preparation (10%): consists of all practice activities, analyzing primary and secondary sources, short writing assignments, and in-class seminars

Essays (45%): includes both Document Based Question (DBQ) and Free Response Question (FRQ) type writing assignments.

Organization of the Course

All topics listed below will include discussion of how they fit into the six ongoing themes which are the focus of the Advanced Placement European History course: Intellectual history, cultural history, political history, diplomatic history, social history, and economic history. It should be noted, however, that these themes weave together to create the fabric that is history, so mastering the individual thematic material will be insufficient for mastery - students will need to be able to assess the ever-changing relationships between themes to truly understand European History as a whole.

The topics and primary source readings listed below are not meant to be exhaustive, but rather are a base-line of major topics and materials which can be broken down into sub-topics for exploration in greater detail.

Unit 1: Renaissance & Reformation

Topics: The Close of the Middle Ages, The Italian Renaissance, The Northern Renaissance, The Reconquista, The Age of Exploration, The Printing Press, The Protestant Reformation, The Catholic Reformation, Wars of Religion, The Thirty Years War

Primary Source Readings:

Baldassare Castiglione’s The Book of the Courtier

Nicolo Machiavelli’s The Prince

Pico della Mirandola’s Oration on the Dignity of Man

Laura Cereta’s Defense of the Liberal Instruction of Women

The Letters of Isabella d’Este

Christine de Pizan’s The City of Ladies

Francesco Petrarch’s A Letter to Boccaccio

Johann Tetzel’s The Spark for the Reformation: Indulgences

Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences, On the Bondage of the Will, Condemnation of Peasant Revolt, and Justification by Faith

John Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion: Predestination

Constitution of the Society of Jesus

Teresa of Avilon’s The Way of Perfection

The Letters of Christopher Columbus

Jacob Fugger’s Letter to Charles V: Finance and Politics

Desiderius Erasmus’ The Praise of Folly

Visual Primary Sources:

Botticelli’s Birth of Venus

Masaccio’s The Tribute Money

Donatello’s David

Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, The Last Supper, various images from his notebooks

Michelangelo’s Pieta, David, samples from the Sistine Chapel

Raphael’s School of Athens

Titian’s Bacchanal of the Adrians

Giorgione’s Tempest

Van Eyck’s Arnolfini Wedding

Holbein the Younger’s The French Ambassadors

Bosch’s The Garden of Earthly Delights

Bruegel’s The Peasant Wedding, The Blind Leading the Blind, Hunters in the Snow

Dürer’s Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, various self-portraits

Grünewald’s The Eisenheim Altarpiece

Tintoretto’s The Last Supper

El Greco’s Resurrection, Burial of the Count Orgaz

Brunelleschi’s Pazzi Chapel

Bramante’s Tempietto

Palladio’s Villa Rotunda

Unit 2: Absolutism & Statemaking

Topics: The Spanish Empire, The Rise of England, The English Civil War and Glorious Revolution, The Rise and Fall of the Dutch Republic, Absolutism in France, Austria, Prussia, Sweden, and Russia

Primary Source Readings:

Richelieu’s Political Will and Testament

Henry IV’s Edict of Nantes

James I’s The Powers of the Monarch in England

The House of Commons’ The Powers of Parliament in England

Heinrich Kramer & Jacob Sprenger’s The Hammer of the Witches

Peter the Great’s Edicts and Decrees

Frederick the Great’s Political Testament

Daniel Dafoe’s The Complete English Tradesman

The Slave Trade

Women of the Third Estate

Unit 3: Enlightenment & Growth

Topics: The Scientific Revolution, The Enlightenment, Enlightened Despotism, Early Industrialization, Agricultural Revolution, The War of the Austrian Succession, The Seven Years’ War, Party Politics in Britain, Decline of Ottoman Empire and Poland

Primary Source Readings:

Immanuel Kant’s What Is Enlightenment?

John Locke’s Second Treatise of Civil Government: Legislative Power

Rene Descartes’ The Discourse on Method

Francis Bacon’s On Superstition and the Virtue of Science

Galileo Galilei’s Letter to Christina of Tuscany

The Papal Inquisition of 1633: Galileo Condemned

Sir Isaac Newton’s Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy

Baron d’Holbach’s The System of Nature

Denis Diderot’s Prospectus for the Encyclopedia of Arts and Sciences

The Philosophe

Voltaire’s Philosophical Dictionary: The English Model and Candide

Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

Thomas Paine’s The Age of Reason: Deism

Baron de Montesquieu’s The Spirit of Laws

John Jacques Rousseau’s The Social Contract

Catherine the II’s Grand Instruction to the Legislative Commission

Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations

John Wesley’s A Plain Account of the People Called Methodists

Visual Primary Sources:

Caravaggio’s The Conversion of St. Paul, Supper at Emmaus

Gentileschi’s Judith and Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes

Bernini’s David, The Ecstasy of St. Theresa, Piazza of St. Peter’s Cathedral

Borromini’s San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane

Rubens’ The Descent from the Cross, Marie Arrives at Marseilles

Van Dyck’s Charles I at the Hunt

Ruisdael’s Windmill at Wijk-bij-Duurstede

Hals’ The Jolly Toper, The Laughing Cavalier

Rembrandt’s The Nightwatch, Six’s Bridge, various self-portraits

Vermeer’s The Kitchenmaid

Hogarth’s The Rake’s Progress and Harlot’s Progress series, Beer Street and Gin Lane

Gainsborough’s Mrs. Richard Brinsley Sheridan

Wren’s St. Paul’s Cathedral

Velázquez’ Las Meninas

Poussin’s Burial of Phocion

The Palace at Versaiiles

Unit 4: Revolution

Topics: The French Revolution, Napoleonic Europe, The Industrial Revolution, Socialism, Restoration Europe, Romanticism, Revolts and Revolutions 1830 - 1848

Primary Source Readings:

Arthur Young’s Travels in France

Revolutionary Legislation: Abolition of the Feudal System

The Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen

Olympe de Gouges’ Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen

Maximilien Robespierre’s Speech to the National Convention – Feb. 5, 1794

Francois-Xavier Joliclerc’s A Soldier’s Letters to His Mother

Madame de Remusat’s Memoirs: Napoleon’s Appeal

Joseph Fouche’s Memoirs: Napoleon’s Secret Police

Napoleon’s Diary

Benjamin Disraeli’s Sybil

Friedrich Engels’ The Condition of the Working Class in England

Honore de Balzac’s Father Goriot

Elizabeth Poole Sandford’s Woman in Her Social and Domestic Character

Prince Klemens von Metternich’s Secret Memorandum to Tsar Alexander I, 1820

Jeremy Bentham’s English Liberalism

The First Chartist Petition

Robert Malthus’ An Essay on the Principle of Population

Robert Owen’s A New View of Society

David Ricardo’s On Wages

Visual Primary Sources:

David’s Oath of the Horatii, Death of Marat

Goya’s Family of Charles IV, The Disasters of War series, Saturn Devouring His Children, The Third of May, 1808

Gericault’s The Raft of the Medusa

Delacroix’ Death of Sardanapalus

Unit 5: Unification & Imperialism

Topics: Italian Unification, German Unification, Nationalist Movements, Victorian Britain, Unrest in Russia, The Second Empire and Third Republic of France, The Second Industrial Revolution, Anarchism, Realism, Impressionism, Rationalism vs. Irrationalism, New Imperialism

Primary Source Readings: Otto von Bismarck’s Speeches on Pragmatism and State Socialism

Giuseppe Mazzini’s The Duties of Man

Heinrich von Treitschke’s Militant Nationalism

Freidrich Fabri’s Does Germany Need Colonies?

Rudyard Kipling’s The White Man’s Burden

Royal Niger Company’s Controlling Africa: The Standard Treaty

Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species

John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty

Karl Marx and Freidrich Engels’ The Communist Manifesto

Emmeline Pankhurst’s Why We Are Militant

Pope Pius IX’s Syllabus of Errors

Emile Zola’s J’Accuse

Visual Primary Sources:

Courbet’s Interior of My Studio, Burial at Ornans

Corot’s Ville d’Avray

Millet’s The Sower

The Crystal Palace

Eiffel’s Tower

The Paris Opera House

Manet’s Bar at Folies-Bergere, Le Dejeuner sur l’herbe (Luncheon on the Grass), Olympia

Monet’s Rouen Cathedral series, Impression: Sunrise, Waterlilies

Renoir’s La Moulin de la Galette, The Bathers

Degas’ Prima Ballerina, The Glass of Absinthe, The Little 14-Year Old Dancer

Rodin’s The Age of Bronze, The Thinker, Balzac

Seurat’s A Sunny Day on La Grande Jatte, La Cirque

Toulouse-Lautrec’s At the Moulin Rouge

Cezanne’s Mont Saint-Victoire, Still Life with Apples and Oranges, Large Bathers

Gauguin’s Vision after the Sermon, la Orana Maria

Van Gogh’s The Starry Night, various self-portraits

Munch’s The Scream

Unit 6: The World at War

Topics: Causes of the Great War, The Great War, The Russian Revolutions and Civil War, The Treaty of Versailles, The Weimar Republic, The Great Depression, The Rise of Fascism, The Third Reich, Stalinism, The Spanish Civil War, Causes of WWII, WWII

Primary Source Readings:

Wilford Owen’s Dulce et Decorum Est

Evelyn Blucher’s The Home Front

Program of the Provisional Government in Russia

V.I. Lenin’s April Theses and Speech to the Petrograd Soviet, Nov. 8, 1917

Erich Maria Remarque’s The Road Block and All Quiet on the Western Front

The Treaty of Versailles

Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points

Lilo Linke’s Restless Days

Heinrich Hauser’s With Germany’s Unemployed

Jose Ortega y Gasset’s The Revolt of the Masses

Sigmund Freud’s Civilization and Its Discontents

Benito Mussolini’s The Doctrine of Fascism

Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf

Joseph Goebbels’ Nazi Propaganda Pamphlet

The Nuremberg Laws

Bruno Bettelheim’s The Informed Heart

Anne Frank’s Diary

Fred Baron’s Witness to the Holocaust

Joseph Stalin’s Problems of Agrarian Policy in the USSR and Report to the Congress of Soviets, 1936

Mrs. Robert Henrey’s The Battle of Britain

William Hoffman’s A German Soldier at Stalingrad

Visual Primary Sources: