Chabot College
Course Outline for History 1Page 1
Fall 2010
Chabot CollegeFall 2010
Course Outline for History 1
HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1600
Catalog Description:
1 - History of Western Civilization to 1600 3 units
Origin and development of civilization in the Mediterranean and its expansion into Europe - the Near East, Greece, Rome the Middle Ages, Renaissance and the Reformation. 3 hours.
[Typical contact hours: 52.5]
Prerequisite Skills:
None.
Expected Outcomes for Students:
Upon completion of this course, students should be able to:
- identify the growth of Mediterranean culture from the dawn of history through the reformation, including the interaction of religious, political, economic and cultural development;
- analyze and appreciate the history of the Renaissance through the Reformation, and the Age of Exploration, including the interaction of religious, political, economic, and cultural developments.
Course Content:
- The Ancient Civilizations
- Egypt - the achievement of stability
- Mesopotamia - the search for order
- Israel - a chosen people
- Persia - empire and religion
- Overriding considerations of religion and economics as forces ofstability and of change
- Classical Civilization: Greece and Rome
- Greek City States in the Early age - Homer; Athenian democracy - emphasis on values: philosophy, drama and citizenship
- Hellenistic culture
- Rome - the Republic - its development, stagnation and decay: literature, government, traditions, and values. The Empire: Caesar, Augustus and the development of the imperial system, its stagnation and decay: philosophy, literature, and values
- The rise of Christianity and Islam and their impact on the west.
- The Byzantine Empire
- The Middle Ages
- Charlemagne - the quest for Empire
- Feudalism and the medieval economy - the growth of the city
- Chivalry, the Crusades, and Islam
- The spirit of the Church - Augustine and Thomas Acquinas
- The Gregorian Church and the Holy Roman Empire
- The Germanic invasions and the new Germanic States
- Development of the National State
- Intellectual synthesis, Dante
- The Renaissance
- New emphasis on the role of the individual - humanism
- Government - a state of chaos, Machiavelli - the Prince
- Achievements in the fields of art and literature: Michelangelo, da Vinci, Raphael, Titian, Rembrandt, Erasmus, etc.
- Emphasis on the past, rather than the future
- The Reformation
- Status of Roman Catholic Church - the "Renaissance Papacy"
- Heroes and Heretics - Albigensians and Wycliffe and Hus
- Martin Luther
Ulrich Zwingli
John Calvin
Thomas Cranmer
- The Church of England and Henry VIII
- The Counter Reformation
- The Age of Exploration
- Portuguese and Spanish maritime voyaging
- The Columbian Moment
- Impact of the New World
- Change from a Mediterranean center of power to an Atlantic World
Methods of Presentation:
- Lecture-discussion
- Student reports
- Appropriate Audio-Visual materials
Assignments and Methods of Evaluating Student Progress:
- Typical Assignments
- Assigned reading and class discussion
- Three or four essay examinations of 1500-2000 words each
- Regular attendance
- Methods of Evaluating Student Progress
- Essays
- Midterm exams
- Quizzes on assigned reading
- Grades A through F according to performance
- Final Exam
Textbook(s) (Typical):
Lynn Hunt et al, The Making of the West: Peoples and Cultures, Volume I, to 1740. Third Edition. Bedford/St. Martin’s, Boston, 2009.
Marvint Perry et al, Western Civilization: Ideas, Politics, and Society, Volume I, to 1789. Ninth Edition. Houghton Mifflin, New York, 2009
Special Student Materials:
None.