You are here: UNE Home / Course and Unit Catalogue / 2009 / A-Z / HIST165

Year:

HIST165 Europe and the New World

Updated: 25 March 2009
Credit Points 6
Offering
Responsible Campus Teaching Period Mode of Study
Armidale Semester 2 Off Campus
Armidale Semester 2 On Campus
Online level Level C - Internet access required
Intensive School(s) None
Supervised Exam There is no UNE Supervised Examination.
Pre-requisites None
Co-requisites None
Restrictions HIST365
Notes None
Combined Units None
Coordinator(s) Jennifer Clark (jclark1@une.edu.au)
Unit Description

By the end of the 15th century European adventurers had discovered the New World and guessed its potential. The consequences of that meeting were enormous. This unit examines the engagement of Europe with the New World, geographically, politically, economically and intellectually. We will consider the exploration of Spain, France and The Netherlands but concentrate on the settlement of British North America. Topics covered include: discovery of the New World, encounters with native people, slavery, witchcraft, early settlement, cultural growth and eventual political separation in Revolution. The unit ends with the War of 1812 and the confirmation of independence for the United States of America.

Prescribed Material
Mandatory
Text(s):

Note: Students are expected to purchase prescribed material

British Atlantic, American Frontier: Spaces of Power in Early Modern British America
ISBN: 9781584654278
Hornsby, S.J., University Press of New England 2004
Text refers to: Semester 2 , On and Off Campus
Disclaimer Unit information may be subject to change prior to commencement of the teaching period.
   

Email to a friend