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Lecturer(s)
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Drška Václav, doc. PhDr. Ph.D.
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Fukala Radek, prof. PhDr. Ph.D.
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Tomíček David, Mgr. Ph.D.
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Course content
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The teaching of the course in combined form summarizes the following topics in individual teaching blocks: 1. The birth of new Christian denominations and European humanism 2. Protoabsolutism 3. Catholic Reform and the Confessionalisation of Europe 4. The main European conflicts on the eve of the Thirty Years' War 5. The Thirty Years' War and the Peace of Westphalia Within the self-study, students deal with topics included in the compulsory literature and especially in the course outline, tasks assigned in the attendance part of the course or in the Moodle learning system, as well as on the basis of individual consultations with the teacher realized also through the communication forum in Moodle or other electronic form.
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Learning activities and teaching methods
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unspecified, unspecified
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Learning outcomes
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This is a one-semester course, consisting of one hour lecture and one hour seminar per week. The lectures are thematically and temporally related to previous topics in Course A and cover the time period up to 1648. Their aim is to introduce students to the basic themes of early modern European history and to give them an overview of the development of early modern European society and to provide information on the current state of research. The aim of the seminar is to acquaint students with the basic methodological and methodological procedures applied in this period through work with selected sources and literature. Emphasis is placed on the interpretive mastery of the text and the heuristics of the field. Compared to the course General Ancient History A, the teaching is divided into hour-long, thematically narrower units.
The student will understand the basic methodological problems of contemporary medievalist discourse, will be able to explain the essence of the main periodization milestones of the epoch, and will be oriented in relative chronology and basic causal links of the historical process. It can locate the basic sources for understanding medieval European society and its interaction with neighbouring cultures.
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Prerequisites
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KGeneral Earlier History A, KHI/BKH11
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Assessment methods and criteria
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unspecified
Fulfillment of the test from the seminar general older history B.
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Recommended literature
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