HIST 100

Spring 2025 All Classes

All Classes

Credit: 3 hours.

Broad introduction to global history, by exploring the global structures and transnational forces that have shaped human history, from the emergence of agriculture and urban centers to our contemporary global village.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Fall 2022 for:

Humanities – Hist & Phil
Cultural Studies - Non-West
HIST 100 class schedule data for spring 2025
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
39597
Discussion/
Recitation
AD1
10:00AM -10:50AM
F
Gregory Hall
Hong, H
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
39598
Discussion/
Recitation
AD2
12:00PM -12:50PM
F
Gregory Hall
Alli, G
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
39599
Discussion/
Recitation
AD3
10:00AM -10:50AM
F
Gregory Hall
Alli, G
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
39600
Discussion/
Recitation
AD4
2:00PM -2:50PM
W
Gregory Hall
Jaimes, M
Polanski, J
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
39601
Discussion/
Recitation
AD5
1:00PM -1:50PM
F
David Kinley Hall
Alli, G
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
39602
Discussion/
Recitation
AD6
3:00PM -3:50PM
W
Gregory Hall
Jaimes, M
Polanski, J
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
54515
Discussion/
Recitation
AD7
10:00AM -10:50AM
F
David Kinley Hall
Jaimes, M
Polanski, J
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
54516
Discussion/
Recitation
AD8
11:00AM -11:50AM
W
Lincoln Hall
Hong, H
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
54517
Discussion/
Recitation
AD9
1:00PM -1:50PM
W
Gregory Hall
Hong, H
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
33842
Online Lecture
AL1
ARRANGED
n.a.
n.a.
Jaimes, M
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/21/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
Section Info:
Description: In History 100 we will study the world from the eleventh century through the early nineteenth century. This was the first global age, when trade, conquest, and colonization connected all parts of the globe as never before. By 1800, all large areas of human settlement and culture everywhere on earth interacted with one another – some only barely, others in deep and transforming ways. We will focus on three long-term developments that have most powerfully shaped the world in which we live: struggles between colonizers and colonized peoples; the global formation and spread of capitalism; and the process of state and empire formation. We will trace the increasing interconnectivity of people across the globe, the increased inequalities that resulted in oppression, and the constant struggles and resistance from the oppressed.
52716
Online
B
ARRANGED
n.a.
n.a.
Natale, M
Part of Term:
B
Date Range:
03/17/25-05/07/25
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Hist & Phil, and Cultural Studies - Non-West course.
Section Info:
Description: In this course we will study the Muslim world from the Mongol Conquest in the thirteenth century until the nineteenth which ushered in a modern Islamic community. Though typically the early modern period is studied as one of exploration, colonization and imperial state centralization, this is also the time of a global Islamic community. The spread of Islam not only resulted in a changing global religious community, but also accompanied the spread of trade networks, political systems and culture. However, by 1800, growing European colonial and imperial powers changed the Islamic landscape from Indonesia through India to the Ottoman lands in the Middle East and Europe and finally to North Africa. This course will focus on how the Muslim World became a global phenomenon touching and changing almost all early modern societies from Indonesia to Spain, and how that phenomena was then impacted by the growth of western European imperialism and colonialism.
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