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World History Lecture Notes
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HI 453: U.S.-Latin American Relations Richard Slatta, North Carolina State University Relationships and difficulties between the United States and Latin America from the 1800s to present.
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500 B.C. - A.D. 1 None, HyperHistory Online These lecture notes are a clickable timeline that cover the key events and places in world history from 500 B.C. to A.D. 1. Some topics include Hellenism, Epoch of the Warring States, King Bimbisara of Magadha, and more. This is a great resources for those examining this period in detail.
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Geology 0060 History of the Earth C.E. Jones, University of Pittsburgh This course focuses on the climate change of the earth and the medieval warming period.
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History 369: The World Since 1914 Nicholas Pappas, Sam Houston State University This course studies the political, economic, social, and cultural development of the World from the outbreak of the First World War to the Present.
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History 266: World History from the Renaissance to Imperialism Lee and Nicolas Pappas, Sam Houston State University This course explores the rise of Modern history from the 1500s onward. It discusses social and economic changes of the time period, cultural changes during the Renaissance, The Reformation, wars of religion, The Ottomon Empire, the European expansion, and several other topics of the new era.
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History of Mathematics G. Donald Allen, Texas A & M University In this course you will see firsthand many of the results that have made what mathematics is today and meet the mathematicians that created them. One particularly interesting attribute of these "builders" of mathematical structure is how clear they were about what to prove. Their results turn out to be just what is needed to establish other results sometimes in an unrelated area.
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History 104: World History from 1500 Dr. Eric Mayer, Victor Valley College Survey of world history since 1500, stressing the interdependency of
regional histories and socioeconomic development. Of primary importance is understanding the history of the "Modern World System" as it developed from 1500 to 1993.
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World History to 1500 Dr. Eric Mayer, Victor Valley College The course is a world history course and for this reason will not be a Euro-centric history course. Course will focus on the beginnings of civilization some five to seven thousand years ago in Mesopotamia, Africa, Asia and the Americas. We will then proceed to Classical Civilizations, the Axis Age and conclude the course with an understanding of the world in 1500. Lecture will stress social, cultural, political and economic history of the various world civilizations.
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Varsity Notes is the world's largest directory of free lecture notes, containing free world history lecture notes and free lecture notes for numerous other academic disciplines. Our free history course notes will help you succeed in any undergraduate or gradute world history course at your college or university. Free cheat notes in world history are also valuable as a self study tool for high school and college students or anyone searching for free resources on history. |
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