Early Modern Gunpowder Empires in Global Perspective
Syllabus, Master's level, 5HA809
- Code
- 5HA809
- Education cycle
- Second cycle
- Main field(s) of study and in-depth level
- History A1N
- Grading system
- Fail (U), Pass (G), Pass with distinction (VG)
- Finalised by
- The Department Board, 24 January 2018
- Responsible department
- Department of History
Entry requirements
A Bachelor's degree, equivalent to a Swedish Kandidatexamen, from an internationally recognised university.
Learning outcomes
Learning outcomes
A student who successfully completed the course will be able to:
- Identify and explain the rough geographical extent of a number of early modern empires discussed in the course literature at several time periods
- Describe, compare, and use different theoretical approaches in the study of early modern empires
- Describe and evaluate the continuing legacy of all of these empires for an understanding of the modern world
- Use some of the available primary sources for studying early modern imperial projects
- Define a research task, analyse a topic, and present the analysis in a concise and understandable way
Content
During the period 1500 to 1800 a number of new empires in Western Europe, the Middle East and South Asia fundamentally altered the social, political, economic, military, and cultural landscape over much of the globe. The main early modern Western European empires to be examined are those of Portugal, the Netherlands and England. The course will also look at the Ottoman Empire (straddling Eastern Europe and the Middle East) and the Mughal Empire (which controlled much of South Asia). The course charts both imperial successes and failures, focusing especially on "technologies" of empire (e.g. improvements in mapping, advances in navigation and new uses for gunpowder) and on major players such as monarchs and monopolistic trading companies. It discusses ideological justifications for empire, the relationship between state-building and empire, imperial warfare, international trade, and labour supply (the latter includes a discussion of the expansion of the global slave trade). It also sheds light on the social and cultural impact of empires both for the imperial centres themselves and for the places and peoples they conquered or sought to control.
Instruction
The course will consist of a number of seminars.
Assessment
Assessment will be based written and oral assignments. Students that have missed a small number of mandatory assignments may complete them by the end of the term at the latest.
Reading list
No reading list found.