MIT OpenCourseWare
  • OCW home
  • Course List
  • about OCW
  • Help
  • Feedback
  • Support MIT OCW

21H.411 History of Western Thought, 500-1300, Spring 2003

Reproduction of manuscript of Four Gospels In Bohairic Coptic and Arabic Copied by Georgis.
Four Gospels manuscript in Bohairic Coptic and Arabic, copied by Georgis in 1205.  (Image courtesy Library of Congress.)

 

Highlights of this Course

This course includes a reading list of significant texts relating to the western intellectual tradition from the period 500-1300 A.D.

Course Description

This course examines the development of the western intellectual tradition from the fall of the Roman Empire through the High Middle Ages. Our basic premise will be that the triumph of Christianity in the west was not the inevitable outcome it appears from hindsight. Our attention will therefore be focused not only on the development of Christian thought and practice, but on its challengers as well. Particular emphasis will be devoted to northern paganism, the rise of Islam, Byzantine orthodoxy, indigenous heretical movements, and the ambiguous position of Jews in European society.

 

Staff

Instructor:
Prof. Anne McCants

Course Meeting Times

Lectures:
Two sessions / week
1.5 hours / session

Level

Undergraduate

Feedback

Send feedback about OCW or this course.