"Lec Last - Concluding Discussion and Advice on ExaminationEarly Modern England: Politics, Religion, and Society under the Tudors and Stuarts (HIST 251) In this final lecture, Professor Wrightson reviews the major themes of the class through a reflection on the nature of the historical process. He explains how the developments traced in the course illustrate the complex and ambiguous nature of historical change and emphasizes the importance of studying history as a means of "understanding ourselves in time" through the disciplined recreation of the past in the present. He concludes by offering his thanks to the Teaching Fellows. 00:00 - Chapter 1. Conclusions 03:54 - Chapter 2. Historiographical Lessons 15:31 - Chapter 3. Awards Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses This course was recorded in Fall 2009.
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Lec 2 -The Tree of Commonwealth
Lec 3 - Households: Structures, Priorities, Strategies, Roles
Lec 4 - Communities: Key Institutions and Relationships
Lec 6 - The Structures of Power
Lec 7 - Late Medieval Religion and Its Critics
Lec 8 -Reformation and Division, 1530-1558
Lec 10 -The Elizabethan Confessional State: Conformity, Papists and Puritans
Lec 12 -Economic Expansion, 1560-1640
Lec 13 - A Polarizing Society, 1560-1640
Lec 17 - Education and Literacy
Lec 18 -Street Wars of Religion: Puritans and Arminians
Lec 19 -Crown and Political Nation, 1604-1640
Lec 20 -Constitutional Revolution and Civil War, 1640-1646
Lec 21 - Regicide and Republic, 1647-1660
Lec 22 - An Unsettled Settlement: The Restoration Era, 1660-1688
Lec 23 - England, Britain, and the World: Economic Development, 1660-1720