Asian Languages & Civilization 112 - Russian Emp in Eurasia

Spring
2018
01
4.00
Sergey Glebov
TTH 08:30AM-09:50AM
Amherst College
ASLC-112-01-1718S
WEBS 217
sglebov@amherst.edu
HIST-112-01,ASLC-112-01,RUSS-130-01

(Offered as HIST 112 [AS/EU/p/c], ASLC 112, EUST 112 and RUSS 130.) In the course of five hundred years, the Russian empire in Eurasia evolved as the largest territorial polity in the world. In this course, we will explore the medieval foundations of the imperial state and look at its predecessors and models (Kievan Rus’ and the empire of the Mongols), discuss ways in which cooperation and resistance shaped the imperial state and society, and study cultural and political entanglements among different ethnic, linguistic and confessional groups in Eurasia. Chronologically, we will cover the period from the tenth century to the crisis of the empire in the early twentieth century. Thematically, we will focus on structures of imperial state and society (the imperial house, peasantry, nobility, confessions, intelligentsia, revolutionary movement) and most important regions of the Russian Empire (Ukraine, the Caucasus, the Baltics, Siberia, Central Asia). Two class meetings per week.


Spring semester.  Five College Associate Professor Glebov.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.