| MO3011 | Society and Religious Change in Sixteenth-Century France |
| Lecturer | Dr Malcolm Walsby (St John’s House, room 12) |
| Credits | 30 |
| Availability | 2012-13, Semester 1 |
| Class Hour | view timetable |
| Description | This course offers a detailed examination of the development and near disintegration of the new French nation state in the sixteenth century. It examines how France faced the two major challenges of the age: the trend towards more centralised state-building, stimulated in part by the changing nature of warfare in the sixteenth century and the urge on the part of European monarchies to create a new monarchy; and the challenge posed by the divisions of European Christendom resulting from the Protestant Reformation. A central question to be answered is why France succeeded in meeting the first challenge so successfully, as epitomised by the "Renaissance" monarchy of Francis I, but then collapsed so weakly in the face of the growth of Calvinism in the second half of the century. |
| Basic Reading | J. Garrisson, A History of Sixteenth-Century France (1995) M. Holt, The French Wars of Religion (1995) |
Course Structure |
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| Assessment | 100% Coursework |
Learning Outcomes |
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| Restrictions | Antirequisite: MO4902 |