The collision of old worlds produced conflict but in the process it would ultimately create an interconnected community of diverse peoples and cultures, the beginnings of globalization.
Designed as a one or two semester research program, up to 6 credit hours may be earned.

Not open to students who have received credit for HIS325. This course examines the Holocaust in the context of modern European history. Three lecture hours per week. This course examines the cultures of Ancient Greece and Rome from the perspective of warfare, examining not only how and why these societies made war but how their warfare shaped and was shaped by each society as a whole. Drop by our Student Navigation Center, and we’ll get you on the right path. It examines many of the key issues that greatly influenced modern Chinese history including Western imperialism, the Talping and Boxer movements, the Republican Revolution, the Nationalist Revolution, the Sino-Japanese War, and the Victory of the Communist Party. Three lecture hours per week. The course introduces students to the European experience by examining broad historical themes. Choosing your classes for your graduate degree at Salem State. Not open to students who have received credit for HIS 710. Taking a class or classes here to count toward a degree elsewhere. This course fulfills these general education curriculum requirements: Contemporary Society, World Cultures. It examines the role of information technology in the research, writing, presenting and teaching of history and aims to develop specific competencies in Web site evaluation, basic data analysis, Web page evaluation/development and multimedia presentations. The course studies different Chinese historical topics in different semesters.

This course will examine the social and cultural history of the eighteenth century giving special attention to the Enlightenment, the intellectual movement that has come to characterize the age.

First year seminars are required for first-year students and transfer students with fewer than 15 credits. Get in touch with us with any questions about our academic programs, campus life or applying. A systematic study of the major patterns of global history in the modern period. Three lecture hours er week, May require assignments encompassing travel off campus. Central Campus, Second Floor, Classroom Building, Email: navcenter@salemstate.edu It pays particular attention to the cultural continuations, social changes, and global interactions around the world. Utilizing the rich resources of New England, this course introduces archaeological methodology, focusing on documents, artifacts, and other data from the period 1600 to 1850.
Three lecture hours per week. This course traces the roots of the American family from colonial time to the present. Not open to students who have received credits for HIS 876. Get in touch with us with any questions about our academic programs, campus life or applying. Three lecture hours per week. Lab fee. Not open to students who have received credit for HIS331. Three lecture hours per week. Prerequisites: HIS700 and completion of 18 credit hours. Not open to students who have received 6 credits for HIS500. The course will consider a wide range of topics including exploration, colonization, commerce, migration, slavery, creole societies, revolution and piracy.