HISTORY 221: THE MEDIEVAL LEGACY
 

Course Requirements


REQUIRED BOOKS (available for sale in the UNCG bookstore):
1. C. Warren Hollister and Judith Bennett, Medieval Europe: A Short History, 9th edition (McGraw-Hill, 2002) [ISBN 0-07-112109-9]
2.Alfred the Great: Asser’s Life of King Alfred and Other Contemporary Sources, trans. and ed. Simon Keynes and Michael Lapidge
                (Penguin Classics, 1983) [ISBN 0140444092]
3. Suger, The Deeds of Louis the Fat, ed. Richard Cusimano and John Moorhead (Catholic Univ of America Press, 1992)
                [ISBN 0813207584]
4. The Letters of Abelard and Heloise, ed. Betty Radice (Penguin, 1974) [ISBN 0-14-044297-9]
5. Jean Froissart, Chronicles, ed. and trans. Geoffrey Brereton (Penguin Classics, 1968) [ISBN 0140442006]
6. On-Line texts. The bulk of your primary source reading will be located on-line, either at my web-site or at the
superior academic site known as the On-Line Medieval Sourcebook.  For each text I have indicated the URL where that text may be found.  If you have trouble using the internet, please see me for assistance.  Please note that the on-line version of this syllabus will have direct hyper-links to these texts.

COURSE REQUIREMENTS:

1.  Attendance and Participation (10% of your grade)
I care about attendance and will reduce the grade of those who frequently miss class without first obtaining permission. Discussion and participation in class can only help your grade. Try to make at least one comment per week: if you get in the habit of offering your ideas and opinions on the readings, you will find that your appreciation and understanding of the material will grow.

 2. Assignments (10%)
Every other week or so I will ask you to write either a short (1 page) response piece to the readings or several (1-2) sample identifications (as practice for the exams).

 3. First Midterm Exam: October 9, (part in class, part take-home) (20%)
The exam will include several short-answer identifications (who, what, where, when, and why important) and one longer, synthetic essay.  The goal of the longer essay will be to have you evaluate and synthesize (that is, pull together) material from the readings and discussions.  You will write the essay (from a list of 2-3 questions provided by me) at home and bring it to the exam date; then, in class, you will answer the identifications.

 4. Second Midterm Examination, November 18 (take-home) (20%)
This will be an entirely take-home exam; you will write two short answers and one longer essay.

 5. Final Exam: Friday May 9, 8-11 AM  (40% of your grade)
The format of this exam will be similar to that of the first midterm.  You will bring two already-written essays to the examination session, at which point you will answer several additional identifications and short answers.

 GRADE BREAKDOWN:
              Attendance and Discussion:     10%
              Assignments                            10%
              First Midterm:                         20%
              Second Midterm:                    20%
              Final Exam:                             40%
 

THE ‘LEGAL’ STUFF
1. In case later consultation should prove necessary, students are asked to keep copies of all graded assignments until the end of the semester (at least).
2. All course requirements must be completed to receive a grade for the class. This means that you will fail the course if you don’t, for instance, turn in the exam essay.
3. Regarding late work .... Assignments are due on the date and at the time listed on the syllabus; if a crisis (such as illness) arises, it is your responsibility to contact me.  If you do not contact me, the work (when eventually received) will be substantially penalized.  Contact may be made by phone, email, or a note left in my mailbox in the History Department (219 McIver). And while I provide my home phone number at the top of the syllabus, I will be annoyed if you call me at home after 9 PM.
3. PLAGIARISM: Plagiarism is a type of cheating, and occurs when a person passes off (whether intentionally or un-intentionally) someone else’s words or ideas as their own. Plagiarism is a serious academic offense, which, in its most overt forms, can result in formal disciplinary action by the university (at the most extreme, this might include expulsion). This is a notoriously thorny area for students.  Many students unintentionally commit plagiarism by ‘borrowing’ ideas, interpretations, and/or actual words from other authors.  Make sure that your words are your own, and that your interpretations are also your own.  If you find yourself using someone else’s words or ideas, make sure you have given him/her credit by using a footnote, endnote, or parenthetical citation. Note: my comments in class do not need to be cited.
4. BE CAUTIOUS in using websites. Many students feel that they can obtain the ‘answer’ (or even a good interpretation) concerning a historical problem by simply looking it up on the web. While the web has many uses, this is almost invariably a fatal strategy.  Looking for someone else’s ideas is no substitute for your own analysis. Some observations from the instructor’s point of view: 1) use of a web-site without citing it (even if it is crap) is plagiarism, which, if detected, can result in serious academic penalties (see above); 2) instructors can often detect uncited use of a website when either the writing style of the student’s paper changes drastically, or when facts/ideas/dates/people not discussed in class or in any of the assigned readings appear in an assignment. Again, I don’t want to discourage you from gaining more perspectives by using the web. What I’m saying is that ultimately you are being evaluated on your analysis of the assigned readings, not on your ability to plug some web site’s ideas into your essay.
 
 

CITATION OF SOURCES
For any written assignment defined as a formal writing assignment (ie., all the essays required in this course), you are expected to provide specific citations to the texts that you use in support of your paper.

What are citations?
        In general: they are bookmarks for the reader, allowing him/her to return to the source you have used to  make your point. They also serve as acknowledgments of the sources you have used (particularly so that your reader does not think you are passing off someone else’s ideas as your own)
        In practice: citations are brief statements of the author and/or title of the work you are referring to, along with a reference point (usually a page number) within that work.  For example, if you wanted to make a parenthetical citation of Hollister’s opinions of King John in a paper, you would include a citation such as this .... (Hollister, p. 256).

Types of Citations
1. Parenthetical citations: appear in parentheses directly after the words to which they provide reference. Parenthetical citations usually include the author’s last name and the number of the page to which you are referring). For example, “Juhel of Mayenne was only 20 years old or so when he founded the priory of Marmoutier in his castle keep (Barton, p. 369).”  The words in quotation marks are what you’ve written; but since you’ve taken this information from another source, you need to indicate that source. Here the citation appears in parentheses to some book by Barton at p. 369.  NOTE: parenthetical citations are informal; they are acceptable (sometimes) in student writing, but never appear in formal academic work.

 2. Formal citations (endnotes or footnotes): this is the way that scholars cite their references. The format of a footnote is indistinguishable from that of an endnote; the only difference between them lies in where they appear on the page (footnotes at the bottom of each page; endnotes in a separate list at the end of the paper).  Modern word-processing makes it childishly easy to create either sort of note; look (usually) under the ‘insert’ pull-down menu of your word-processor and you will find a choice for ‘footnotes/endnotes’.  When you create one, a superscript number will appear in the body of your text where you created the note. That number is meant to alert the reader that he or she ought now to redirect his/her eyes either to the bottom of the page (footnote) or the back of the paper (endnote) for the relevant citation. NOTE: although word-processors allow the creation of superscript note numbers as roman numerals (e.g., i, ii, v, xiii), this is to be avoided. Always make sure you are creating arabic numerals (e.g., 1, 2, 3). [see the end of the next paragraph for examples]
            What appears within the foot- or endnote is also important. For a book, you ought to include all of the information you would provide in a bibliographic entry: author, title of book  (underlined or italicized ), and publishing information (place published, publisher, date published). If the work to which you are referring is an article, the format is slightly different: author, title of article (in quotation marks), title of journal (italicized or underlined), volume number of journal, and year of journal.  Either way, you will also need to include the specific page number to which you are referring the reader.     If you are citing a web-site (or on-line text), the rules are less clear. If the on-line material is clearly derived from a book, then you ought to provide all of the usual information one expects for a book, but you should add the URL and the webpage title; if the page lacks proper bibliographic information, provide whatever you can.  Here is an example of a endnote to a book. [1]   Here is an example of a citation to an article. [2] (note that a footnote would look the same, but would simply appear at the bottom of each page of your essay/paper).  Here is an example of a citation to a web-site. [3]   Foot or endnotes are always preferable to parenthetical citations.

WHEN must you provide a citation?
 1. Whenever you use an author’s words directly. In this case, the author’s words must appear in quotation
  marks in the body of your essay and the citation should appear immediately after the closed quotation mark.  For instance, in the following made-up sentence I quote myself and use a parenthetical citation to a made-up work:  “As the noted medieval historian, Richard Barton, once said, ‘Medieval History is cool’ (Barton, p. 297)’.”
 2. Whenever you have paraphrased a source (that is, taken the gist of  it and reworked it into your own
  words) or when you refer to an episode from a source (for example, “In the relief clause of Magna Carta, the barons demanded ....”).  Because you are not using the exact words of the original text, you have some leeway about where you place the citation. Place it either at the end of the paragraph or immediately after the relevant portion of your paper.
 3. Whenever you mention a fact or event that is not generally known. Lots of confusion can and does exist
  about what is and what is not ‘generally well-known.’  Use common sense. You don’t need to cite Hollister if you state that the Battle of Hastings occurred in 1066 (this is a famous and well-known event/date). More obscure material might require a citation.

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ENDNOTES:

1.  Mary W. Smith, Footnoting for Fun and Profit (Boston: Academic Press, 1980), 44.

2.  John Q. Doe, “How to Create Footnotes,” Journal of Scholarship 15 (1999), 219.

3. Cartulaire de l'abbaye cardinale de la Trinité de Vendôme, ed. Charles Métais, volume 1 (Paris: A. Picard et fils, 1893), 1:14-18.  Translated from the Latin by Richard Barton and published on-line under the title “Land Tenure and Family Conflict: the Honor of Vendôme, c. 1006-1040,” at http://www.uncg.edu/~rebarton/vendome.htm


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