HIS201/HIS601: Introduction to Christian History
This course provides an essential overview of Christian history. This highly informative, broad-ranging study provides vital facts on the growth and impact of Christianity from the apostles to the present day not only in the Western world but also globally.
At a Glance
- Introduction to the main threads and issues running through each century of Christian history
- Explanations of key historical developments
- Thematic connections between centuries
- Focused looks at key persons, ideas, and events
- Assigned proctor to guide you through the course and provide extra assignments
- Access to all course material—video lectures; lessons; key concept reviews, and quizzes
- Access to the Cerego learning system to build memory retention of course objectives
- $250 per month access to complete the course at your own pace
More Details
The Introduction to Christian History course provides an essential overview. This highly informative, broad-ranging study, taught by scholar and author Stephen Backhouse, provides vital facts on the growth and impact of Christianity from the apostles to the present day not only in the Western world but also globally, including the development of Eastern Orthodox and Armenian Christianity, as well as Christianity in Latin America, Southeast Asia, the Baltic and Slavic states, and India. The course is organized by century, going through the major events, ideas, and personalities that have shaped Christian history around the world.
Course Outline
- Servants and Leaders: 1–100
- Love and Courage: 100–200
- Martyrs and Heretics: 200–300
- Establishment and Resistance: 300–400
- East and West: 400–500
- Centres and Margins: 500–600
- Soldiers and Missionaries: 600–700
- Monks and Emperors: 700–800
- Conversion and Culture: 800–900
- Green Shoots, Dead Branches: 900–1000
MIDTERM - Popes, Kings, and Peasants: 1000–1100
- War and Peace: 1100–1200
- Empire and Wilderness: 1200–1300
- Humility and Power: 1300–1400
- Church and State: 1400–1500
- Expansion and Consolidation: 1500–1600
- Reform and Revival: 1600–1700
- Reason and Revolution: 1700–1800
- Progress and Preservation: 1800–1900
- Sacrifice and Invention: 1900–2000
FINAL EXAM