"This royal throne of kings, this scepter'd isle ... This
blessed plot, this earth, this realm, this England,
This
nurse, this teeming womb of royal kings, Fear'd by their breed and famous
by their birth" -- William Shakespeare,
Richard II, II, i,
40. It is difficult to separate the history and culture of Great
Britain from the personalities, politics, and policies of its monarchs.
Who can imagine the Church of England without Henry VIII (and his wives),
the English Renaissance without Elizabeth I (or Shakespeare's plays without
the Wars of the Roses), the American War for Independence without George
III, the British Empire without Queen Victoria or contemporary royal roles
without the Queen Mum? By listening to lectures by British experts on the
monarchy; by studying historical, artistic, and literary portraits of the
kings and queens; by visiting palaces, castles, educational institutions,
and churches associated with royal rule, this course will focus on the
ways in which the monarchy has shaped political, social, economic, religious,
and intellectual developments in Great Britain from the Anglo-Saxons to
the present.
In addition to Westminster Abbey, the Tower of London, Hampton Court, the Houses of Parliament, the British Museum and Library, Buckingham Palace, and the National Portrait Gallery in London, students will visit royal landmarks in Canterbury, the site of the martyrdom of Thomas Becket; Oxford, a royalist stronghold during the Civil Wars; Windsor, the home of British monarchs for over 900 years; Winchester, the capital of the Anglo-Saxon world; and Edinburgh, the home of the Stuart dynasty and birthplace of Mary, Queen of Scots. Lectures will explore themes dealing with the politics of the monarchy, church-state conflict, cultural representations of royal power, and pivotal events in British history.
See http://www.cofc.edu/~mccandla/rbsyl.htmlfor
undergraduate and http://www.cofc.edu/~mccandla/gradrbsyl.html
for graduate syllabi.
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Dates: 3 July 2003
- 3 August 2003
Where: London, England,
and Edinburgh, Scotland
Accommodation: Stamford
Street Residence Hall, King's College, University of London (all are single
rooms with bathroom and small refrigerator; five rooms share a kitchen;
laundry facilities are in complex)
Instructor: Amy Thompson
McCandless, Professor of History, College of Charleston
British Coordinator: David
Waller, Senior Lecturer, University College Northampton
Credit hours: six
credits in history, undergraduate or graduate level
Costs (includes airfare,
accommodations, program trips and admission fees, 6-credit hours tuition,
5-day excursion to Scotland): $4849 for undergraduates;
$5149 for graduates.
Royal Britain: The Monarchy from Alfred the Great to Elizabeth II will be one of twenty-five different courses in the arts, humanities, social sciences, business, and health sciences offered in London during the summer of 2003 by the British Studies Summer Program of the University of Southern Mississippi. The College of Charleston has been a member of this consortium since 1999. See the British Studies web site at http://www.cice.usm.edu/ie/europe/british for more information.
For details on individual courses and application forms, please contact the British Studies Coordinator, Dr. A. McCandless, 327 Maybank Hall or 210B Randolph Hall, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC 29424; tel: 843-953-8025 or 843-953-5527; fax: 843-953-6349; e-mail: mccandlessa@cofc.edu .