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Department of History and Archaeology

COURSES OFFERED TO OTHER DEPARTMENTS

HISTORY COURSES OFFERED TO OTHER DEPARTMENTS

Courses that are marked with an asterisk (*) are offered by the staff at special hours (different from the teaching programme of the Faculty of History & Archaeology).

Whenever a course is not offered in special hours, students from other departments are advised to declare their participation to the teachers at the beginning of the courses, independently from the dates for official selection declarations submitted to their corresponding departmental secretaries. In this case, maximum number of students is 150 per course (priority list).

For the FACULTY OF PHILOLOGY (between brackets the course code as offered by the Faculty of Philology):

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

Compulsory

ΙΙ 10ΑΤ (ΚΙΙ01) Ancient Greek History Α* (winter semester)  

From the appearance of the polis to the end of the reign of Philip II of Macedonia

Ancient Greek History during the Archaic and the Classical periods.

This course is focusing on the most significant political events, as well as all institutional, social and economic aspects of each one of these two periods of Greek history.

e-class: PHIL1732

E. Psoma, 3 hours

ΙΙ 11ΑΤ (KΙI02) Ancient History B*     (winter semester)

Introduction and Overview of Roman History from the Early Years to Diocletian

Overview of the evolution of Roman history from the foundation of Rome to the tetrarchy of Diocletian (753 BC–305 A.D). In this term, the main weight of the lectures will fall on the following issues:

  • The constitution, the political institutions and the social organization of Republican Rome.
  • The expansion of Rome in Italy and the Mediterranean Sea
  • The crisis of the Roman Republic
  • The establishment of the Augustan Principate
  • The administrative and social organization of the Roman Empire
  • The crisis of the 3rd century AD.

eclass: ARCH701

N. Giannakopoulos, 3 hours * The class is taught at the same time as II 25 Ancient History C of the Department of History and Archaeology

Optional (limited selection)

II 89 Ancient Greek History

Introduction to Ancient Greek Epigraphy.

The course aims at familiarizing students with interpretative methods in ancient Greek epigraphy. Basic categories of Greek private and public inscriptions are examined, such as decrees, laws, epistles, edicts, honorary and funeral inscriptions. Epigraphical sources will be approached in close inter-relationship with literary sources and historical events, as well as with questions of topography and of prosopography. The seminar includes visits to the Epigraphical Museum.

e-class: ARCH533

S. Aneziri, 3 hours

II13AT (KII03) Βyzantine History*  (spring semester)

Introduction to Byzantine History 

Introduction to the history and culture of the Byzantine world. Byzantium through the ages: political ideology, constitution, major turning points, the geographical space and historical development, law, and society in the eleven centuries of the empire’s life. The place of Byzantium on the international stage, the geopolitical changes and the geostrategy of the state. Characteristic accomplishments of Byzantine civilisation.

A. Kiousopoulou, 3 hours

KΙΙ04 Modern Greek History* (winter semester)

The course examines the major political, social and economic developments in the Greek lands under Ottoman and Venetian rule from the fall of Constantinople (1453) to the forced entry of Greece into the Second World War (1940). Institutions of the Ottoman Empire pertaining to its Greek Orthodox populations will also be highlighted. The political ideas of the Greek Enlightenment in the eighteenth century and the establishment of the Greek nation-state following the Revolution of 1821 will also be thoroughly examined. The political, institutional and intellectual history of Modern Greece in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century will also be overviewed.

e-class: ARCH267

Sp. Ploumidis, 3 hours (with the participation of Dr. Andreas Antonopoulos, who will teach a three-hour session)

DEPARTMENT OF BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND FOLKLORE

Compulsory

II13AT (MΙΙ03) Βyzantine History*      (spring semester)

Introduction to Byzantine History

Introduction to the history and culture of the Byzantine world. Byzantium through the ages: political ideology, constitution, major turning points, the geographical space and historical development, law, and society in the eleven centuries of the empire’s life. The place of Byzantium on the international stage, the geopolitical changes and the geostrategy of the state. Characteristic accomplishments of Byzantine civilisation.

A. Kiousopoulou, 3 hours

Optional (limited selection)

ΙΙ 10Φ (ΜΙΙ01) Ancient Greek History Α*    (winter semester)

From the appearance of the polis to the end of the reign of Philip II of Macedonia

Ancient Greek History during the Archaic and the Classical periods.

This course is focusing on the most significant political events, as well as all institutional, social and economic aspects of each one of these two periods of Greek history.

eclass: PHIL1732

E. Psoma, 3 hours

ΙΙ 11ΑΤ (ΜΙI02) Ancient History B*     (winter semester)

Introduction and Overview of Roman History from the Early Years to Diocletian

Overview of the evolution of Roman history from the foundation of Rome to the tetrarchy of Diocletian (753 BC–305 A.D). In this term, the main weight of the lectures will fall on the following issues:

  • The constitution, the political institutions and the social organization of Republican Rome.
  • The expansion of Rome in Italy and the Mediterranean Sea
  • The crisis of the Roman Republic
  • The establishment of the Augustan Principate
  • The administrative and social organization of the Roman Empire
  • The crisis of the 3rd century AD.

eclass: ARCH701

N. Giannakopoulos, 3 hours * The class is taught at the same time as II 25 Ancient History C of the Department of History and Archaeology

II 89 Ancient Greek History   (spring semester)

Introduction to Ancient Greek Epigraphy.

The course aims at familiarizing students with interpretative methods in ancient Greek epigraphy. Basic categories of Greek private and public inscriptions are examined, such as decrees, laws, epistles, edicts, honorary and funeral inscriptions. Epigraphical sources will be approached in close inter-relationship with literary sources and historical events, as well as with questions of topography and of prosopography. The seminar includes visits to the Epigraphical Museum.

e-class: ARCH533

S. Aneziri, 3 hours

ΜΙΙ04  Modern Greek History* (winter semester)

The course examines the major political, social and economic developments in the Greek lands under Ottoman and Venetian rule from the fall of Constantinople (1453) to the forced entry of Greece into the Second World War (1940). Institutions of the Ottoman Empire pertaining to its Greek Orthodox populations will also be highlighted. The political ideas of the Greek Enlightenment in the eighteenth century and the establishment of the Greek nation-state following the Revolution of 1821 will also be thoroughly examined. The political, institutional and intellectual history of Modern Greece in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century will also be overviewed.

e-class: ARCH267

Sp. Ploumidis, 3 hours (with the participation of Dr. Andreas Antonopoulos, who will teach a three-hour session)

DEPARTMENT OF LINGUISTICS

Optional (limited selection)

ΙΙ 10Φ (ΓΙΙ01) Ancient Greek History Α* (winter semester)

From the appearance of the polis to the end of the reign of Philip II of Macedonia

Ancient Greek History during the Archaic and the Classical periods.

This course is focusing on the most significant political events, as well as all institutional, social and economic aspects of each one of these two periods of Greek history.

e-class: PHIL1732

E. Psoma, 3 hours

ΙΙ 11ΑΤ (ΓΙI02) Ancient History B*     (winter semester)

Introduction and Overview of Roman History from the Early Years to Diocletian

Overview of the evolution of Roman history from the foundation of Rome to the tetrarchy of Diocletian (753 BC–305 A.D). In this term, the main weight of the lectures will fall on the following issues:

  • The constitution, the political institutions and the social organization of Republican Rome.
  • The expansion of Rome in Italy and the Mediterranean Sea
  • The crisis of the Roman Republic
  • The establishment of the Augustan Principate
  • The administrative and social organization of the Roman Empire
  • The crisis of the 3rd century AD.

eclass: ARCH701

N. Giannakopoulos, 3 hours

II 89 Ancient Greek History    (spring semester)

Introduction to Ancient Greek Epigraphy.

The course aims at familiarizing students with interpretative methods in ancient Greek epigraphy. Basic categories of Greek private and public inscriptions are examined, such as decrees, laws, epistles, edicts, honorary and funeral inscriptions. Epigraphical sources will be approached in close inter-relationship with literary sources and historical events, as well as with questions of topography and of prosopography. The seminar includes visits to the Epigraphical Museum.

e-class: ARCH533

S. Aneziri, 3 hours

II13AT (ΓΙΙ03) Βyzantine History*     (spring semester)

Introduction to Byzantine History 

Introduction to the history and culture of the Byzantine world. Byzantium through the ages: political ideology, constitution, major turning points, the geographical space and historical development, law, and society in the eleven centuries of the empire’s life. The place of Byzantium on the international stage, the geopolitical changes and the geostrategy of the state. Characteristic accomplishments of Byzantine civilisation.

A. Kiousopoulou, 3 hours

ΓΙΙ04  Modern Greek History* (winter semester)

The course examines the major political, social and economic developments in the Greek lands under Ottoman and Venetian rule from the fall of Constantinople (1453) to the forced entry of Greece into the Second World War (1940). Institutions of the Ottoman Empire pertaining to its Greek Orthodox populations will also be highlighted. The political ideas of the Greek Enlightenment in the eighteenth century and the establishment of the Greek nation-state following the Revolution of 1821 will also be thoroughly examined. The political, institutional and intellectual history of Modern Greece in the nineteenth and the early twentieth century will also be overviewed.

e-class: ARCH267

Sp. Ploumidis, 3 hours (with the participation of Dr. Andreas Antonopoulos, who will teach a three-hour session)

For the DEPARTMENT OF ΕDUCATIONAL STUDIES

Compulsory

74ΙΙ10ΑΤ Ancient History* (spring semester)

Ancient Greek History from the beginning until the Roman Imperial period

The course will focus on the main political events and the most significant constitutional, social and economic features of the various periods of Ancient Greek History.

e-class: ARCH685

 N. Giannakopoulos, 3 hours

74ΙΙ13ΑΤ Byzantine History* (spring semester)

Introduction to Byzantine History 

Introduction to the history and culture of the Byzantine world. Byzantium through the ages: political ideology, constitution, major turning points, the geographical space and historical development, law, and society in the eleven centuries of the empire’s life. The place of Byzantium on the international stage, the geopolitical changes and the geostrategy of the state. Characteristic accomplishments of Byzantine civilisation.

A. Kiousopoulou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 88 Contemporary Greek Political History     (winter semester)

The Greek Political System, 1929-1967 (winter semester)

An examination of the evolution of the Greek political system from the Great Depression of the 1930s until the imposition of the military dictatorship in 1967.

e-class: ARCH271

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

Optional

ΙΙ 30 Early Modern Greek History II    (spring semester)

History of the Greek territories under Venetian rule (13th-18th c.)

Political environment, ideology, administrative institutions and ecclesiastical policy, social stratification and groupings, economic activities, cultural life.

eclass: ARCH330

K. Konstantinidou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 84 History of the Post-WW2 World    (spring semester)

The course discusses the postwar history of international relations, focusing on three processes: the Cold War, decolonization and European integration.

eclass: ARCH114

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

For the DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY

Compulsory

73ΙΣΤ001 Ancient History*                 (spring semester)

Ancient Greek History from the beginning until the Roman Imperial period

The course will focus on the main political events and the most significant constitutional, social and economic features of the various periods of Ancient Greek History.

e-class: ARCH685

N. Giannakopoulos, 3 hours

73ΙΣΤ002 Βyzantine History   (winter semester)

Byzantine History from the 4th to the 11th Century

This course introduces the students to the history of Byzantium from the fourth to the eleventh century, focusing on selected aspects of the empire’s history, while adhering to a basic chronological frame. The course examines the structure of the Byzantine state (as well as challenges and changes to that structure), political ideology, religious developments, as well as specific topics of economic and cultural history, including military and cultural interactions with neighbors.

e-class::  ARCH959

K. Nikolaou, 3 hours

73 ΙΥ 20 Modern Greek History * (winter semester)

This course covers the period from the Fall of Constantinople (1453) to the early decades of the modern Greek state. On the one hand, it aims to illustrate aspects pertaining to the socio-economic, political and cultural characteristics of the population of the Greek peninsula in the period of Ottoman and Venetian rule. On the other hand, it will examine issues of the history of the modern Greek state, with particular emphasis on politics, ideology, economy and social structure.

e-class: ARCH909

E. Koumas, 3 hours

Optional

ΙΙ 30 Early Modern Greek History II          (spring semester)

History of the Greek territories under Venetian rule (13th-18th c.)

Political environment, ideology, administrative institutions and ecclesiastical policy, social stratification and groupings, economic activities, cultural life.

e-class: ARCH330

K. Konstantinidou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 88 Contemporary Greek Political History     (winter semester)

The Greek Political System, 1929-1967 (winter semester)

An examination of the evolution of the Greek political system from the Great Depression of the 1930s until the imposition of the military dictatorship in 1967.

e-class: ARCH271

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 84 History of the Post-WW2 World I  (spring semester)

The course discusses the postwar history of international relations, focusing on three processes: the Cold War, decolonization and European integration.

e-class: ARCH114

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

For the DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY

Optional

67ΙΙ 10ΑΤ Ancient History *         (spring semester)

Ancient Greek History from the beginning until the Roman Imperial period

The course will focus on the main political events and the most significant constitutional, social and economic features of the various periods of Ancient Greek History.

eclass: ARCH685

N. Giannakopoulos, 3 hours

67ΙΙ 13ΑΤ Introduction to Byzantine History  *      (spring semester)

Introduction to the history and culture of the Byzantine world. Byzantium through the ages: political ideology, constitution, major turning points, the geographical space and historical development, law, and society in the eleven centuries of the empire’s life. The place of Byzantium on the international stage, the geopolitical changes and the geostrategy of the state. Characteristic accomplishments of Byzantine civilisation.

A. Kiousopoulou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 30 Early Modern Greek History B  (spring semester)

History of the Greek territories under Venetian rule (13th-18th c.)

Political environment, ideology, administrative institutions and ecclesiastical policy, social stratification and groupings, economic activities, cultural life.

eclass: ARCH330

K. Konstantinidou, 3 hours

ΙΥ 20 Modern Greek History  *  (winter semester)

This course covers the period from the Fall of Constantinople (1453) to the early decades of the modern Greek state. On the one hand, it aims to illustrate aspects pertaining to the socio-economic, political and cultural characteristics of the population of the Greek peninsula in the period of Ottoman and Venetian rule. On the other hand, it will examine issues of the history of the modern Greek state, with particular emphasis on politics, ideology, economy and social structure.

e-class: ARCH909

E. Koumas, 3 hours

ΙΙ 88 Contemporary Greek Political History     (winter semester)

The Greek Political System, 1929-1967  (winter semester)

An examination of the evolution of the Greek political system from the Great Depression of the 1930s until the imposition of the military dictatorship in 1967.

eclass: ARCH271

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 84 History of the Post-WW2 World I     (spring semester)

The course discusses the postwar history of international relations, focusing on three processes: the Cold War, decolonization and European integration.

eclass: ARCH114

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

For the FACULTY OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE

Optional

ΕEI01 Modern Greek History *  (winter semester)

This course covers the period from the Fall of Constantinople (1453) to the early decades of the modern Greek state. On the one hand, it aims to illustrate aspects pertaining to the socio-economic, political and cultural characteristics of the population of the Greek peninsula in the period of Ottoman and Venetian rule. On the other hand, it will examine issues of the history of the modern Greek state, with particular emphasis on politics, ideology, economy and social structure.

e-class: ARCH909

E. Koumas, 3 hours

For the FACULTY OF FRENCH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE

Optional

64679 Modern Greek History *  (winter semester)

This course covers the period from the Fall of Constantinople (1453) to the early decades of the modern Greek state. On the one hand, it aims to illustrate aspects pertaining to the socio-economic, political and cultural characteristics of the population of the Greek peninsula in the period of Ottoman and Venetian rule. On the other hand, it will examine issues of the history of the modern Greek state, with particular emphasis on politics, ideology, economy and social structure.

e-class: ARCH909

E. Koumas, 3 hours

 For the FACULTY OF GERMAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE

Optional

ΙΥ 20 Modern Greek History *  (winter semester)

This course covers the period from the Fall of Constantinople (1453) to the early decades of the modern Greek state. On the one hand, it aims to illustrate aspects pertaining to the socio-economic, political and cultural characteristics of the population of the Greek peninsula in the period of Ottoman and Venetian rule. On the other hand, it will examine issues of the history of the modern Greek state, with particular emphasis on politics, ideology, economy and social structure.

e-class: ARCH909

E. Koumas, 3 hours

ΙΙ 13ΑΤ Βyzantine History*                (spring semester)

Introduction to Byzantine History 

Introduction to the history and culture of the Byzantine world. Byzantium through the ages: political ideology, constitution, major turning points, the geographical space and historical development, law, and society in the eleven centuries of the empire’s life. The place of Byzantium on the international stage, the geopolitical changes and the geostrategy of the state. Characteristic accomplishments of Byzantine civilisation.

A. Kiousopoulou, 3 hours     

ΙΙ 30 Early Modern Greek History B  (spring semester)

History of the Greek territories under Venetian rule (13th-18th c.)

Political environment, ideology, administrative institutions and ecclesiastical policy, social stratification and groupings, economic activities, cultural life.

eclass: ARCH330

K. Konstantinidou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 88 Contemporary Greek Political History     (winter semester)

The Greek Political System, 1929-1967   (winter semester)

An examination of the evolution of the Greek political system from the Great Depression of the 1930s until the imposition of the military dictatorship in 1967.

eclass: ARCH271

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

ΙΙ 84 History of the Post-WW2 World I       (spring semester)

The course discusses the postwar history of international relations, focusing on three processes: the Cold War, decolonization and European integration.

eclass: ARCH114

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours

For the FACULTY OF SPANISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE

Compulsory

72ΚΟΙ 009 Modern Greek History *  (winter semester)

This course covers the period from the Fall of Constantinople (1453) to the early decades of the modern Greek state. On the one hand, it aims to illustrate aspects pertaining to the socio-economic, political and cultural characteristics of the population of the Greek peninsula in the period of Ottoman and Venetian rule. On the other hand, it will examine issues of the history of the modern Greek state, with particular emphasis on politics, ideology, economy and social structure.

e-class: ARCH909

E. Koumas, 3 hours

For the DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATICS AND TELECOMMUNICATIONS

  ΙΙ 84 History of the Post-WW2 World  (spring semester)

The course discusses the postwar history of international relations, focusing on three processes: the Cold War, decolonization and European integration.

eclass: ARCH114

Ε. Hatzivassiliou, 3 hours