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Introduction to the Program
Un programa exhaustivo y 100% online, exclusivo de TECH y con una perspectiva internacional respaldada por nuestra afiliación con la Historical Association”
En un entorno globalizado, los estudiantes recurren a los estudios en historia del mundo con el fin de prepararse para futuras carreras y estudios. Incluso para los académicos y los profesionales que luego deciden especializarse en temas y áreas históricas más específicas, esta Postgraduate diploma en Ancient and Medieval World History proporciona la capacitación esencial y el marco comparativo necesario para analizar la historia en profundidad.
El claustro docente lo componen expertos internacionalmente reconocidos que se han capacitado y/o trabajado en instituciones de referencia. Así, le confieren una orientación académica y rigurosa, basada en la evidencia científica, que servirá para actualizar los conocimientos en Prehistoria, Historia Antigua, Medieval, Moderna y Contemporánea.
Este programa está dirigido a aquellas personas interesadas en alcanzar un nivel de conocimiento superior en Ancient and Medieval World History. Esta es la oportunidad de cursar esta capacitación en un formato 100% online, sin tener que renunciar a obligaciones y haciendo fácil el regreso a la universidad. El estudiante actualiza sus conocimientos y consigue un título de Postgraduate diploma para seguir creciendo personal y profesionalmente.
Gracias a la colaboración con Historical Association (HA), el profesional podrá acceder a recursos especializados como planes de clase, guías temáticas y materiales didácticos para la enseñanza de la Historia. También podrá participar en eventos académicos, obtener descuentos en publicaciones y vincularse a una red internacional de educadores, fortaleciendo su análisis histórico desde una visión inclusiva y global.
Este programa te permitirá potenciar tus capacidades y actualizar tus conocimientos en Ancient and Medieval World History”
Esta Postgraduate diploma en Ancient and Medieval World History contiene el programa académico más completo y actualizado del panorama universitario. Las características más destacadas son:
- Desarrollo de 100 escenarios simulados presentados por expertos en historia
- Sus contenidos gráficos, esquemáticos y eminentemente prácticos con los que están concebidos, recogen una información científica y práctica sobre la historia del mundo
- Novedades sobre los últimos descubrimientos en la historia de nuestras civilizaciones
- Contiene ejercicios prácticos donde realizar el proceso de autoevaluación para mejorar el aprendizaje
- Sistema interactivo de aprendizaje basado en el método del caso y su aplicación a la práctica real
- Todo esto se complementará con lecciones teóricas, preguntas al experto, foros de discusión de temas controvertidos y trabajos de reflexión individual
- Disponibilidad de los contenidos desde cualquier dispositivo fijo o portátil con conexión a internet
Esta Postgraduate diploma es la opción perfecta para adentrarte en el conocimiento de la historia del mundo y el comportamiento humano desde sus inicios”
Incluye en su cuadro docente profesionales pertenecientes al ámbito del mundo de la historia, que vierten en esta capacitación la experiencia de su trabajo, además de reconocidos especialistas pertenecientes a sociedades de referencia y universidades de prestigio.
Gracias a su contenido multimedia elaborado con la última tecnología educativa, permitirán al profesional un aprendizaje situado y contextual, es decir, un entorno simulado que proporcionará un aprendizaje inmersivo programado para entrenarse ante situaciones reales.
El diseño de este programa se centra en el Aprendizaje Basado en Problemas, mediante el cual el docente deberá tratar de resolver las distintas situaciones de práctica profesional que se le planteen a lo largo del curso. Para ello, el profesional contará con la ayuda de un novedoso sistema de vídeos interactivos realizados por reconocidos expertos en Ancient and Medieval World History con gran experiencia docente.
Aprovecha la última tecnología educativa para ponerte al día en Ancient and Medieval World History sin moverte de casa"
Contarás con los últimos recursos didácticos, impartidos por expertos en Historia"
Syllabus
The content structure has been designed by a team of historians aware of the current relevance of training to be able to specialize in this area of knowledge, in order to enrich students and raise their level of knowledge in Ancient and Medieval World History through the latest educational technologies available.
This Postgraduate diploma in World History contains the most complete and up-to-date program on the market”
Module 1. Ancient World History I
1.1. Introduction to Ancient History
1.1.1. Concept of Ancient History
1.1.2. Geographic Framework
1.1.3. General Features of Ancient History
1.1.4. Chronology
1.2. The Urban Revolution and the Formation of the State
1.2.1. Origins (15000-9500 B.C.)
1.2.2. Neolithic in the Near East (9,500-7000 B.C.)
1.2.3. The Urban Revolution in Mesopotamia (7000-5100 B.C.)
1.3. Mesopotamia in the 3rd Millennium B.C. and Egypt from the Tinite Age to the First Intermediate Period
1.3.1. Mesopotamia in the 3rd Millennium B.C.
1.3.2. The Tinite Age in Egypt
1.3.3. The Old Kingdom (III-VI dynasty)
1.3.4. First Intermediate Period (VII-XI Dynasties)
1.4. II Millennium B.C.
1.4.1. The Paleobabylonian Era
1.4.2. New Populations: Hittites and Hurrians
1.4.3. Late Bronze Age
1.5. Egypt in the Middle Kingdom and the Second Intermediate Period
1.5.1. The Middle Kingdom: the XI and XII Dynasties
1.5.2. The Second Intermediate Period (XIII-XVII dynasties)
1.6. Mesopotamia in the 1st Millennium
1.6.1. The Assyrian Empire (934-539 B.C.)
1.6.2. The Neo-Babylonian Empire (626-539 B.C.)
1.7. Egypt: The New Egyptian Kingdom
1.7.1. The XVIII Dynasty
1.7.2. The XIX Dynasty
1.7.3. The XX Dynasty
1.8. Egypt in the Third Intermediate Period
1.8.1. The XXI Dynasty
1.8.2. The Libyan Dominion: XXII and XXIII Dynasties
1.8.3. The XXIV Dynasty
1.8.4. The XXV Dynasty: Nubia Dominates Egypt
1.9. The Late Egyptian Period (664-332 B.C.)
1.9.1. The XXVIth Dynasty or Saite Era
1.9.2. XXVII to XXXI Dynasties
1.10. The Persian Empire
1.10.1. Introduction
1.10.2. The Zenith of the Empire: Darius I (521-486 B.C.)
1.10.3. Xerxes I (486-465 B.C.)
1.10.4. Monarchs there is between 465 and 330 B.C.
Module 2. Medieval World History I
2.1. The High Middle Ages
2.1.1. Concept
2.1.2. Periodization
2.1.3. Sources
2.2. Ancient Rome
2.2.1. The Roman Empire
2.2.2. Socioeconomic Transformations in the 4th century
2.2.3.The Irruption of the Barbarians
2.3. The New Political Organization in the West
2.3.1. The different Germanic Kingdoms and the Reorganization of the Territory
2.4. The Byzantine Empire
2.4.1. Byzantium under Justinian (s. VI)
2.4.2. Byzantium in the 7th century: Political Keys to the Byzantine Revival
2.4.3. From the Iconoclast Controversy to the Macedonian Dynasty
2.4.4. Decline of Byzantium (ss. XII and XIII)
2.4.5. End of Byzantium (s. XIV)
2.5. Islam
2.5.1. Pre-Islamic Characteristics
2.5.2. Muhammad
2.5.3. The Precepts of Islam
2.5.4. The death of Muhammad and the Orthodox Caliphs
2.5.5. The Expansion of Islam
2.6. Charlemagne
2.6.1. The Renewal of the Empire
2.6.2. Policy
2.6.3. Economy
2.6.4. Culture and Art
2.7. The Continuity of the Carolingian Empire
2.7.1. Successors
2.7.2. Causes of the Disintegration of the Carolingian Empire
2.7.3. The Carolingian Legacy
2.8. The Umayyad Dynasty
2.8.1. Origins and Rise to the Caliphate
2.8.2. Al-Andalus
2.9. The Abbasid Caliphate
2.9.1. Origin
2.9.2. The 8th Century
2.9.3. The 9th Century
2.10. Byzantine Withdrawal
2.10.1. Heraclian Dynasty
2.10.2. Isauric Dynasty
Module 3. Ancient World History II
3.1. The First Greece
3.1.1. Cretan-Mycenaean Greece
3.1.2. The Dark Ages
3.2. Archaic Greece
3.2.1. The Formation of the Polis
3.2.2. The Transformation of the Aristocratic Regime
3.2.3. The Economic Evolution: Currency and the Development of Trade
3.2.4. Greek Colonization: Causes, Characteristics and Development
3.2.5. Sparta and Athens in the Archaic Period
3.3. Classical Greece
3.3.1. The Medical Wars
3.3.2. The Athenian Maritime Empire
3.3.3. Democracy in Athens
3.3.4. Economy and Agrarian Society in the 5th Century B.C.
3.3.5. The Peloponnesian War
3.3.6. Alexander the Great
3.4. Hellenistic Greece
3.4.1. Characteristics of Hellenistic Kingship: The Structure and Organization of the Hellenistic Kingdoms
3.4.2. The Ptolemaic Monarchy
3.4.3. Greek Cities
3.4.4. Greek Leagues
3.4.5. Hellenistic Economy: General Characteristics
3.4.6. Hellenistic Society
3.4.7. Hellenistic Culture
3.5. The Origins of Rome and Monarchic Rome
3.5.1. Pre-Roman Italy
3.5.2. The Foundation of Rome
3.5.3. The City of Romulus
3.5.4. The First Kings of Rome
3.5.5. The Etruscans
3.5.6. The Etruscan Kings
3.6. The Roman Republic
3.6.1. The Origins of the Republic
3.6.2. The Conflict between Patricians and Plebeians
3.6.3. The Conquest of Italy
3.6.4. The Government of the Republic
3.6.5. The Expansion into the Mediterranean: The Punic Wars and the Conquest of the East
3.7. The End of the Republic
3.7.1. Imperialism and Its Consequences
3.7.2. The Attempts of the Gracchi to Reform
3.7.3. Marius and Sulla
3.7.4. From Pompey to Caesar
3.7.5. The Dissolution of the Republic
3.8. Augustus and the Principality
3.8.1. The Creation of the Empire
3.8.2. The Julio-Claudian Dynasty
3.8.3. The First Crisis of the Empire: The Year of the Four Emperors
3.8.4. The Flavian Dynasty
3.8.5. The Antonine Dynasty
3.9. The Crisis and the Recovery of the Empire
3.9.1. The Severan Dynasty
3.9.2. The Great Crisis: Military Anarchy
3.9.3. Diocletian and the Tetrarchy
3.10. The Late Antique World
3.10.1. The New Empire of Constantine and the Constantinian Dynasty
3.10.2. The Julian Emperor
3.10.3. The Valentinian Era
3.10.4. Theodosius I and the Theodosian Dynasty
3.10.5. The Fall of the Empire
Module 4. Medieval World History II
4.1. Feudalism and Feudal Society
4.1.1. Feudalism: Nobility and Seigniory
4.1.2. Feudal Society
4.1.3. Forms of Urban Government
4.2. The Revival and Expansion of Europe
4.2.1. The Causes and Forms of European Expansion
4.2.2. Christianity: Evangelization, Crusades and Eastward Expansion
4.3. The Christian Kingdoms in Europe during the 11th and 12th Centuries
4.3.1. The Dissolution of Monarchical Power
4.3.2. The Feudal Monarchies
4.4. Monarchy in Western European
4.4.1. The Consolidation of European Monarchies
4.5. The Confrontation of the Empire and the Papacy
4.5.1. The End of Universal Ideas
4.5.2. The Struggle between the Empire and the Papacy
4.6. The Church and Culture in the Middle Ages
4.6.1. The Church during Feudal Times
4.6.2. Church Renewal
4.6.3. The New Religious Movements: The Gothic
4.7. The Late Medieval Crisis: The 14th and 15th Centuries
4.7.1. Nature and Causes of the Crisis
4.7.2. Demographic, Economic and Social Consequences
4.7.3. The Social Crisis: Popular Uprisings
4.8. The Hundred Years War
4.8.1. France and England at the Beginning of the 14th century
4.8.2. The First Phase of the War
4.8.3. The Second Phase of the War
4.8.4. France: Louis XI and the Resolution of the Burgundy Problem
4.8.5. England: Wars of the Roses
4.9. The Imperial Territory and the Italian Peninsula
4.9.1. Germany and Imperial Decline
4.9.2. The Political Fragmentation of Italy
4.10. Culture
4.10.1. The Renewal of Philosophical and Political Thought
4.10.2. Universities
4.10.3. Humanism
A unique, key, and decisive training experience to boost your professional development”
Postgraduate Diploma in Ancient and Medieval World History
In December 2021, scientists from the University of Seville and the IAPH (Andalusian Institute of Historical Heritage) found in the Sancti Petri channel, near the Bay of Cadiz, the remains of a building thought to be one of the holy grails of archaeology: the Temple of Hercules in Cadiz, a sanctuary of Phoenician origin dedicated to the god Melkart and later to Heracles. This unusual discovery is a reminder that, no matter how far the world advances, the past and the present will continue to be linked by the invisible warp of knowledge. Wanting new professionals to learn about this fascinating area of human chronology, TECH offers the Postgraduate Diploma in Ancient and Medieval World History, a program of the highest curricular level and with a 100% online format that delves through four modules into the culture, politics, art, religion and other fundamental aspects that pertain to the past centuries of human development. If ancient civilizations and the Middle Ages are your passion, this course is for you.
Dare you want to learn about ancient world history
How connected are the events in the timeline? Perhaps the Egyptian who started with writing on papyrus was inspired by the prehistoric pictograms he saw in some cave. And it is possible that the descendant of that scribe wrote centuries later one of the edicts that led to the internal disputes of the Roman Empire, thus giving genesis to its fall. What if those subsequent wars led to the flight of a family in which the master builder who built one of the ships on which Christopher Columbus traveled was born? Cause and effect permeates time, which is why the study of history is so fascinating, as is our program. By accessing our content you will be able to acquire knowledge on a wide range of topics ranging from Mesopotamia to the political fragmentation of Italy. If you want to acquire historiographical skills and humanistic studies in an easy and enriching way, enroll now in our online university.