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Age of Revolution: 1789-1830 (14.01.25-25.03.25)

 

Ferdinand Victor Eugène Delacroix, La Liberté guidant le peuple, 1830

Paris, Louvre, RF 129

This image: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nuremberg_chronicles_-_Organizational_Structure_of_the_Empire_of_the_Holy_Roman_Empire_(CLXXXIIIv-CLXXXIIIIr).jpg

 

“Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, but to be young was very heaven!” 

Here it is! The age of revolutions. The time of Robespierre and Madame Guillotine, of Napoleon and Josephine, and of great battles fought when men looked really good in uniform. We’ll be covering all that of course – a comprehensive introduction into a period of tumult and change. But we’ll be going much much further. Because it didn’t end there, did it? We are still living through the aftershocks of the age of revolution.

This short period gave birth not only to more revolutions – from Ecuador to Ireland – but perhaps to the modern age itself.

RJW F2502 Online course (via Zoom)

10 weeks, Tuesday 14 January - Tuesday 25 March (incl., with half-term break on 18 February)

£120 (individual registration); £216 (for two people sharing one screen).

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13 March

Austen and the Age of Revolution

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26 March

The Papacy (15.01.25-26.03.25)