Ergebnis der Suche

Ergebnis der Suche nach: (Freitext: WHERE) und (Systematikpfad: GESCHICHTE)

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  • The Diary of Samuel Pepys

    Civil servant Samuel Pepys' diary from 1660 to 1670, where he writes about everything from his business meetings to his wife's beauty and going out to the theatre (UK 2020).

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  • Mapping Prejudice

    This project delves into the Minneapolis area's real estate history, where racially-restrictive deeds were powerful tools used by real estate developers in the 19th and 20th century to prevent people of color from buying or occupying property (USA: University of Minnesota 2019).

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  • King John: The Decision–Making Game

    This decision-making game introduces students to the key events of John’s reign, his quarrels with the Pope, with the King of France and with the barons and why his problems developed to the point where he had to agree to Magna Carta (thinkinghistory.co.uk 2014).

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  • What caused the French Revolution?

    What rights do people have, and where do they come from? Who gets to make decisions for others, and on what authority? And how can we organize society to meet people’s needs? (TED-Ed lesson 2021)

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  • Centering Spenser

    This project presents an analysis and reconstruction of Edmund Spenser's life and experiences at Kilcolman Castle, the now-ruined estate in Ireland where the poet is believed to have written large parts of his masterpiece The Faerie Queene (USA 2018).

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  • Picturing US History

    Presented by the American Social History Project at CUNY (City University of New York), this web resource is founded on the belief that ʺvisual materials are vital to understanding the American past.ʺ The site provides illustrated essays, narrated lectures, and My Favorite Image, where scholars and curators examine a single image for teaching purposes ...

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  • The Atlantic Slave Trade

    John Green teaches about slavery. He investigates when and where slavery originated, how it changed over the centuries, and how Europeans and colonists in the Americas arrived at the idea that people could own other people (11 minutes / USA: Crash Course 2017).

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  • Investigating Gerrymandering and the Math Behind Partisan Maps

    In many states, where the majority party has the authority to rewrite the electoral map, legislators essentially have the power to choose their voters (New York Times Lesson 2018).

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  • United States Civil Rights Trail

    The trail wends its way across 15 states and a succession of churches, courthouses, schools, museums and other landmarks where activists challenged segregation in the 1950s and 1960s, largely in the South (USA 2018).

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  • A day in the life of an ancient Athenian

    It’s 427 BCE and the worst internal conflict ever to occur in the ancient Greek world is in its fourth year. Athens is facing a big decision: what to do with the people of Mytilene, a city on the island of Lesbos where a revolt against Athenian rule has just been put down. How did these kinds of decisions get made? (TED-Ed lesson 2021)

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