About the Program
Bachelor of Arts (BA)
The Department of History offers a program of instruction ranging widely over the historical record of human experience. The chronological, geographical, and topical range affords great flexibility to students working toward degrees in history and to those who wish to give a historical dimension to their studies in other disciplines. History at Berkeley is a highly flexible major that allows students to follow their interests. It is also a major that places strong value on original student research, with all students completing capstone projects on topics they choose in consultation with members of the faculty.
Declaring the Major
Students may declare the major after completing three letter-graded courses in the Department of History with a 2.0 grade-point average (GPA) or better. This must include at least two lower division courses.
Honors Program
To graduate with honors in History, a major must achieve a general GPA of 3.5, a departmental GPA of 3.7, and a minimum grade of "A-" in HISTORY 101. To be eligible for graduation with high or highest honors in History, a major must complete the one-year thesis program, achieve a general GPA of 3.5, a departmental GPA of 3.7, and a grade of "A" in HISTORY 101. The student must also receive a nomination for high or highest honors from the 101 instructor. The decision to award high or highest honors rests with the Honors Committee.
A major who is eligible for honors after completing HISTORY 101 (but not the one-year thesis program) and is interested in continued research may pursue a second thesis project under the rubric HISTORY H195. The second project may substitute for the 101 thesis in determining eligibility for high or highest honors if the student meets the GPA standards and receives a nomination from the H195 instructor.
Minor Program
The Department of History offers a minor in History.
Students are encouraged to meet with the minor adviser to file a "History Minor Application" as soon as they have completed one course towards the minor. In addition to turning in the application, students who have taken their lower division minor course elsewhere should provide an unofficial copy of the transcript showing the course that satisfies the minor and the grade received.
All students must submit a completed “History Minor Application” and an L&S “Minor Completion” petition by the minor declaration deadline once they have enrolled in or completed the course that will complete the minor. The deadline is May first for the spring and November first for the fall. The application and completion forms may be submitted simultaneously.
Major Requirements
In addition to the University, campus, and college requirements, listed on the College Requirements tab, students must fulfill the following requirements specific to their major program.
General Guidelines
- All courses taken to fulfill the major requirements below must be taken for graded credit, other than courses listed which are offered on a Pass/No Pass basis only. Other exceptions to this requirement are noted as applicable.
- No more than one upper division course may be used to simultaneously fulfill requirements for a student's major and minor programs.
- A minimum grade point average (GPA) of 2.0 must be maintained in both upper and lower division courses used to fulfill the major requirements.
For information regarding residence requirements and unit requirements, please see the College Requirements tab.
Summary of Major Requirements
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
Lower division Requirements: Four courses | ||
Upper division Requirements: Eight courses | ||
Pre-modern History Requirement: One course, used in fulfillment of either lower or upper division requirements | ||
Field of Concentration: At least four of the eight upper division courses must constitute a Field of Concentration (see below) | ||
At least one section of HISTORY 103 | ||
One section of HISTORY 101 |
Lower Division Requirements
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
Select one survey course in the history of the United States from the following: 1 | ||
Introduction to the History of the United States: The United States from Settlement to Civil War [4] | ||
Introduction to the History of the United States: The United States from Civil War to Present [4] | ||
Select one survey course in the history of Europe from the following: 1 | ||
Origins of Western Civilization: The Ancient Mediterranean World [4] | ||
Origins of Western Civilization: Medieval Europe [4] | ||
European Civilization from the Renaissance to the Present [4] | ||
Select one survey course in the history of another world area from the following: 1 | ||
After the Roman Empire: the East [4] | ||
History of China: Origins to the Mongol Conquest [4] | ||
Introduction to Chinese History from the Mongols to Mao [4] | ||
Latin American History: Becoming Latin America, 1492 to 1824 [4] | ||
Latin American History: Modern Latin America [4] | ||
African History [4] | ||
India [4] | ||
The Middle East [4] | ||
Introduction to the History of Japan [4] | ||
One elective: Select any additional course listed above or one of the following: 2 | ||
HISTORY 1 | Global History | 4 |
Comparative World History [4] | ||
Science and Society [4] | ||
HISTORY 39 A-Z Freshman Sophomore Seminar |
1 | Students may substitute one upper division course for one of these requirements, in consultation with the Undergraduate Adviser. The substitute course will not then fulfill one of the eight upper division requirements. |
2 | Please note that HISTORY R1B, HISTORY 24, HISTORY 84, and HISTORY 98 do not fulfill this requirement. |
Upper Division Requirements
Select eight courses, including the following:
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
At least one section from the HISTORY 103 series | ||
One section of HISTORY 101 |
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
HISTORY 100AC | Special Topics in the History of the United States | 4 |
HISTORY 100AP | Special Topics in Ancient History (Premodern) | 4 |
HISTORY 100B | Special Topics in European History | 4 |
HISTORY 100BP | Special Topics in Medieval History (Premodern) | 4 |
HISTORY 100D | Special Topics in the History of the United States | 4 |
HISTORY 100E | Special Topics in Latin American History | 4 |
HISTORY 100F | Special Topics in Asian History | 4 |
HISTORY 100H | Special Topics in African History | 4 |
HISTORY 100L | Special Topics in Legal History | 4 |
HISTORY 100M | Special Topics in the History of the Middle East | 4 |
HISTORY 100S | Special Topics in the History of Science | 4 |
HISTORY 100U | Special Topics in Comparative History | 4 |
HISTORY 100UP | Special Topics in Comparative History (Premodern) | 4 |
HISTORY 101 | Seminar in Historical Research and Writing for History Majors | 5 |
HISTORY 103A | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Ancient | 4 |
HISTORY 103B | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Europe | 4 |
HISTORY 103C | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: England | 4 |
HISTORY 103D | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: United States | 4 |
HISTORY 103E | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Latin America | 4 |
HISTORY 103F | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Asia | 4 |
HISTORY 103H | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Africa | 4 |
HISTORY 103S | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: History of Science | 4 |
HISTORY 103U | Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Comparative History | 4 |
HISTORY 104 | The Craft of History | 4 |
HISTORY 105A | Ancient Greece: Archaic and Classical Greek History | 4 |
HISTORY 105B | Ancient Greece: The Greek World: 403-31 BCE | 4 |
HISTORY 106A | Ancient Rome: The Roman Republic | 4 |
HISTORY 106B | Ancient Rome: The Roman Empire | 4 |
HISTORY 108 | Byzantium | 4 |
HISTORY 109A | The Rise of Islamic Civilization, 600-1200 | 4 |
HISTORY 109B | The Middle East, 1000-1750 | 4 |
HISTORY 109C | The Middle East From the 18th Century to the Present | 4 |
HISTORY 111A | Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Southeast Asia to the 18th Century | 4 |
HISTORY 111B | Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Modern Southeast Asia | 4 |
HISTORY 111C | Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Political and Cultural History of Vietnam | 4 |
HISTORY 111D | Vietnam at War | 4 |
HISTORY 112B | Africa: Modern South Africa, 1652-Present | 4 |
HISTORY 112C | Colonialism and Nationalism in Africa | 4 |
HISTORY 113A | Course Not Available | |
HISTORY 113B | Modern Korean History | 4 |
HISTORY 114A | Politics, Culture, and Philosophy in South Asia before Modernity | 4 |
HISTORY 114B | India: Modern South Asia | 4 |
HISTORY 116A | China: Early China | 4 |
HISTORY 116B | China: Two Golden Ages: China During the Tang and Song Dynasties | 4 |
HISTORY 116C | China: Modern China | 4 |
HISTORY 116D | China: Twentieth-Century China | 4 |
HISTORY 116G | Imperial China and the World | 4 |
HISTORY 117A | Topics in Chinese History: Chinese Popular Culture | 4 |
HISTORY 117D | Topics in Chinese History: The Chinese Body: Gender and Sex, Health, and Medicine | 4 |
HISTORY 118A | Japan: Japan, Archaeological Period to 1800 | 4 |
HISTORY 118B | Japan: Japan 1800-1900 | 4 |
HISTORY 118C | Japan: Empire and Alienation: The 20th Century in Japan | 4 |
HISTORY 119A | Topics in Japanese History: Postwar Japan | 4 |
HISTORY 120AC | American Environmental and Cultural History | 4 |
HISTORY 121B | The Colonial Period and American Revolution: The American Revolution | 4 |
HISTORY 122AC | Antebellum America: The Advent of Mass Society | 4 |
HISTORY 123 | Civil War and Reconstruction | 4 |
HISTORY 124A | The Recent United States: The United States from the Late 19th Century to the Eve of World War II | 4 |
HISTORY 124B | The Recent United States: The United States from World War II | 4 |
HISTORY 125A | African American History and Race Relations: 1450-1860 | 4 |
HISTORY 125B | African American History and Race Relations: 1860-2016 | 4 |
HISTORY 126A | Course Not Available | 4 |
HISTORY 126B | Course Not Available | 4 |
HISTORY 127AC | California | 4 |
HISTORY 128AC | California, the West, and the World | 4 |
HISTORY 130 | American Foreign Policy | 4 |
HISTORY 131B | Social History of the United States: Creating Modern American Society: From the End of the Civil War to the Global Age | 4 |
HISTORY C132B | Intellectual History of the United States since 1865 | 4 |
HISTORY 133A | The History of American Capitalism | 4 |
HISTORY 133B | Wall Street / Main Street | 4 |
HISTORY 134A | The Age of the City: The Age of the City, 1825-1933 | 4 |
HISTORY 135 | Course Not Available | 4 |
HISTORY 136A | The History of Women in the United States before 1900 | 4 |
HISTORY 136B | Gender and Sexuality in Twentieth-Century US History | 4 |
HISTORY 136C | Defiant Women: Gender, Power and Violence in American History | 4 |
HISTORY 137AC | The Repeopling of America | 4 |
HISTORY 138 | History of Science in the U.S. | 4 |
HISTORY 138T | History of Science in the US CalTeach | 4 |
HISTORY C139B | The American Immigrant Experience | 4 |
HISTORY C139C | Civil Rights and Social Movements in U.S. History | 4 |
HISTORY 140B | Mexico: Modern Mexico | 4 |
HISTORY 141B | Social History of Latin America: Social History of Modern Latin America | 4 |
HISTORY 142 | Cuba in World History | 4 |
HISTORY 143 | Brazil | 4 |
HISTORY 145 | Latin America in Film | 4 |
HISTORY 146 | Latin American Women | 4 |
HISTORY 149B | Medieval Italy: Italy in the Age of Dante (1000-1350) | 4 |
HISTORY 150B | Medieval England: From the Conquest to 1290 | 4 |
HISTORY 151A | Early Modern Britain, 1485-1750: Reformation to Revolution, Island to Empire | 4 |
HISTORY 151B | Britain 1485-Present: Britain, 1660-1851 | 4 |
HISTORY 151C | Maker of the Modern World? Britain since 1750 | 4 |
HISTORY 152A | Topics in the History of the British Isles: Ireland Since the Union | 4 |
HISTORY 154 | Course Not Available | 4 |
HISTORY 155A | Medieval Europe: From the Late Empire to the Investiture Conflict | 4 |
HISTORY 155B | Medieval Europe: From the Investiture Conflict to the Fifteenth Century | 4 |
HISTORY C157 | The Renaissance and the Reformation | 4 |
HISTORY 158A | Modern Europe: Old Regime and Revolutionary Europe, 1715-1815 | 4 |
HISTORY 158B | Modern Europe: Europe in the 19th Century | 4 |
HISTORY 158C | Modern Europe: Old and New Europe, 1914-Present | 4 |
HISTORY 158D | History of Fascism | 4 |
HISTORY 159A | European Economic History | 4 |
HISTORY 159B | European Economic History | 4 |
HISTORY 160 | The International Economy of the 20th Century | 4 |
HISTORY 162A | Europe and the World: Wars, Empires, Nations 1648-1914 | 4 |
HISTORY 162B | War and Peace: International Relations since 1914 | 4 |
HISTORY 164A | The Birth of Modern Thought: European Intellectual History, 1500-1800 | 4 |
HISTORY 164B | Modern European Intellectual History: European Intellectual History from Enlightenment to 1870 | 4 |
HISTORY 164C | Modern European Intellectual History: European Intellectual History 1870 to the Present | 4 |
HISTORY 165A | Topics in Modern European History: The Reformations of Christendom | 4 |
HISTORY 165B | Topics in Modern European History: The World, the Picture, and the Page: The Revolution in European Culture since the late 18th Century | 4 |
HISTORY 165D | The Social and Cultural History of Early Modern Europe | 4 |
HISTORY 166A | Course Not Available | 4 |
HISTORY 166B | Modern France: Renaissance to Revolution | 4 |
HISTORY 166C | Modern France | 4 |
HISTORY 167A | Modern Germany: Early Modern Germany | 4 |
HISTORY 167B | Modern Germany: The Rise and Fall of the Second Reich: Germany 1770-1918 | 4 |
HISTORY 167C | Modern Germany: Germany 1914 to the Present | 4 |
HISTORY 167D | Berlin and the Twentieth Century | 4 |
HISTORY 168A | Spain and Portugal: The Spanish and Portuguese Empires in the Golden Age: 1450-1700 | 4 |
HISTORY 169A | Modern Italy: Renaissance and Baroque Italy 1350-1800 | 4 |
HISTORY 170 | The Netherlands | 4 |
HISTORY 171A | Russia: Russia to 1700 | 4 |
HISTORY 171B | Autocracy and Society in Romanov Russia | 4 |
HISTORY 171C | Russia: History of the Soviet Union | 4 |
HISTORY 172 | Russian Intellectual History | 4 |
HISTORY 173B | History of Eastern Europe: The Habsburg Empire, 1740-1918 | 4 |
HISTORY 173C | History of Eastern Europe: History of Eastern Europe: From 1900 to the Present | 4 |
HISTORY 174A | Topics in the History of Eastern Europe: A History of Poland-Lithuania | 4 |
HISTORY 174B | Topics in the History of Eastern Europe: Poles and Others: the Making of Modern Poland | 4 |
HISTORY C175B | Jewish Civilization: Modern Period | 4 |
HISTORY C176 | Course Not Available | 4 |
HISTORY 177A | Armenia: Armenia from Ethnogenesis to the Dark Ages | 4 |
HISTORY 177B | Armenia: From Pre-modern Empires to the Present | 4 |
HISTORY 178 | History of the Holocaust | 4 |
HISTORY 180 | The Life Sciences since 1750 | 4 |
HISTORY 180T | History of the Life Sciences Since 1750 (Cal Teach) | 4 |
HISTORY 181B | Topics in the History of the Physical Sciences: Modern Physics: From the Atom to Big Science | 4 |
HISTORY 182A | Science, Technology, and Society | 4 |
HISTORY 182AT | Science, Technology, and Society (Cal Teach) | 4 |
HISTORY C182C | Introduction to Science, Technology, and Society | 4 |
HISTORY 183A | Health and Disease | 4 |
HISTORY 185A | History of Christianity: History of Christianity to 1250 | 4 |
HISTORY 185B | History of Christianity: History of Christianity from 1250 | 4 |
HISTORY 186 | International and Global History since 1945 | 4 |
HISTORY C187 | The History and Practice of Human Rights | 4 |
HISTORY C188B | Art and Science | 4 |
HISTORY 190 | Soccer: A Global History | 4 |
HISTORY C191 | Death, Dying, and Modern Medicine: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives | 4 |
HISTORY C192 | Course Not Available | 3 |
HISTORY C194 | Dutch Culture and Society: Amsterdam and Berkeley in the Sixties | 4 |
HISTORY 199 | Supervised Independent Study and Research (May count towards the eight upper division requirements if taken for four units, one time only. See advisor.) | 1-4 |
Field of Concentration Requirement
At least four of the eight upper-division courses must constitute a Field of Concentration, which shall be defined by one of the following rubrics:
- a period (such as “The Ancient World,” “The Medieval World,” “The Twentieth Century,” or a similarly broad temporal span)
- a geographical area (such as “Eastern Europe,” “China,” “The Mediterranean,” or a similarly broad spatial expanse)
- a thematic approach (such as “Science and Medicine,” “Law,” “Popular Culture,” “Religion,” or a similarly broad subject matter)
The four courses constituting the Field of Concentration must include History 101.The three additional courses in the Field may include a course from the History 103 series. They may also include one appropriate upper-division course (of at least three units) from another department (in consultation with the Undergraduate Advisor.)
Pre-Modern Requirement
At least one course used to fulfill the major requirements must be devoted entirely to pre-modern history, to be selected from courses focused on one or more of the following eras: antiquity, the classical period, and the medieval period. Courses dealing solely with the early modern period do not satisfy this requirement.
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
HISTORY 2 | Comparative World History ("Ancient Empires") | 4 |
HISTORY 3 | After the Roman Empire: the East | 4 |
HISTORY 4A | Origins of Western Civilization: The Ancient Mediterranean World | 4 |
HISTORY 4B | Origins of Western Civilization: Medieval Europe | 4 |
HISTORY 6A | History of China: Origins to the Mongol Conquest | 4 |
HISTORY 100AP | Special Topics in Ancient History | 4 |
HISTORY 100UP | Special Topics in Comparative History ("Premodern") | 4 |
HISTORY 105A | Ancient Greece: Archaic and Classical Greek History | 4 |
HISTORY 105B | Ancient Greece: The Greek World: 403-31 BCE | 4 |
HISTORY 106A | Ancient Rome: The Roman Republic | 4 |
HISTORY 106B | Ancient Rome: The Roman Empire | 4 |
HISTORY 108 | Byzantium | 4 |
HISTORY 109A | The Rise of Islamic Civilization, 600-1200 | 4 |
HISTORY 109B | The Middle East, 1000-1750 | 4 |
HISTORY 111A | Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Southeast Asia to the 18th Century | 4 |
HISTORY 114A | Politics, Culture, and Philosophy in South Asia before Modernity | 4 |
HISTORY 116A | China: Early China | 4 |
HISTORY 116B | China: Two Golden Ages: China During the Tang and Song Dynasties | 4 |
HISTORY 117D | Topics in Chinese History: The Chinese Body: Gender and Sex, Health, and Medicine | 4 |
HISTORY 118A | Japan: Japan, Archaeological Period to 1800 | 4 |
HISTORY 149B | Medieval Italy: Italy in the Age of Dante (1000-1350) | 4 |
HISTORY 150B | Medieval England: From the Conquest to 1290 | 4 |
HISTORY 155A | Medieval Europe: From the Late Empire to the Investiture Conflict | 4 |
HISTORY 155B | Medieval Europe: From the Investiture Conflict to the Fifteenth Century | 4 |
HISTORY 171A | Russia: Russia to 1700 | 4 |
HISTORY 177A | Armenia: Armenia from Ethnogenesis to the Dark Ages | 4 |
HISTORY 185A | History of Christianity: History of Christianity to 1250 | 4 |
Minor Requirements
Students who have a strong interest in an area of study outside their major often decide to complete a minor program. These programs have set requirements and are noted officially on the transcript in the memoranda section, but they are not noted on diplomas.
General Guidelines
- All minors must be declared no later than one semester before a student's Expected Graduation Term (EGT). If the semester before EGT is fall or spring, the deadline is the last day of RRR week. If the semester before EGT is summer, the deadline is the final Friday of Summer Sessions. To declare a minor, contact the department advisor for information on requirements, and the declaration process.
- The History minor consists of six four-unit courses: one lower division and five upper division, from at least two of the seven historical fields below.
- All courses taken to fulfill the minor requirements must be taken for a letter grade.
- An overall GPA of 2.0 is required for all coursework applied to the minor.
- All of the upper division courses taken to fulfill the History minor requirements must be completed at Berkeley in the Department of History. The lower division course may be taken at a California community college; only articulated courses will count (please see assist.org for a full list of currently articulated courses.
- Courses used to fulfill the minor requirements may be applied toward the Seven-Course Breadth requirement, for L&S students.
- No more than one upper division course may be used to simultaneously fulfill requirements for a student's major and minor programs.
- Students can declare the minor as soon as they have completed at least one History course at Berkeley. Students must declare the minor before the end of their penultimate semester at Berkeley.
- L&S students must additionally submit a signed Completion of L&S Minor to the Department of History during their final semester.
Requirements
Code | Title | Units |
---|---|---|
Lower Division | ||
Select one of the following courses: | ||
Comparative World History [4] | ||
After the Roman Empire: the East [4] | ||
Origins of Western Civilization: The Ancient Mediterranean World [4] | ||
Origins of Western Civilization: Medieval Europe [4] | ||
European Civilization from the Renaissance to the Present [4] | ||
History of China: Origins to the Mongol Conquest [4] | ||
Introduction to Chinese History from the Mongols to Mao [4] | ||
Introduction to the History of the United States: The United States from Settlement to Civil War [4] | ||
Introduction to the History of the United States: The United States from Civil War to Present [4] | ||
Latin American History: Becoming Latin America, 1492 to 1824 [4] | ||
Latin American History: Modern Latin America [4] | ||
African History [4] | ||
India [4] | ||
The Middle East [4] | ||
Introduction to the History of Japan [4] | ||
Science and Society [4] | ||
39 A-Z Freshman Sophomore Seminar | ||
Upper Division | ||
Select five courses from the following: | ||
Africa | ||
Special Topics in African History [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Africa [4] | ||
Africa: Modern South Africa, 1652-Present [4] | ||
HISTORY N112B | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Colonialism and Nationalism in Africa [4] | ||
Asia | ||
Special Topics in Asian History [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Asia [4] | ||
Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Southeast Asia to the 18th Century [4] | ||
Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Modern Southeast Asia [4] | ||
HISTORY C111B | Course Not Available | |
Topics in the History of Southeast Asia: Political and Cultural History of Vietnam [4] | ||
HISTORY 113A | Course Not Available | |
Modern Korean History [4] | ||
Politics, Culture, and Philosophy in South Asia before Modernity [4] | ||
India: Modern South Asia [4] | ||
China: Early China [4] | ||
China: Two Golden Ages: China During the Tang and Song Dynasties [4] | ||
China: Modern China [4] | ||
China: Twentieth-Century China [4] | ||
Imperial China and the World [4] | ||
Topics in Chinese History: Chinese Popular Culture [4] | ||
Topics in Chinese History: The Chinese Body: Gender and Sex, Health, and Medicine [4] | ||
Japan: Japan, Archaeological Period to 1800 [4] | ||
Japan: Japan 1800-1900 [4] | ||
Japan: Empire and Alienation: The 20th Century in Japan [4] | ||
Topics in Japanese History: Postwar Japan [4] | ||
HISTORY N119A | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Europe | ||
Special Topics in Ancient History [4] | ||
Special Topics in Medieval History [4] | ||
Special Topics in European History [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Ancient [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Europe [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: England [4] | ||
Ancient Greece: Archaic and Classical Greek History [4] | ||
Ancient Greece: The Greek World: 403-31 BCE [4] | ||
Ancient Rome: The Roman Republic [4] | ||
HISTORY N106A | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Ancient Rome: The Roman Empire [4] | ||
HISTORY N106B | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Medieval Italy: Italy in the Age of Dante (1000-1350) [4] | ||
Medieval England: From the Conquest to 1290 [4] | ||
Early Modern Britain, 1485-1750: Reformation to Revolution, Island to Empire [4] | ||
Britain 1485-Present: Britain, 1660-1851 [4] | ||
Maker of the Modern World? Britain since 1750 [4] | ||
HISTORY N151C | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Topics in the History of the British Isles: Ireland Since the Union [4] | ||
Medieval Europe: From the Investiture Conflict to the Fifteenth Century [4] | ||
Medieval Europe: From the Late Empire to the Investiture Conflict [4] | ||
The Renaissance and the Reformation [4] | ||
Modern Europe: Old Regime and Revolutionary Europe, 1715-1815 [4] | ||
Modern Europe: Europe in the 19th Century [4] | ||
Modern Europe: Old and New Europe, 1914-Present [4] | ||
HISTORY N158C | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
European Economic History [4] | ||
European Economic History [4] | ||
HISTORY N160 | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Europe and the World: Wars, Empires, Nations 1648-1914 [4] | ||
HISTORY N162A | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
The Birth of Modern Thought: European Intellectual History, 1500-1800 [4] | ||
Modern European Intellectual History: European Intellectual History from Enlightenment to 1870 [4] | ||
Modern European Intellectual History: European Intellectual History 1870 to the Present [4] | ||
Topics in Modern European History: The Reformations of Christendom [4] | ||
Topics in Modern European History: The World, the Picture, and the Page: The Revolution in European Culture since the late 18th Century [4] | ||
The Social and Cultural History of Early Modern Europe [4] | ||
HISTORY 166A | Course Not Available | |
Modern France: Renaissance to Revolution [4] | ||
Modern France [4] | ||
Modern Germany: Early Modern Germany [4] | ||
Modern Germany: The Rise and Fall of the Second Reich: Germany 1770-1918 [4] | ||
Modern Germany: Germany 1914 to the Present [4] | ||
Spain and Portugal: The Spanish and Portuguese Empires in the Golden Age: 1450-1700 [4] | ||
Modern Italy: Renaissance and Baroque Italy 1350-1800 [4] | ||
The Netherlands [4] | ||
Russia: Russia to 1700 [4] | ||
Autocracy and Society in Romanov Russia [4] | ||
Russia: History of the Soviet Union [4] | ||
Russian Intellectual History [4] | ||
History of Eastern Europe: The Habsburg Empire, 1740-1918 [4] | ||
History of Eastern Europe: History of Eastern Europe: From 1900 to the Present [4] | ||
Topics in the History of Eastern Europe: A History of Poland-Lithuania [4] | ||
Topics in the History of Eastern Europe: Poles and Others: the Making of Modern Poland [4] | ||
History of the Holocaust [4] | ||
History of Christianity: History of Christianity to 1250 [4] | ||
History of Christianity: History of Christianity from 1250 [4] | ||
Dutch Culture and Society: Amsterdam and Berkeley in the Sixties [4] | ||
Latin America | ||
Special Topics in Latin American History [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Latin America [4] | ||
Mexico: Modern Mexico [4] | ||
Social History of Latin America: Social History of Modern Latin America [4] | ||
Brazil [4] | ||
HISTORY N143 | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Latin American Women [4] | ||
Near and Middle East | ||
Special Topics in the History of the Middle East [4] | ||
Byzantium [4] | ||
The Rise of Islamic Civilization, 600-1200 [4] | ||
The Middle East, 1000-1750 [4] | ||
The Middle East From the 18th Century to the Present [4] | ||
HISTORY N109C | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Armenia: Armenia from Ethnogenesis to the Dark Ages [4] | ||
Armenia: From Pre-modern Empires to the Present [4] | ||
United States | ||
Special Topics in the History of the United States [4] | ||
Special Topics in the History of the United States [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: United States [4] | ||
American Environmental and Cultural History [4] | ||
The Colonial Period and American Revolution: The American Revolution [4] | ||
Antebellum America: The Advent of Mass Society [4] | ||
Civil War and Reconstruction [4] | ||
The Recent United States: The United States from the Late 19th Century to the Eve of World War II [4] | ||
HISTORY N124A | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
The Recent United States: The United States from World War II [4] | ||
HISTORY N124B | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
African American History and Race Relations: 1450-1860 [4] | ||
African American History and Race Relations: 1860-2016 [4] | ||
HISTORY N125B | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
HISTORY 126A | Course Not Available | |
HISTORY 126B | Course Not Available | |
California [4] | ||
American Foreign Policy [4] | ||
Social History of the United States: Creating Modern American Society: From the End of the Civil War to the Global Age [4] | ||
HISTORY N131B | Course Not Available [4] (Summer Session) | |
Intellectual History of the United States since 1865 [4] | ||
The Age of the City: The Age of the City, 1825-1933 [4] | ||
HISTORY 135 | Course Not Available | |
HISTORY 136AC | Course Not Available [4] | |
The Repeopling of America [4] | ||
History of Science in the U.S. [4] | ||
History of Science in the US CalTeach [4] | ||
The American Immigrant Experience [4] | ||
Civil Rights and Social Movements in U.S. History [4] | ||
HISTORY 154 | Course Not Available | |
Comparative | ||
Special Topics in Legal History [4] | ||
Special Topics in the History of Science [4] | ||
Special Topics in Comparative History [4] | ||
Special Topics in Comparative History [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: History of Science [4] | ||
Proseminar: Problems in Interpretation in the Several Fields of History: Comparative History [4] | ||
The Craft of History [4] | ||
The International Economy of the 20th Century [4] | ||
War and Peace: International Relations since 1914 [4] | ||
Jewish Civilization: Modern Period [4] | ||
The Life Sciences since 1750 [4] | ||
History of the Life Sciences Since 1750 (Cal Teach) [4] | ||
Topics in the History of the Physical Sciences: Modern Physics: From the Atom to Big Science [4] | ||
Science, Technology, and Society [4] | ||
Science, Technology, and Society (Cal Teach) [4] | ||
Health and Disease [4] | ||
International and Global History since 1945 [4] | ||
The History and Practice of Human Rights [4] | ||
Death, Dying, and Modern Medicine: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives [4] | ||
HISTORY C192 | Course Not Available |
College Requirements
Undergraduate students must fulfill the following requirements in addition to those required by their major program.
For detailed lists of courses that fulfill college requirements, please review the College of Letters & Sciences page in this Guide. For College advising appointments, please visit the L&S Advising Pages.
University of California Requirements
Entry Level Writing
All students who will enter the University of California as freshmen must demonstrate their command of the English language by fulfilling the Entry Level Writing requirement. Fulfillment of this requirement is also a prerequisite to enrollment in all reading and composition courses at UC Berkeley.
American History and American Institutions
The American History and Institutions requirements are based on the principle that a US resident graduated from an American university, should have an understanding of the history and governmental institutions of the United States.
Berkeley Campus Requirement
American Cultures
All undergraduate students at Cal need to take and pass this course in order to graduate. The requirement offers an exciting intellectual environment centered on the study of race, ethnicity and culture of the United States. AC courses offer students opportunities to be part of research-led, highly accomplished teaching environments, grappling with the complexity of American Culture.
College of Letters & Science Essential Skills Requirements
Quantitative Reasoning
The Quantitative Reasoning requirement is designed to ensure that students graduate with basic understanding and competency in math, statistics, or computer science. The requirement may be satisfied by exam or by taking an approved course.
Foreign Language
The Foreign Language requirement may be satisfied by demonstrating proficiency in reading comprehension, writing, and conversation in a foreign language equivalent to the second semester college level, either by passing an exam or by completing approved course work.
Reading and Composition
In order to provide a solid foundation in reading, writing, and critical thinking the College requires two semesters of lower division work in composition in sequence. Students must complete parts A & B reading and composition courses by the end of their second semester and a second-level course by the end of their fourth semester.
College of Letters & Science 7 Course Breadth Requirements
Breadth Requirements
The undergraduate breadth requirements provide Berkeley students with a rich and varied educational experience outside of their major program. As the foundation of a liberal arts education, breadth courses give students a view into the intellectual life of the University while introducing them to a multitude of perspectives and approaches to research and scholarship. Engaging students in new disciplines and with peers from other majors, the breadth experience strengthens interdisciplinary connections and context that prepares Berkeley graduates to understand and solve the complex issues of their day.
Unit Requirements
-
120 total units
-
Of the 120 units, 36 must be upper division units
- Of the 36 upper division units, 6 must be taken in courses offered outside your major department
Residence Requirements
For units to be considered in "residence," you must be registered in courses on the Berkeley campus as a student in the College of Letters & Science. Most students automatically fulfill the residence requirement by attending classes here for four years. In general, there is no need to be concerned about this requirement, unless you go abroad for a semester or year or want to take courses at another institution or through UC Extension during your senior year. In these cases, you should make an appointment to meet an adviser to determine how you can meet the Senior Residence Requirement.
Note: Courses taken through UC Extension do not count toward residence.
Senior Residence Requirement
After you become a senior (with 90 semester units earned toward your BA degree), you must complete at least 24 of the remaining 30 units in residence in at least two semesters. To count as residence, a semester must consist of at least 6 passed units. Intercampus Visitor, EAP, and UC Berkeley-Washington Program (UCDC) units are excluded.
You may use a Berkeley Summer Session to satisfy one semester of the Senior Residence requirement, provided that you successfully complete 6 units of course work in the Summer Session and that you have been enrolled previously in the college.
Modified Senior Residence Requirement
Participants in the UC Education Abroad Program (EAP), Berkeley Summer Abroad, or the UC Berkeley Washington Program (UCDC) may meet a Modified Senior Residence requirement by completing 24 (excluding EAP) of their final 60 semester units in residence. At least 12 of these 24 units must be completed after you have completed 90 units.
Upper Division Residence Requirement
You must complete in residence a minimum of 18 units of upper division courses (excluding UCEAP units), 12 of which must satisfy the requirements for your major.
Plan of Study
Students are encouraged to familiarize themselves with the History major requirements before making a program plan. For more detailed information regarding the courses listed below (e.g., elective information, GPA requirements, etc.), see the College Requirements and Major Requirements tabs.
Freshman | |||
---|---|---|---|
Fall | Units | Spring | Units |
Lower Division US History (Historical Studies Breadth) | 4 | Lower Division European History (Social and Behavioral Sciences) Breadth) | 4 |
Reading and Composition A | 4 | Reading and Composition B | 4 |
American Cultures Requirement | 4 | L&S Breadth | 4 |
L&S Breadth | 3 | Lower Division Elective | 3 |
15 | 15 | ||
Sophomore | |||
Fall | Units | Spring | Units |
Lower Division Other World Area History | 4 | Lower Division History Elective | 4 |
L&S Breadth | 4 | American Cultures Requirement | 4 |
Lower Division Elective | 4 | L&S Breadth | 3 |
Lower Division Elective | 3 | L&S Breadth | 4 |
15 | 15 | ||
Junior | |||
Fall | Units | Spring | Units |
Upper Division History (1 of 6) | 4 | Upper Division History (3 of 6) | 4 |
Upper Division History (2 of 6) | 4 | Upper Division History (4 of 6) | 4 |
Lower or Upper Division Elective | 4 | Lower or Upper Division Elective | 4 |
Lower or Upper Division Elective | 3 | Upper Division L&S Non-Major Department Elective | 3 |
15 | 15 | ||
Senior | |||
Fall | Units | Spring | Units |
Upper Division History (5 of 6) | 4 | Upper Division History (6 of 6) | 4 |
One of the following proseminars: | 4 | HISTORY 101 | 5 |
HISTORY 103A [4] | Lower or Upper Division Elective | 3 | |
HISTORY 103B [4] | Lower or Upper Division Elective | 3 | |
HISTORY 103C [4] | |||
HISTORY 103D [4] | |||
HISTORY 103E [4] | |||
HISTORY 103F [4] | |||
HISTORY 103H [4] | |||
HISTORY 103S [4] | |||
HISTORY 103U [4] | |||
Upper Division L&S Non-Major Department Elective | 4 | ||
Lower or Upper Division Elective | 3 | ||
15 | 15 | ||
Total Units: 120 |
1 | This is a sample program plan. This plan assumes that the student has completed the Entry Level Writing, American History and Institutions, Quantitative Reasoning, and Foreign Language requirements prior to admission. |
2 | Students are strongly advised to work with an academic adviser to determine a personal program plan. Your program plan will differ depending on previous credit received, your course schedule, and available offerings. |
3 | At least one of the 12 courses required for the major must be devoted entirely to premodern history. |
4 | Field of Concentration requirement: HISTORY 101 plus at least 3 other upper division History courses. Students must submit the Field of Concentration form (online) two semesters prior to graduation. For a 4-year plan, submit form the spring term of the third year. |
Accelerated Program Plans
For students considering graduating in less than four years, it's important to acknowledge the reasons to undertake such a plan of study. While there are advantages to pursuing a three-year degree plan such as reducing financial burdens, they are not for everyone and do involve sacrifices; especially with respect to participating in co-curricular activities, depth of study, and summer internships, which typically lead to jobs upon graduation. All things considered, please see the tables for three and three and a half year degree options.
Student Learning Goals
Mission
The History major helps students learn to think critically and deeply about the historical processes that have shaped the world we live in. History majors are exposed to a temporally and geographically broad range of historical experience, but they are also required to concentrate on a world region or theme or a period in history, both in order to develop depth of understanding and in order to prepare for the capstone of the History Major: an article-length, primary-source based, original research project. The major is designed to develop critical reading, thinking, and writing skills that will be needed to succeed in this capstone course.
Learning Goals for the Major
- Distinguish and characterize significant periods of historical experience in multiple societies from different parts of the globe.
- Describe events and developments in the history of multiple societies in terms of continuity, change, and causation.
- Understand interpretive debates about the past.
- Appreciate the complexities involved in interpreting societies and social change: for example, the local and the global, particular and general, contingent and structural.
- Identify different kinds of historical evidence and understand their role in the production of historical knowledge.
Skills
- Recall factual claims about the past and synthesize them into coherent interpretive arguments.
- Read documents closely and critically.
- Formulate a well-organized, well-supported argument.
- Demonstrate clear writing in the form of essays of varying lengths.
- Make cogent oral arguments about reading assignments in the context of a seminar discussion.
- Conduct original research with primary sources.
- Locate good, relevant secondary scholarship, and distinguish good from poor scholarship.
- Observe ethical practices of citation and intellectual self-presentation.
Career & Internship Information
Career Services Overview
The UC Berkeley Career Center prepares undergraduates, graduate students, and alumni to make informed decisions about their futures by providing comprehensive resources, programs, and counseling on career development, internships, employment, and graduate school. Whether it be through a resume critique, an alumni networking event, or an interviewing skills workshop, the Career Center is committed to helping all students achieve:
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Career Clarity: providing students the opportunity to identify their career direction;
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Career Competitiveness: providing students the opportunity to enhance their marketability via real-world experiences;
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Career Connections: providing students opportunities to engage with alumni and employers.
Career and Internship Resources
The UC Berkeley Career Center offers a wide variety of programs and resources to support students of all majors and class levels.
- Job Search Tools: Resume and cover letter writing, job search strategies, networking tools, interviewing skills, and more.
- Career Counseling: A wide variety of scheduled and drop-in appointment options based on major and topic.
- Internships: Internship listings, search strategies, FAQs, and more.
- Career Exploration: Resources to explore career options, identify career goals, and develop effective career plans.
- Events and Workshops: Over 70 events each semester including workshops, alumni networking events, career panels, conferences, and on-campus Career Chats.
- Career Fairs and Employer Information Sessions: We offer 14 career fairs each year across a variety of career fields and partner with numerous employers for on-campus information sessions.
- Graduate and Professional School: Counseling and resources to help students research and apply for graduate and professional school including medical school and law school.
Common Career Paths for History Majors
Career Destinations Survey
Every year the Career Center surveys graduating seniors about their post-graduation plans to better understand the career outcomes of our alumni including: career fields, job titles, specific employers, entry-level salaries, and graduate/professional school destinations. The data profiles by major provide an impressive overview of the diverse interests and achievements of recent graduates from UC Berkeley, including specific data for the History Department. Each survey year includes the August, December, and May graduating cohorts for that survey year. This data is designed to provide students, alumni, and employers with critical information about where Cal students go after graduation. As expected, college major does not restrict the employment or graduate school options that Cal students pursue. With careful planning, you can develop career-related skills and experiences that can prepare you for almost any job or graduate school field.
Sample Career Pathways
History majors go on to pursue a wide variety of career options including, but not limited to:
- Local, state and federal government: Public policy, city and regional planning, judicial services, program administration, social services, intelligence, law enforcement, foreign service, research.
- Politics: Elected or appointed leadership, campaign management, staff administration, special interest advocacy, lobbying.
- Law: Prosecution, defense, corporate, public interest, mediation.
- Nonprofit: Administration, management, public relations, fundraising/development, program coordination, grant writing, volunteer management.
- Museums, curatorial and archival management: Acquisition, preservation, exhibition, research.
- Education:
- Primary and post-secondary: teaching, administration, library services.
- Higher education: teaching, research, administration, student affairs, admissions, advising, community relations.
- Business: Sales, management, office administration, human resources, training, public relations, writing/editing.
- Media: Editing, publishing, writing, sales, digital media, public relations, broadcasting.
Visit our Connecting Majors to Careers resource to explore additional career paths most commonly associated with over 80 majors, including History.
Faculty and Instructors
+ Indicates this faculty member is the recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award.
Faculty
Diliana Angelova, Associate Professor. Early Christian and Byzantine Art, women, gender, material culture, history of ideas, late antique art, the Virgin Mary, early Christian empresses, imperial iconography, power and material culture, the empress Helena, the relic of the True Cross, urban development of Constantinople, textiles, ivories, mythology in Byzantine art, myth and genre in Archaic and Classical Greek art, and romantic love in ancient and medieval art .
Research Profile
Stephan H. Astourian, Associate Adjunct Professor. Armenia, Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Modern Turkey, Diasporas .
Research Profile
Janaki Bakhle, Associate Professor. Intellectual history of religion, politics and modern India, South Asia.
Research Profile
Andrew E. Barshay, Professor. Social thought, modernism, social sciences in modern Japan, marxism, Japanese history, Japanese-Russian relations.
Research Profile
Mark Brilliant, Associate Professor. 20th century US history, with a focus on political economy, civil rights, education, law, and the west.
Research Profile
Cathryn Carson, Professor. History of physics, science and society, history of universities, German history, intellectual history, ethnography, data science, nuclear waste.
Research Profile
Margaret Chowning, Professor. Mexico, history, gender, women, Latin America.
Research Profile
John Connelly, Professor. Modern East and Central European political and social history, comparative education, history of nationalism and racism, history of Catholicism, Late Modern Europe.
Research Profile
Thomas Dandelet, Professor. Renaissance Italy and Europe, Spanish Empire, early modern Mediterranean.
Research Profile
Brian DeLay, Associate Professor. US, the Americas, International History, nineteenth century, Native American history, American West, Borderlands.
Research Profile
Nicholas Dirks, Professor. History and anthropology of South Asia, social and cultural theory, history of imperialism, historiography, cultural studies, globalization.
Research Profile
Sandra Eder, Assistant Professor. Gender, sexuality, medicine, science, US History 20th century, popular culture.
Research Profile
John M. Efron, Professor. Cultural and social history of German Jewry.
Research Profile
Susanna Elm, Professor. History of the Later Roman Empire, pagan - Christian interactions, ancient medicine, slavery and the evolution of Christianity, leadership and empire, reception of antiquity.
Research Profile
Victoria Frede-Montemayor, Associate Professor. Enlightenment, Russian intellectual history, sentimentalism, eighteenth and nineteenth century, anti-religious thought, romanticism, history of friendship.
Research Profile
Bruce Hall, Associate Professor. Africa.
Research Profile
David Henkin, Professor. History, US History, urban history, cultural history, History of Time.
Research Profile
Rebecca Herman, Assistant Professor. Latin American history in a global context.
Research Profile
Carla Hesse, Professor. France, modern Europe, history of women.
Research Profile
Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann, Associate Professor. Modern German and European History, Conceptual History, Transnational History, urban studies.
Research Profile
Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers, Associate Professor. U S women’s history and African-American history.
Research Profile
Abhishek Kaicker, Assistant Professor. South Asia, Mughal, early modern, cities, history, Persian.
Research Profile
Tabitha Kanogo, Professor. Colonialism, nationalism, women and gender, childhood and youth.
Research Profile
Ethan Katz, Associate Professor. Jewish history, modern France, empire, Jewish-Muslim relations, secularism.
Research Profile
Geoffrey Koziol, Professor. Medieval history, History of Medieval Christianity, Medieval Political Institutions.
Research Profile
Emily Mackil, Associate Professor. Ancient Greek history.
Research Profile
Waldo E. Martin, Professor. African American History , Modern American Culture.
Research Profile
Maria Mavroudi, Professor. Byzantine studies.
Research Profile
Massimo Mazzotti, Professor. History of science, History of Mathematics, social theory, science and society, STS .
Research Profile
Rebecca McLennan, Associate Professor. North America: 1763-present, law and society, crime and punishment, prisons, society and culture, capitalism, global foodways .
Research Profile
Maureen Miller, Professor. Medieval history.
Research Profile
+ Carlos F. Norena, Associate Professor. Roman history.
Research Profile
Michael Nylan, Professor. Gender, history, East Asian studies, early China, the fifth century BC to the fifth century AD, with an emphasis on the sociopolitical context, aesthetic theories and material culture, belief.
Research Profile
Vanessa Ogle, Associate Professor. Late Modern Europe, Western Europe.
Research Profile
Dylan Penningroth, Professor. African American history and in U S socio-legal history.
Research Profile
Christine Philliou, Associate Professor. Middle East, Ottoman Empire political and social history, Turkey and Greece as parts of the post-Ottoman world.
Research Profile
Isabel Richter, Assistant Adjunct Professor. Modern German history (18th – 20th centuries), yransnational youth cultures in the 20th century, history of death in modern Europe, cultural anthropology, material and visual history in the 19th and 20th centuries, national socialism, gender history and interdisciplinary gender studies.
Research Profile
Caitlin C. Rosenthal, Assistant Professor. American history, capitalism, economic history, slavery.
Research Profile
Daniel Sargent, Associate Professor. American history, International History, Contemporary History.
Research Profile
Elena A. Schneider, Associate Professor. Cuba and the Caribbean, colonial Latin America, The Atlantic World, 1400-1888.
Research Profile
+ Ethan H. Shagan, Professor. British history, early modern European history, history of religion.
Research Profile
Jonathan Sheehan, Professor. Religion, Christianity, Europe, secularism, Secularization.
Research Profile
Ronit Stahl, Assistant Professor. Modern America.
Research Profile
Nicolas Tackett, Associate Professor. Ethnicity, elites, China, cities, national identity, social networks, medieval history, death ritual, Tang Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Liao Dynasty.
Research Profile
James Vernon, Professor. Britain, its Empire and World, 1750 to present.
Research Profile
Wen-Hsin Yeh, Professor. History, East Asian studies, Qing and Modern China.
Research Profile
Peter B. Zinoman, Professor. Vietnam, Vietnam War, Vietnamese literature, Southeast Asian history, communism, nationalism, colonialism.
Research Profile
Lecturers
Christoph Hermann, Lecturer.
Elizabeth Schwall, Lecturer.
Jennifer Terry, Lecturer.
Joseph Kellner, Lecturer.
Margo Boenig-Lipstin, Lecturer.
Andrej Milivojevic, Lecturer.
David Wetzel, Lecturer.
Emeritus Faculty
Richard M. Abrams, Professor Emeritus. Politics, recent US history: business foreign relations, etc .
Research Profile
Anthony Adamthwaite, Professor Emeritus.
Margaret Lavinia Anderson, Professor Emeritus. Germany 1860-1945, Kulturkampf, the Center Party (Zentrum), 19th century European Catholicism, the 19th century European Religious Revival, Democratisation more generally and comparatively, comparative elections and electoral politics, European (and esp German) Relations with the late Ottoman Empire, Armenian Genocide.
Research Profile
Robert M. Berdahl, Professor Emeritus.
Mary Elizabeth Berry, Professor Emeritus. Late medieval and early modern Japan.
Research Profile
Thomas A. Brady, Professor Emeritus.
Richard Candida Smith, Professor Emeritus. Identity, memory, narrative, 19th and 20th century US cultural and intellectual history, cultural interaction and exchange with France and Latin America, oral history and personal testimony as historical sources.
Research Profile
Jan De Vries, Professor. Economics, demography, history.
Research Profile
+ Robin L. Einhorn, Professor Emeritus. Taxation, United States political history, urban history, nineteenth century.
Research Profile
Paula S. Fass, Professor Emeritus. History of childhood, social and cultural history of the United States, immigration and ethnicity, history of education, child abduction.
Research Profile
+ Erich S. Gruen, Professor Emeritus. Classics, Greek and Roman history, Jews in the Greco-Roman world.
Research Profile
Samuel Haber, Professor Emeritus.
John L. Heilbron, Professor Emeritus. History of the physical sciences, biography.
Research Profile
Richard Herr, Professor Emeritus.
David Hollinger, Professor Emeritus. US history.
Research Profile
Eugene F. Irschick, Professor Emeritus.
David G. Johnson, Professor Emeritus. History, East Asian studies, city-god cults of T'ang and Sung China, ritual and sculpture in Chinese religion.
Research Profile
Kerwin L. Klein, Professor Emeritus.
Ira M. Lapidus, Professor Emeritus.
John Lesch, Professor Emeritus.
Linda Lewin, Professor Emeritus. Race, social history of 19th andamp,amp, 20th century Brazil--family andamp,amp, kinship, illegitimacy andamp,amp, inheritance rights, banditry (emergence of cangaco), slavery, andamp,amp, color, oral poetic tradition in NE region (repentistas, desafio), cotton production in 19th-century NE Brazil.
Research Profile
+ Leon F. Litwack, Professor Emeritus.
Thomas R. Metcalf, Professor Emeritus.
+ Robert L. Middlekauff, Professor Emeritus.
Sheldon Rothblatt, Professor Emeritus.
Mary P. Ryan, Professor Emeritus.
Peter Sahlins, Professor Emeritus. Early modern France, animal-human relations, immigration, citizenship and nationality in pre-modern Europe .
Research Profile
Irwin Scheiner, Professor Emeritus.
Charles G. Sellers, Professor Emeritus.
Yuri Slezkine, Professor. Russia, Late Modern Europe.
Research Profile
John M. Smith, Professor Emeritus.
Randolph R. Starn, Professor Emeritus.
William B. Taylor, Professor Emeritus.
Contact Information
Department of History
3229 Dwinelle Hall
Phone: 510-642-1971
Fax: 510-643-5323
Undergraduate Minor Advisor
Erin Leigh Inama
3312 Dwinelle Hall
Phone: 510-642-2378
Student Services Coordinator
Anne Meyers
3313 Dwinelle Hall
Phone: 510-643-8995