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Medieval
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The medieval period occupies a central place in history courses, humanities programs, and interdisciplinary studies because it represents a vast, transformative stretch of human civilization that shaped the modern world. Students are regularly asked to examine it across fields including European history, religious studies, art history, literature, and the history of science. What makes the period academically compelling is its complexity — it encompassed dramatic shifts in theology, political power, cultural production, and intellectual life, and understanding it requires reading that past on its own terms rather than through modern assumptions.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some take a cultural and transitional angle, examining the shift from medieval to Renaissance Europe or tracing the development of the scientific method through and beyond the medieval period. Others focus on religious and philosophical thought, including Christian mysticism, Islamic philosophy, and the history of figures like Satan across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Literary analysis appears through works like Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, while art historical approaches surface in examinations of the nude and zodiac symbols in Northern Renaissance artwork. The Byzantine Empire's construction and cultural history represents yet another case-study angle these papers take.

A strong essay on a medieval topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that situates its argument within a specific time, place, or tradition rather than making sweeping claims about "the Middle Ages" as a whole. Primary sources and period-specific context carry the most weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is imposing contemporary values onto medieval works or institutions without acknowledging the significant cultural distance involved.

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Paper Doctorate
Medieval pilgrimages: religious practice and cultural significance
Pilgrimages were central to Medieval Christianity and remain central to many devout Christians today. Such pilgrimages were not only central to these Christians, but to the Holy Land as well.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Comparative analysis of two versions of Hamlet
Zeffirelli and Branagh Versions of Shakespeare's Hamlet
Paper Undergraduate
Medieval Period Did the Fall
Did the fall of the Roman herald a true 'Dark Age'?
Paper Undergraduate
Byzantium: the surprising life of a medieval empire
After the fall of Rome, all of Europe is often said to have entered a 'dark age.' Yet the Eastern part of the former Roman Empire, known as Byzantium, flourished, lead by the great capital of Constantinople.
Essay Doctorate
Historical adaptations to information overload: theoretical models and technological developments
This essay describes three ways in which people have dealt with problems of information overload or retrieval--forgery, ideology, and historiography. Forgery is seen as not peripheral but central especially in the context of pre-literate oral-based cultures. Ideology is seen as not necessarily as tendentious as one might suspect for historical purposes, as it often records adversarial information to rebut it. Historiography is seen as the product of forces of power and hegemony, and necessarily incorporates elements of both forgery and ideology.
Essay Doctorate
Space Inhabit. You Visit St. Patrick\'s Cathedral
This paper provides an overview of the history and architecture of St. Patrick's Cathedral, the seat of the archdiocese of New York City. St. Patrick's is both a work of beauty and a functional religious structure. It began with a congregation of Irish Catholic immigrants but now tourists from all over the world visit the Neo-Gothic structure.
Thesis Doctorate
Lawsuit Challenges Anti-Abortion Policies at Catholic Hospitals
Abortion is never an easy topic to talk about. However, when it comes in the context of saving a mother's life vs. saving that of a fetus that is 100 % likely to die, this seems like a no brainer. Not for a Catholic-sponsored hospital, which sets its own rules and directives, choosing non-life over life itself.