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History 125, Western Civilization to 1650

Final Exam, Spring 2005

 

Directions

 

You have one (1) question to answer on the final exam.  You will answer the question in class, in a blue book (I will provide you with the blue book).

 

You must answer the question on the basis of the assigned course readings and lectures.  DO NOT USE any other sources except for those directly assigned for this class!

 

You may bring all of your books for the course to the exam, and you can bring your lecture notes, too.  You can also bring an outline for your answer to the exam question. 

 

BUT YOU MAY NOT "pre-write" your exam answer!!!! 

 

The exam REQUIRES that you put all quotations in quotation marks!!  Also, you must identify the source of any quotation with a parenthetical reference.  [For example, (Coffin, p. 240).]

 

If you are not quoting, then BE VERY CAREFUL about putting things in your own words!  DO NOT ACCIDENTALLY PLAGIARIZE!!!

 

Here is the question.  Please be sure to read the "tips on writing essays" that follow the question!

 

Question

 

What were the most important changes in the relationship between government authorities and Christian religious authorities in Western and Central Europe between the 600s and the early 1600s C.E.?  Explain these changes, using evidence from documents to support your ideas whenever possible.

 

In other words, explain the major changes in the the relationship between Church and State in the late Western Roman Empire and in Western and Central Europe from the 600s until the 1600s. 

 

This will require that you review sections of most of the lectures since the mid-term (Weeks VII to XV), sections of most of the chapters in Coffin since the mid-term (chapters VII to XV), and many of the documents in Brophy.

 

These are the documents in Brophy that are most relevant to answering the exam question: 

The Theodosian Code:  Roman Law

Gregory of Tours, History of the Franks

The Charter of Liberties for St. Omer

The Magna Carta

Las Siete Partidas:  Castialian Law Code

Pope Boniface VIII, Papal Bull Unam Sanctam

Hus, The Church

The Trial of Jeanne d'Arc

Calvin, Draft Ecclesiastical Ordinances

Luther, Appeal to the Christian Nobility

Statement of Grievances, the Diet of Worms, 1521

Bodin, On Sovereignty.

Oath of Allegiance (Henry VIII)

 

 

Some tips on writing essays that require examination of documents:

 

Before you start writing:

 

*Pay attention to how the question is worded.  What is the "question word"?  Is the question asking you to explain Why, How, or What? Is it asking you to Compare (explain what is similar) or Contrast (explain what is different)?  Or is it asking you to Evaluate a statement (to explain if you agree or not and why)?   Even if you have correct information in your essay, it still is not a good essay unless you answer the question that was actually asked!

 

*Be sure that you have read the documents carefully and thought about how they fit together with the information and ideas from your textbook and class lectures.  Remember, your goal is to build an answer out of the evidence, so you have to think about what the evidence actually says.  Don't twist the evidence to fit your pre-conceived notions; instead, think about how the evidence relates to other "facts."

 

*If a question asks you answer on the basis of documents, then it is absolutely critical that you discuss the evidence from those documents in your essay.  An "ok" essay has correct information from the textbook; a "good" essay has correct information and also uses documents to prove your thesis; a "really good" paper refers to specific evidence from the documents and then explains what the evidence means and how it is related to the essay's main points.

 

*Think through your answer and write an outline!!!!  Don't try to write an essay of this type off the top of your head.  You need a have a logical plan that allows you to break your answer down into clear stages, and you need to think about how and where you are going to use different evidence.  No matter how good you are at writing off the top of your head, you need to have a clear organizational structure for the essay before you start writing.

 

The organization of the essay:

 

The classic essay presents an introduction that states a thesis; has several body paragraphs, each of which is devoted to explaining a single idea that helps prove the thesis; and ends with a conclusion that clearly re-states the main ideas in the essay.

 

1) The Introduction.  Be sure that your introductory paragraph lets the reader know what your main question is.   But you MUST do more than this in the introduction!  Your introduction must present a thesis statement.  The thesis statement is the main point of your answer.  It can be one sentence or several sentences.  But it must be a logical statement that answers the question.  By the end of the first paragraph, the reader should know what your argument is and should have a sense of how you will develop that argument in the essay. 

 

Again, remember that the thesis is not just a restatement of the question!  It is the core of your ANSWER to the question.  One of the biggest problems with most students' introductions is that all they do is re-phrase the question—they don't present an answer!

 

2) The Body.  The body of your paper should be composed of several paragraphs, each of which is completely devoted to explaining one main idea.  So if your thesis has three "sub-points," you need to have three body paragraphs (etc).

 

Again, you must break your thesis down into several "sub- ideas" and provide evidence to prove these ideas.  That is the function of the body paragraphs in your paper.  Be sure that each paragraph in the body of your paper is devoted to explaining a single main idea (one main idea per paragraph).  That main idea should help us understand your thesis. 

 

It is extremely important that each paragraph has a clear Topic Sentence.  The topic sentence (the first sentence of the paragraph) must present the main idea of that paragraph, and everything in the paragraph must be related to the topic sentence.  (If you have a fact or information in the paragraph that is not logically connected to the topic sentence, then you have to move that fact/information to another paragraph where it does fit with the topic sentence!)

 

After the topic sentence, each paragraph needs to include evidence that supports the main idea in the paragraph.  In other words, you have to illustrate and prove your point in that paragraph.  Remember (and this is really important) that you must EXPLAIN what the evidence means--don't assume that it is obvious! 

 

This is where you integrate the documents into your essay.  Try to use as many of the assigned documents as you can!  And be sure to refer explicitly to the document.  ("In his August 6, 1786 speech to Congress, John Jay argued that…."   or "In his 1630 statement A Model of Christian Charity, John Winthrop insisted…). 

 

Remember, the difference between an good essay and a really good essay is that a really good essay explains the evidence in the documents.  Every time you present a quotation from a document or paraphrase or summarize information from a document, you need to explain what that information needs and how it relates to your main point.

 

In really good essays, each paragraph ends in a transition sentence that guides the reader to the next topic sentence.  (example--"The differences in the composition of the settlers of New England and Virginia help us to understand difference in family patterns in the two regions.")

 

3) Be sure that you end your paper with a concluding paragraph that sums up you main ideas and makes clear how all of these ideas add up to your main point (thesis), and how your main point answers the main question of your paper.