The discipline aims to provide the necessary tools for an in-depth study of the fundamental themes of the history of early modern Sicily in correlation with European history, focusing on institutional, political, cultural and socio-economic aspects, but also it examines in depth the relations between Sicily and the journey from the XV to the XIX century.
The expected learning outcomes, as defined by the Dublin Core, are as follows:
DD1 – Knowledge and understanding
Students will acquire an in-depth knowledge of the fundamental themes of the history of early modern Sicily in correlation with European history (15th–19th centuries), focusing on institutional, political, cultural and socio-economic aspects and on the relations between Sicily and the phenomenon of travel/Grand Tour.
DD2 – Applying knowledge and understanding
Students will be able to apply historical methods and historiographical tools to critically analyse primary sources and scholarly works, linking the Sicilian case to wider European historical processes and interpreting travellers and travel practices as a cultural phenomenon.
DD3 – Making judgements
Students will develop the ability to critically evaluate historiographical interpretations and documentary sources, forming independent assessments of institutional, political and cultural dynamics in early modern Europe and of the specific role of Sicily.
General course
John Julius Norwich, Paul Duncan, Sicily: A Short History, from the Greeks to Cosa Nostra, John Murray Press, 2016
Monographic course
| Argomenti | Riferimenti testi | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sicily and the Mediterranean History of Sicily | |
| 2 | Sicily as seen by travellers | |
| 3 | The Sixteenth Century | |
| 4 | The Barons | |
| 5 | The Sicilian Inquisition | |
| 6 | The Seventeenth Century | |
| 7 | Eighteenth Century | |
| 8 | From the Austrians to the Bourbons | |
| 9 | The Risorgimento in Sicily |