The traditions of the western world /
The traditions of the western world /
Ed. by J. H. Hexter, Peter Reisenberg, Franclin Ford L., Klausedt Epstein.
- Chicago, IL : Rand McNally & Company, 1967.
- XXIV; 917 p. ; 25 cm.
- Rand McNally history ser. .
Contents: Antiquity:I. The Judeo-Christian source of western traditions; II. The classical source of western traditions; III. Confrontation of the Judeo-Christian and Creco-Roman traditions. The renaissance, and the reformation. The earlymiddle ages; II. The high middle ages; III. The renaissance. IV. The reformation. The early modern period: Theology and ethics, 1570-1815; II. Nature and humanity, 1570-1815; III. Problems of political authority, 1570-1815; IV. The revolutionary Wave, 1689-1815. The recent period: I. Romanticism; II. Liberalism; III. Conservatism; IV. Socialism. V. Realism and the New Irrationalism, 1865-1914. Vi. The chaoticmodern world since 1914.
History--Europe
Contents: Antiquity:I. The Judeo-Christian source of western traditions; II. The classical source of western traditions; III. Confrontation of the Judeo-Christian and Creco-Roman traditions. The renaissance, and the reformation. The earlymiddle ages; II. The high middle ages; III. The renaissance. IV. The reformation. The early modern period: Theology and ethics, 1570-1815; II. Nature and humanity, 1570-1815; III. Problems of political authority, 1570-1815; IV. The revolutionary Wave, 1689-1815. The recent period: I. Romanticism; II. Liberalism; III. Conservatism; IV. Socialism. V. Realism and the New Irrationalism, 1865-1914. Vi. The chaoticmodern world since 1914.
History--Europe