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Unlike most contemporary approaches to history, which reflect the fashions and biases of the fleeting present, Humanitas offers students something more substantial. Following C.S. Lewis’ stout defense of reading primary sources in “On the Reading of Old Books,” Humanitas will help “persuade the young that firsthand knowledge is not only more worth acquiring than secondhand knowledge, but it is usually much easier and more delightful to acquire.” Geared towards history, humanities, and humane letters courses, the Humanitas series offers a continuous, unfolding narrative of Western Civilization through a collection of carefully curated primary source documents.
Full program includes:
Humanitas: Early Middle Ages
Humanitas Early Middle Ages is designed as a one-semester, high school history course. With the rise of Christianity and the foundering of Rome, the medieval period begins in crisis. The Early Middle Ages books move from pressing questions about the relationship between the Church and state to the establishment of a Holy Roman Empire. Students will discover that the medieval period, commonly known as “the Dark Ages,” was anything but dark as these books chart the maturation of the liberal arts, the advances of science and culture that accompanied a renaissance of learning, and the development of political theory and practice as various states and kingdoms are established.
The 50 chapters include:
- Accounts of religious developments
- Documents from the court of Charlemagne that chart the spread of imperial power and the flowering of the Carolingian Renaissance
- Historical chronicles that relate political developments in what will become England and France
- Poetic and literary texts that help provide national identities
Humanitas: Early Middle Ages Teacher's Guide PDF
The Humanitas Early Middle Ages Teacher's Guide PDF offers teachers further resources for understanding the texts included in Humanitas Early Middle Ages Books 1 and 2. The guide supplies teachers with: lesson objectives and plans teacher's tips that point to specific portions of the source document, providing additional context for the source documents and suggesting points of discussion additional notes that will help teachers show students how the various source documents relate to each other questions for discussion and writing (taken from the student edition).
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The following items are included in this bundle:
Humanitas Early Middle Ages Teacher's Guide PDF
Humanitas Early Middle Ages Teacher's Guide PDF offers teachers further resources for understanding the texts included in Humanitas Early Middle Ages Books 1 and 2. The guide supplies teachers with... Learn more
Humanitas: The Early Middle Ages
Humanitas Early Middle Ages is designed as a one-semester, high school history course. With the rise of Christianity and the foundering of Rome, the medieval period begins in crisis. The Early M... Learn more

