Scandinavian history
7.5 ECTS creditsScandinavia is known internationally for todays welfare states, and as the historic homeland of the Vikings. This course offers a broader understanding of Scandinavia's past, highligthing the dramatic events that transformed a peripheral European region into modern industrial nations. Themes explored in the course include debilitating poverty, ruthless autocracies with colonies in four continents, civil war, and volcanic eruptions, but also intercultural encounters, science, and democratic breakthroughs.
The course covers Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Finnish, and Icelandic history from the Viking age onwards, and provides knowledge of the politics, demography, religion, economy, and culture of the region. There is a special focus on state building, conflicts and conflict resolution, migration and minorities, as well as cultural developments in the Nordic countries.
Instruction is in the form of lectures, which provide overviews of Scandinavian history, and seminars.
The course covers Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Finnish, and Icelandic history from the Viking age onwards, and provides knowledge of the politics, demography, religion, economy, and culture of the region. There is a special focus on state building, conflicts and conflict resolution, migration and minorities, as well as cultural developments in the Nordic countries.
Instruction is in the form of lectures, which provide overviews of Scandinavian history, and seminars.
Progressive specialisation:
G1N (has only upper‐secondary level entry requirements)
Education level:
Undergraduate level
Admission requirements:
General admission requirements plus upper secondary level History 1b or 1a1 + 1a2 and Civics 1b or 1a1 + 1a2, or equivalent
Selection:
Selection is usually based on your grade point average from upper secondary school or the number of credit points from previous university studies, or both.