Living, loving, and dying in Europe 1500-1800
HIST 4100A
Living, loving, and dying in Europe 1500-1800
Fall 2026/Winter 2027
Instructor: Professor Rod Phillips
What is this course about?
In this full-year seminar we try to capture the texture of the everyday lives of Europeans in the Early Modern period, roughly 1500-1800. It鈥檚 an exciting and challenging task because everyday lives are difficult to generalize about and the evidence of them is often elusive and apparently contradictory. That shouldn鈥檛 be surprising, as we look at the diversity of everyday lives around us. At the same time, it鈥檚 possible to define patterns and regularities, and that will be our achievement by the end of the course, even while we appreciate deviations from what appear to be the dominant patterns.听听
We鈥檒l focus on a number of themes that lead us down a number of trails. Supposing we start with birth, which marks the beginning of 鈥榣iving鈥. We might ask: What were birth rates in Early Modern Europe? How many children did women have on average? Were there variations by region, by class, by religion, and between town and country?听 How did birth rates change over time, and why? What percentage of children were born to married or cohabiting couples, what percentage to single women?
听
听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 听听听听听听听听听听听
听
Having established the big picture, we鈥檒l try to understand these birth rates. Why did people have children anyway 鈥 to provide workers, to ensure there were heirs for land and titles, to comply with religious teachings, or unintentionally? Did religious and secular authorities encourage people to have children? If women or couples 诲颈诲苍鈥檛 want to have children, what kinds of family limitation were available 鈥 abortion, contraception, sexual abstinence, non-procreative sexual behaviour, infanticide?听 Were they permitted, and how widely were they used?
How old were women when they started and ceased having children?听 How were births spaced, and why? Did many women die in childbirth, and what became of their children? Why did women have children outside marriage? Were these births simply unintended or were women persuaded to risk pregnancy by promises of marriage? Were women coerced to have sex or raped?
听
听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 听听听听听
听
Where and in what context did births take place? How often were midwives involved? How were newborns cared for? Were they breast-fed by their mothers or by wet-nurses? Why did so many children 鈥 often a fifth or a quarter 鈥 die in the first year of life? How common were infanticide and child-abandonment? What was the state of medical knowledge with regard to infants? How were children named and how many were baptized?
What seems a reasonably straightforward event 鈥 birth 鈥 leads us into many areas of economic, religious, social, cultural, and even political life. At every point, women and men made decisions that can reveal their attitudes towards one another and the world around them. Their decisions give us insights into their modes of thought, experiences, and behaviour.
听
听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听听 听听听听听听听听听听听
听
We鈥檒l track a number of life events/issues in this way, including childhood, relationships, marriage, family and household relationships, diet, clothing, animals, work, leisure, illness, old age, and death. As we do, we鈥檒l study the way historians employ theoretical perspectives and methodologies as they write their histories. We鈥檒l read secondary works (mainly articles), watch videos, analyse primary printed sources, interpret statistics, and evaluate contemporary images. In short, we鈥檒l deploy a wide range of resources and perspectives to understand the complexities of living, loving, and dying in Early Modern Europe.
Course format
This is a seminar that will meet in person once a week throughout the academic year (September 2026 to April 2027).
Coursework
Seminars are discussions, and students are expected to read specified readings in advance of each meeting so as to be prepared to participate in discussions. The course outline will list the topics of the weekly seminars and the readings to be done in advance. All the readings (almost all are articles) are available on-line. Each student will briefly introduce one article each term.
The major piece of coursework is an essay that鈥檚 due by the end of the Winter term. In the last few weeks of that term, each student will present their essay to the seminar. Just as 鈥渓iving, loving, and dying鈥 includes a massive range of subjects, so there鈥檚 great flexibility in your choice of essay topic. Past essays have included domestic architecture, evidence of contraception, violence, attitudes toward death, wolves, child-rearing, responses to disease, and tea-drinking practices. You鈥檒l decide on your topic in consultation with me.
Your final grade will be based on (1) your participation in discussions, (2) your introduction of two articles, and (3) the presentation of your essay and the essay itself. (There is no final examination.)
Textbook
There鈥檚 no textbook for this seminar, but students not familiar with Early Modern Europe are advised to read a general survey so as to have a sense of the place and the period. Good surveys are: Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks, Early Modern Europe, 1450-1789 (3rd edition); Henry Kamen, Early Modern European Society; and Beat K眉min (ed.), The European World, 1500-1800 (available on-line).
Questions?
For more information, please contact me: roderick.phillips@carleton.ca