Skip to main content

Staff

Apr 30, 2010

God Save the King: The Concept of Monarchial Authority in Colonial America

Miller, Dennis. “God Save the King: The Concept of Monarchial Authority in Colonial America.” (Under the direction of Dr. Holly Brewer.) In April 1586, Queen Elizabeth I of England acquired a now-obscure title that helped establish English societal values over the New World. This title, “Weroanza,” meant “Big Chief” in the Native American language. Elizabeth’s…

Apr 28, 2010

A Castellan Claims his Castles: Textualization of Claims in Eleventh-Century Aquitaine

Battle, Indrayani. “A Castellan Claims his Castles: Textualization of Claims in Eleventh-Century Aquitaine.” (Under the direction of Dr. Julie Mell.) The Conventum inter Guillelmum Aquitanorum Comitem et Hugonem Chilarchum is a 340-line, highly descriptive document of claims, counter-claims, and often violent conflicts, all revolving around property, between Hugh of Lusignan and Count William of Aquitaine,…

Apr 22, 2010

Casualties of a Radicalizing Cuban Revolution: Middle-Class Opposition and Exile, 1961-1968

Loiacano, Catherine Lynn. “Casualties of a Radicalizing Cuban Revolution: Middle-Class Opposition and Exile, 1961-1968.” (Under the direction of Dr. Richard Slatta.) This study explores the major factors contributing to the exodus of the Cuban middle class from 1961-1968. For the purpose of this study, the heterogeneous middle class is broken up into middle-class students, professionals,…

Apr 22, 2010

“The Extremest Necessity:” Lincoln’s Policies on Civil Liberties and Citizen Responses, 1861-1865

Martin, Elizabeth Mae-Carr. “‘The Extremest Necessity:’ Lincoln’s Policies on Civil Liberties and Citizen Responses, 1861-1865.” (Under the direction of Dr. Susanna Lee.) Abraham Lincoln has been viewed alternately as a hero of the Union or a tyrant who abused his power. This debate stems in part from Lincoln’s actions regarding civil liberties. Lincoln authorized the…

Apr 20, 2010

A Reevaluation of Iron Age Fortified Sites on the Eastern Kerak Plateau

Brown, Stephanie Hope. “A Reevaluation of Iron Age Fortified Sites on the Eastern Kerak Plateau.” (Under the direction of Dr. S. Thomas Parker.) This thesis is concerned with the nature of ten Moabite fortified sites on the eastern Kerak Plateau in central Jordan. Based largely upon an attempted synthesis between the archaeological record of the…

Apr 20, 2010

Politics of the Black Flag: Guerrilla Memory and Southern Conservatism in the New South

Hulbert, Matthew C. “Politics of the Black Flag: Guerrilla Memory and Southern Conservatism in the New South.” (Under the direction of Dr. Susanna Lee.) This thesis explores the intersection of Civil War memory and the history of conservative politics in the New South through two critical phases and its historiographic context. Phase one examines the…

Apr 8, 2010

Southern Appalachian People’s Responses to Socio-Economic Change–The New Deal, the War on Poverty, and the Rise of Tourism

Gillespie, Jessica L. “‘Loved to Stayed On Like It Once Was’: Southern Appalachian People’s Responses to Socio-Economic Change–The New Deal, the War on Poverty, and the Rise of Tourism.” (Under the direction of Dr. Craig Thompson Friend.) Over the course of the twentieth century, southern Appalachian residents have been defined and described primarily by outside…

Mar 3, 2010

A Synthesis of Three Surface Surveys in Jordan and an Interpretation of Increased Settlement and Land Use in the Late Byzantine Era

Hunter, Frances. “A Synthesis of Three Surface Surveys in Jordan and an Interpretation of Increased Settlement and Land Use in the Late Byzantine Era.” (Under the direction of Dr. S. Thomas Parker.) The Middle East in the Byzantine period is one of the least analyzed historic periods. Scholars assumed that this was a time of…

Jan 28, 2010

Faculty Research

                                       

Jan 13, 2010

The Dominance of the Roman Army in Northern Britain and Subsequent Rift between Roman and Briton on the Military Frontier

Huber, Christopher Ryan. “The Dominance of the Roman Army in Northern Britain and Subsequent Rift between Roman and Briton on the Military Frontier.” (Under the direction of Dr. S. Thomas Parker.) Britain was a province far from the Roman heartland. An accomplishment in its mere inclusion within the Roman Empire, such distance made Britain a…