Professor John Munro passed away on December 23, 2013. This site is maintained and kept online as an archive. For more infomation please visit the Centre for Medieval Studies

Professor John H. Munro
Department of Economics
University of Toronto
150 St. George Street
Toronto, Ontario M5S 3G7
CANADA


http://www.economics.utoronto.ca/munro5/

ECONOMICS 201Y1

The Economic History of Medieval and Early Modern Europe, 1250 - 1750

For the academic year 2003 - 2004

See the Robarts Library - ERES web link to this course, and to related sites.

See also Notices, for any new or recent announcements concerning this course or my other course in European economic history. This page is updated frequently.

The Teaching Assistant for this course, ECO 201Y1, is: Mr. Thomas Caldwell: thomas.caldwell@utoronto.ca

The Course Outline and other important web documents for Eco. 201Y1:

Web documents are posted in PDF [portable document file] and MS - Word or (occasionally) HTML formats

The Lecture Notes for Eco 201Y1: Schedule for Postings the Lecture Notes, in 2003 - 2004 [html].

Former Examinations and Review Questions:

BIBLIOGRAPHIES: for essays in undergraduate economic history courses

The bibliography lists and the individual bibliographies, in both short and long versions, are accessible in both html and pdf formats; but in order to retrieve the individual bibliographies you must click on the highlighted "List" in the html format only. Only the bibliographies in the long-format contain statistical and other appendices; and they are best read in the pdf format. Bibliographies in the short-format, usually in two pages, contain the key readings and a few questions to guide you in formulating your essays. The second-term bibliographies have now been updated and revised.

Formats and Other General Observations. Also in pdf format.

Bibliographies for ECO 201Y1: The Economic History of Later Medieval and Early Modern Europe, 1250-1750.


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