Skip to main content

Quick Links

Related Sites

History Department
300 Carson Hall
Hanover, NH  03755
P: (603) 646-2545 or
(603) 646-9503
F: (603) 646-3353
 
Contact Information:
Chair: Walter Simons (walter.simons@dartmouth.edu)
Vice Chairs: David Lagomarsino (david.lagomarsino@dartmouth.edu) [Fall] and Douglas Haynes (douglas.haynes@dartmouth.edu) [Winter & Spring]
 
A&S History Department Administrator:  Gail M. Vernazza (gail.vernazza@dartmouth.edu)
History Department Administrative Assistant:  Bruch Lehmann (kristin.b.lehmann@dartmouth.edu)
 
 
Banner image:
Leonardo Bruni, Historia Florentina, Venice, 1476. Printed on vellum, illuminated bifolium (Dartmouth College, Rauner Special Collections, Lansburgh 36)

Events

Lectures and Symposiums

UNKEPT WOMEN:  Elite Prostitution in Eighteenth-Century Paris

Monday, May 13, 4 PM, L02 Carson Hall

Lecture by NINA KUSHNER D'90, Assistant Professor of History, Clark University

 

TOPPLING KUCHUM, CROSSING A CONTINENT: Russia's Conquest of Siberia and Expansion Across Eurasia

Tuesday, May 7th, 4 PM, L02 Carson Hall

Lecture by Erika Monahan D'96, Assistant Professor of History, University of New Mexico

 


 


 


 

 

 

 

 

Michael Ermarth

Professor of History
Office: 408 Carson Hall
Office Phone: (603) 646-2523
Fax: (603) 646-3353
Email: Michael.Ermarth@Dartmouth.edu

Address:

  • Department of History
    Dartmouth College
    6107 Carson Hall
    Hanover, NH 03755
  • Courses:

  • 51: Modern European Intellectual History, the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
  • 52: Modern Germany, 1800-1945
  • 64: Modern Europe: The Enlightenment through World War I
  • 65: Modern Europe: The Twentieth Century
  • 96: Topics in Twentieth Century Germany
  •  

    Michael Ermarth teaches courses in modern European history-Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries, German history of the same period, and European intellectual history since the 17th century. His area of special interest is German intellectual history, especially the rise of historical consciousness, theory of interpretation, and philosophy of culture. His recent research and publication has centered on the transformation of German attitudes toward "Americanization" in the twentieth century.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Last Updated: 12/10/10