How much of European history do you learn in your country?

How much of European history do you learn in your country?

I recall learning about the Middle Ages, the Rennaissance, the French Revolution, Napoleon, WW1, WW2, and the Bosnian War. That was pretty much it, I think.

Oh, and Ancient Greece and the Roman Republic/Empire.

>Not learning about the Ancient Finnish Empire
Argentine education everybody

Basically nothing.

>Korea never under European control

So USSR and USA don't count as European?

boy, Europe sure does extend pretty far East

Very little, beyond our conflicts with Britain and Spain, and our involvement in the world wars.

With the exception of some brief discussion of European explorers and conquistadors, we never touched anything pre-1700.

Our required history class is called Canadian History. We don't learn about anything European other than the Holocaust.

Well, as an example, we dedicated an entire hour (and there were 5 pages in the textbook) just for the Luxembourg-Habsburg rivalry for the HRE throne.

The entire history of east asia between the 13th and 19th century was summarised on 2 pages, 1 for China (50% was the Unequal treaties) and 1 for Japan (50% being about Commodore Perry)

From first to sixth grade Portuguese History and Geography.
Seven to nine grade focused on European History.
Honestly very little from the rest of the world was taught, but that's because having History from the ten to the twelve grade is optional, and because I picked science and technology and I didn't have it.

Not much.

>Canadian history

>....
>...
>fuck indians
>...
>...
>die a bit in europe
>...
>2016

must've been a boring class

For things we weren't involved in we just learn the very basics.

Which is more than I can say for literally any other part of the planet (we also spent a week or so talking about israel and how their neighbors wanted to push them into the sea)

well, it is important to learn about the struggles of your greatest ally

I took ap euro and ap world history so a good bit. A lot of other people just took global history which is basically just a watered down version of the two

None.

:-DD

The curricula I was taught included early old world civilizations to then move to a focus on Rome and Greece, basisc on early Greek city states, their philosophers, Athens and Sparta, the Peloponenssian wars, Alexander's Macedonian empire and it's fall, the foundation of Rome, the 7 tyrants, the Republic, the Punic wars, the Empire, the fall of Rome, the invassion of the Visigoth kingdoms by the Moors, the Reconquista and general Medieval European history with a focus on Spain, the age of discovery and SĀ“pain's golden century, the Renaissance with a strong focus on Italy, the Enlightenment with a strong focus an France, French Revolution going in detail from the Estates General to the the end of terror, Napoleon and his wars, obviously a focus on Latin American independence, the rise of the British Empire and Industrial Revolution, German and Italian reunifications, modernism, fin du siecle, some German/French philosophers and thinkers (Nietzche, Kant, Freud) the Russian revolution WWI and WWII but only as backdrops to our country's history, a general overview of post-war Europe and Nato/Eastern bloc, fall of communism, German reunification and the rise of the EU... A lot of art history goes in between all of this...

Now, that's the progarm up until high school for the European side, which admittedly is the largest outside of our own history even if we do focus quite a bit on the US,, the textbooks in my time at least were actually pretty good and if you leave out we near completely ignore Scandinavia and Eastern Europe, and leave some Western Europeans like Netherlands and Belgium to mere overviews and footnotes, it really isn't bad and very focused and detailed in many points, good enough you should understand the basics of Western history...

Cont

We learned about how Suez Canal Crisis showed the end of Euro dominance then we said "God bless America" and jacked off our American teacher for the rest of the semester between Arnold Schwarzenegger films

Cont.
But the teachers... Let's say 9 out of 10 are grossly incompetent, and the one in ten is somewhat limited when it comes to detailed questions and discussions, in reality your average high school graduate will barely be even to find in the map the 6 countries we focus strongly on, will be completely unaware of most of the history of antiquity, and be able to recall in the most simplistic terms later European history, if at all... I attended good private schools and didn't meet a competent history teacher until college, I dread to think what public education is like even if it's the same curriculum by law. Our country's education system is defficient to say the least... But at least a good program is there, and those who want to can in fact educate themselves on the textbooks and recommended materials...

I learned very little history in general.

>zero Greek and Roman history other than their mythology and literature
>a passing mention of the Goths that took the Iberian peninsula
>a passing mention of the Islamic conquest of Iberia
>a little about the Reconquista and the discover of the Americas
>artistic movements in the late middle ages and renaissance
>French Revolution
>WWs and Cold War

That's about it.

My school (and University, for that matter) was mostly centered around STEM stuff. I've basically had to learn history from scratch on my own.

I was taught pretty much the entirety of western civilization history, I had 3 separate subjects for Universal History, Chilean History and geography:

Ancient civilizations (Babylonians, Egyptians, Greeks)
Roman Empire
Middle Ages (frank empire, crusades)
Renaissance (origins of capitalism, commercial revolution, artists and stuff)
Imperial era
(then we kinda shoved in American Civilizations, Spanish Empire, and Chilean Independence)
Industrial Revolution
Russian Revolution
WWI
Rise of totalitarianism
WWII
Cold War (Korea war, Missile Crisis, Vietnam War)

Then as a separate subject:
Chilean native peoples
Spanish conquest and war of Arauco
Spanish colonization
Deeper look into the independence process
19th century republican history
Pacific War
Civil War
Social issues in the late 19th and early 20th century
Chile during the cold war
Allende's regime and coup

I went to school in the late 90s so they talk about the military government period too much.

Exactly this + The unification in Germany and Italy
The rest is all Islamic history, ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the rest of the pre-Islamic Middle Eastern civilizations

Oh and the European geographical discoveries if that counts

>orangeThailandia

EU colonized Thailandia right now with sexual turism

anglos are not european according to britbong and russians are asian

Nothing memorable.
Most of what I know is from /gsg/ posters and self-interest over the course of 4 years playing EU3/4, CK2, Vicky2.

Here teacher focus more in the time after the independence from Spain, we didn't learn anything about our past as a Spanish colony.

Shit op was asking European history in general. If I remember correctly we learned a lot about Ancient Greece, Roman Empire, the Renaissance, and of course, the industrial revolution. That's it. Yeah, our education kinda sucks.

Dutch history is world history.

Slavs don't exist.

basic prehistoric
first civilizations of Mesopotamia, Egypt, etc
Roman, Greek
medieval feudalism
industralization in Europe
rise of socialism, labor unions in Belgium
World War 1 & 2
human rights, etc

Never learnt anything about US, funnily enough nothing about Belgian Congo either

>Bosnian War
kek, we didn't have the time to cover it

By high school years:
1) Ancient history - focus on Greece and Rome
2) Middle ages - mostly Europe, a bit of the Islamic world, ended with Age of Discovery, if I remember right
3) Enlightenment, Napoleon, Russia, colonialism, I remember covering the Boxer Rebellion in China, USA independence and civil war, WWI
4) interwar period, WWII (all European fronts, the African and the Pacific front), Cold War

Croatia and the rest of the world were usually given a similar amount of attention, with Croatian history being done in greater detail. Croatian history includes parts of history relevant to Croatia, like general Austro-Hungarian history.

Legit question here, do you get taiught in Central America why you celebrate independence the same day that we do? Is there any appreciation at all for figures like Hidalgo and Morelos?

My history went a bit like this:

Hunter gatherer > Agriculture > Bronze Age > Iron Age
Egypt > Greeks > Romans
WITCHES TORTURE PLAGUE
War with Spain / Revolution >Golden Age > Slavery > Colonization > war with everyone
Japan
French revolution > American revolution
Industrial revolution in the UK > steam machines > worker emancipation
WW1
WW2
Cold war > Israel > Watergate > Berlin wall
Russia and China under Communism

I didn't learn very much because we had the option of taking either Asian or European history so I know a decent amount about Asian history though

Israel ????

>he didn't learn about Israel in school
Bad goy.

A lot because my country does not care about its own history anymore.

Almost everything I'm afraid.

How are Russians Asian if 83% of their population is of East Slavic descent?

European history and culture in Russian schools are praised as the only worthy of existence in the entire Universe. Not exaggerating a bit here.

NK was never our colony. USA was not a part of GB when they got there.