Essay Topic Hub

Medieval
Essays

217+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

217 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

The medieval period occupies a central place in history courses, humanities programs, and interdisciplinary studies because it represents a vast, transformative stretch of human civilization that shaped the modern world. Students are regularly asked to examine it across fields including European history, religious studies, art history, literature, and the history of science. What makes the period academically compelling is its complexity — it encompassed dramatic shifts in theology, political power, cultural production, and intellectual life, and understanding it requires reading that past on its own terms rather than through modern assumptions.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some take a cultural and transitional angle, examining the shift from medieval to Renaissance Europe or tracing the development of the scientific method through and beyond the medieval period. Others focus on religious and philosophical thought, including Christian mysticism, Islamic philosophy, and the history of figures like Satan across Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Literary analysis appears through works like Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, while art historical approaches surface in examinations of the nude and zodiac symbols in Northern Renaissance artwork. The Byzantine Empire's construction and cultural history represents yet another case-study angle these papers take.

A strong essay on a medieval topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that situates its argument within a specific time, place, or tradition rather than making sweeping claims about "the Middle Ages" as a whole. Primary sources and period-specific context carry the most weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is imposing contemporary values onto medieval works or institutions without acknowledging the significant cultural distance involved.

Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Black Athena theory: evaluating historical claims and controversies
First, discuss your overall thoughts on the controversial Black Athena theory, and discuss the extent to which you think this theory holds weight (be specific: avoid empty answers like "I totally agree" or "this theory…
Paper Doctorate
Theology: an invitation to the study of God by Grenz and Olsen
Blog 1: Who needs theology; an invitation to study God The book - Who needs Theology? An Invitation to Study God– is an important undertaking by Roger Olson and Stanley Grenz, the former a career academic and the latter a member of the clergy, which hits at the root of the issue i.e. the role of the clergy as an intermediary between God and the believer. Christendom, it is fair to say, has engaged in this debate for over 500 years. "Who needs theology" is therefore an important read for not just budding theologians or academics in faith but for every believer who is unwilling to outsource the interpretation of faith to schooled clergymen.
Paper Undergraduate
Religious Reformation in early modern Europe
The Protestant Reformation was a full-fledged ideological, political, and social revolution. Efforts to reform the Catholic Church were directed not just at the religious institution itself: its theological doctrines,…
Paper Masters
Ben Jonson Intertextualities: The Influence
Ben Jonson is a writer who was deeply influenced by earlier novels in both themes and structures. In the opening of the Prologue to Volpone, the play of interest in this paper, Jonson invokes Horace and Aristotle,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Marco Polo: life, travels, and historical significance
Marco Polo: The Explorer in His Own Voice and the Voice of Italo Calvino
Paper Undergraduate
Characteristics of romantic poets
Among the aspects of the Romantic Movement in England may be listed: sensibility; primitivism; love of nature; sympathetic interest in the past, especially the medieval; mysticism; individualism; romanticism criticism;…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Modern iconography: symbols, meaning, and cultural representation
¶ … Iconography picture is worth a thousand words.
Paper High School
Ancient astronauts: evidence and theories
Adherents of the Ancient Astronaut thesis believe that intelligent extraterrestrial beings have visited Earth in antiquity and made contact with humans in certain points of our history. This encounter – they emphasize – can be evidenced from aspects such as religion, ancient culture, and technologies. A derivative of this thesis is that many, if not all, of the humans in existence today are products of the original extra-terrestrials who populated the earth in a pre-historic period. We were either created by them or born from them, possibly in a process that was described by Thomas Gold, a professor of astronomy as a "garbage theory" where humans spawned form extra-terrestrial waste. A sub-theory states that much of our human knowledge, religion, and culture may have originated from these extra-terrestrials who built (or supported human in building) many of the marvels on Earth such as the pyramids in Egypt or the Moai stone heads of Easter Island (Lieb, 1998). Adherents of this view have amassed an arsenal of reasons to support their point, but few academicians if any accept them. Scientific research has not found any conclusive evidence and all assertions of ancient astronauts remain unsupported.
Paper Undergraduate
Foucault and Rhetoric Like All
Like all crucial theoretical texts, Michel Foucault's contribution to the of study rhetoric and ideology is essentially descriptive, in that he engages in a process of describing phenomena previously considered…
Paper Undergraduate
Korean Music_ You Would Imagine
You would imagine how inconveniencing it can be when your teacher all of a sudden asks you to sit down on the floor to play drums, something that you are not used to. This may sound alien to many but to those aspiring…