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Personal bio
Nancy Kollmann has been teaching at Stanford since 1982; she is a specialist in the history of early modern Russia (from Ivan the Terrible to Catherine the Great). She has published books on kinsihp networks in high politics, on litigations on honor among common people in early Russia and on the practice of the criminal law. She is currently exploring two very different fields-- the use of political violence and the visual world of early modern Russia.
Currently teaching
HISTORY 299X: Preparing for International Field Work: Public Service or Research
(Spring)
HISTORY 399A: Preparing for International Field Work: Public Service or Research
(Spring)
OSPGEN 62: St. Petersburg: Crucible of Russian History and Culture
(Summer)
HISTORY 299A: Senior Research I
(Autumn, Winter, Spring)
HISTORY 299B: Senior Research II
(Winter, Spring)
HISTORY 299C: Senior Research III
(Winter, Spring)
HISTORY 299S: Undergraduate Directed Research and Writing
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
HISTORY 399W: Graduate Directed Reading
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
HISTORY 499X: Graduate Research
(Autumn, Winter, Spring, Summer)
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