The University of Georgia, Department of History
Welcome Graduate Undergraduate People Resources Events Contributions Workshops
Benjamin Ehlers

Early modern Europe; Hapsburg Spain; religious history

Associate Professor, Director of Graduate Studies
Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1999

Office: 315 LeConte
Office Hours: Email
Phone: (706) 542-2520

behlers@uga.edu

[Download CV]

Benjamin Ehlers is the author of Between Christians and Moriscos: Juan de Ribera and Religious Reform in Valencia, 1568-1614 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006).

Research and Teaching Interests

[Europe-Early Modern]
[Religion]

Selected Publications

Between Christians and Moriscos: Juan de Ribera and Religious Reform in Valencia, 1568-1614 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006) [More Info]

Courses Taught

FRES1020: Freshman Seminar [Syllabus]

HIST2302: History of Western Society Since 1500 [Syllabus]

HIST3340: The Age of Renaissance and Reformation [Syllabus]

HIST3340: The Age of Renaissance and Reformation [Syllabus]

HIST3371: Tudor-Stuart England [Syllabus]

HIST3443: Spain in the Age of Cervantes [Syllabus]

HIST4300: Studies in European History [Syllabus]

HIST4710: Atlantic World [Syllabus]

HIST4990: Senior Seminar [Syllabus]

MA Theses Supervised

Fowler, Jessica, "Illuminating Heretics: Alumbrados and Inquisition in Sixteenth-Century Cuenca" (2009)

Announcements

People by Name

All People

Faculty (alpha)

Faculty (field)

Grad Students (alpha)

Grad Students (field)

Staff

People by Field

Africa

African American

Ancient & Medieval

Asia

Capitalism

Cultural & Intellectual

Early America

Environment & Agriculture

Europe-Early Modern

Europe-Modern

Film and History

Gender & Sexuality

Imperialism & Colonialism

Latin America & Caribbean

Middle East

Native American

Political & Legal

Religion

Transnational

U.S. South

U.S. 19th & 20th Century

War and Diplomacy

Women's History

 

 

 

 

 

></tr><tr> </tr><tr>
<td colspan=
The University of Georgia Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Department of History