Ancient History University of Nottingham
| Award | Attendance | Study | Duration | Start | Domestic fees | International fees |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BA (Hons) | On-Campus | find out | find out | find out | find out | £24700.00 year per |
Course overview
Course overview
This course examines the political, social, economic and cultural history of ancient Greece and Rome. It does not merely handle facts and events, but what lies behind them and what makes them significant and exciting: progress and decline, labour and leisure, revolution and reconciliation, conquest, exploitation and resistance. No previous knowledge of Greek or Latin is required and, except in designated language modules, all texts are read in translation. The study of either Greek or Latin is optional.
Year one
You will study two core modules which give you an integrated introduction to the history and culture of Greece and Rome, along with either beginners' Greek or Latin, or Seeing through Language and Working with Language, and an in-depth module on one particular topic (e.g. Alexander). An introduction to the reception of classical culture in the modern world (Classics and Popular Culture) is optional.
Year two
This year combines a wide range of optional modules exploring ancient history and society with an extended source study, to prepare you for third year dissertation work; an independent module encourages an innovative (often creative) project on your own choice of subject. You also have the option to continue or start learning Greek or Latin.
Year three
You will develop and pursue your own interests through a 10,000 word dissertation on any area of ancient history, and combine this with a Special Subject which involves detailed, in-depth study of a particular topic (taught in seminars). Optional modules, or continued language work, complete the year.
By the end of this course
You will have a broad knowledge of periods of ancient history and you will have undertaken in-depth study into areas of your own interest. If you have elected to study Greek and Latin, you will have the skills to read and translate some source materials. Your transferable skills will include oral and written communication skills, the ability to construct a logical argument, and the ability to synthesise and evaluate information and opinions.
This course examines the political, social, economic and cultural history of ancient Greece and Rome. It does not merely handle facts and events, but what lies behind them and what makes them significant and exciting: progress and decline, labour and leisure, revolution and reconciliation, conquest, exploitation and resistance. No previous knowledge of Greek or Latin is required and, except in designated language modules, all texts are read in translation. The study of either Greek or Latin is optional.
Year one
You will study two core modules which give you an integrated introduction to the history and culture of Greece and Rome, along with either beginners' Greek or Latin, or Seeing through Language and Working with Language, and an in-depth module on one particular topic (e.g. Alexander). An introduction to the reception of classical culture in the modern world (Classics and Popular Culture) is optional.
Year two
This year combines a wide range of optional modules exploring ancient history and society with an extended source study, to prepare you for third year dissertation work; an independent module encourages an innovative (often creative) project on your own choice of subject. You also have the option to continue or start learning Greek or Latin.
Year three
You will develop and pursue your own interests through a 10,000 word dissertation on any area of ancient history, and combine this with a Special Subject which involves detailed, in-depth study of a particular topic (taught in seminars). Optional modules, or continued language work, complete the year.
By the end of this course
You will have a broad knowledge of periods of ancient history and you will have undertaken in-depth study into areas of your own interest. If you have elected to study Greek and Latin, you will have the skills to read and translate some source materials. Your transferable skills will include oral and written communication skills, the ability to construct a logical argument, and the ability to synthesise and evaluate information and opinions.
Entry requirements for this course
Contact University of Nottingham to find course entry requirements.
View foundation and pathway programmes to help you meet academic and language entry requirements.
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