Classics-BA

Bachelor's degree

In Durham

£ 9,250 + VAT

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    Durham

The core of the Classics course is language, although how much language is studied and at what level depends upon the individual student. The course is perfect for those entering with A-levels in Greek and/or Latin, but it is also available to those who have never studied an ancient language before. We offer modules in both Latin and Greek, in both prose and verse, at every level.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Durham
See map
Stockton Road, DH1

Start date

On request

About this course

Admissions Process Subject requirements, level and grade In addition to satisfying the University’s general entry requirements, please note: We welcome applications from those with other qualifications equivalent to our standard entry requirements and from mature students with non-standard qualifications or who may have had a break in their study. For more information contact our Admissions Selectors Classical subjects are not essential for any of our courses, but for the Classics (Q), we look for evidence of linguistic ability For Ancient,...

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Subjects

  • Greek
  • Latin
  • Classics

Course programme

Year 1

In the first year, all students take two interdisciplinary modules that serve to give everyone grounding in the central periods of Greek and Roman culture:

  • Remembering Athens
  • Monuments and Memory in the Age of Augustus.
Other first-year optional modules have previously included:
  • Beginners’ Latin and Greek
  • Intermediate Latin and Greek for those with an A-level or equivalent
  • Greek Art and Architecture
  • Early Greek Philosophy
  • The Craft of the Ancient Historian.
Year 2

Many of the modules in the second year are broad surveys, for example of a historical period or a literary genre.

Students of Latin and Greek may carry on to a higher level in the second year, where the level depends on whether they took Beginners’ language in the first year or came in with an A-level.

Historical offerings have previously included:
  • Archaic Greece
  • Athens, Sparta and the Greek World
  • History of The Hellenistic Age
  • Crisis of The Roman Republic
  • Alexandria
  • Emperors and Dynasties.
Cultural surveys have previously included:
  • The Ancient Novel
  • Traditions of Epic
  • Greek Literature and The Near East
  • Interpreting Greek Tragedy Today
  • Creation and Cosmology
  • Living in the Classical World
  • Being Human: Classical Perspectives
  • The Literary and Political Culture of The Roman Republic.
Year 3 (Year 4 if undertaking a Year Abroad)

All students write a Dissertation in the third year. You choose a topic at the end of your second year in consultation with an adviser, with whom you will meet regularly for guidance throughout year three. Students of Latin and Greek will proceed to the next level, with the texts becoming more difficult or fragmentary. Most other modules in the third year cover specific topics that arise out of the research interests of the members of staff.

Historical modules have previously included:
  • Law and Society in Classical Athens
  • Roman Syria
  • Writing Alexander
  • The World of Greek Rituals and Greeks and Persians.
Cultural topics have previously included:
  • The Gods in Greek Literature
  • Hellenistic Poetry: Theory and Practice
  • Historiography, Propaganda and the Persian Wars
  • Love and Sex in Ancient Poetry
  • Knowledge and Doubt in Hellenistic Philosophy.
Study Abroad Classics and Ancient History

Single Honours courses include an optional European Studies element as part of the ERASMUS scheme, whereby students may spend the third year of a four-year course studying at a European university. We currently have ERASMUS exchange links with universities in Belgium (Liege), France (Bordeaux), Germany (Tubingen, Munich), Greece (Athens), Italy (Bologna, Rome, Milan, Vercelli), the Netherlands (Free University, Amsterdam, Groningen), Spain (Seville) and Switzerland (Fribourg), with further to come. Students interested in studying abroad should apply to transfer to the European Studies course after their first year of study.

Classics-BA

£ 9,250 + VAT