IELTS 6.5, with no component below 5.5
Our BA Ancient History and Archaeology with Professional Placement will enable you to understand the societies and people of the past.
On this course, you will have the opportunity to explore ancient Greece and Rome, join an archaeological dig and study abroad.
Ancient history is the study of the Greek and Roman worlds over a period spanning from 2000 BC to around 600 AD; it covers parts of modern Africa, Asia and Europe. You will learn about these ancient worlds in their political, literary, social, cultural and religious contexts. Your first year is about discovery and experimentation. You will address important modern questions and trace them back to their roots, exploring different periods of ancient history through both literary and material sources. You can enhance your knowledge of the ancient world through optional Latin and Greek language modules, or deepen your understanding through hands-on experience with artefacts from the Ure Museum.
At the University of Reading, our expertise in archaeology starts with the earliest humans and spans up until the medieval period. We focus mainly on British, European and Near Eastern Archaeology, but explore other regions across the world. You will learn about burial archaeology, material culture, bioarchaeology (including human remains), forensics, past environments (including geoarchaeology), museums and gender archaeology. Core modules will provide you with a solid historical and archaeological grounding and optional modules will allow you to explore the different periods, cultures and countries that interest you. Popular modules taken by students on this degree include The Ancient World on Film and Rome's Mediterranean Empire.
In the Department of Classics, our academics are at the forefront of their disciplines. Their research feeds directly into your studies, exposing you to the latest developments in the field. In 2019, we achieved a 95% satisfaction score for the teaching on our courses in the National Student Survey.
The Department of Archaeology is a research-intensive department, specialising in social and scientific archaeology. 97% of our research was judged to be of international standing in the Research Excellence Framework 2014. We also have an outstanding track record for student satisfaction, with scores consistently between 90-100% for overall student satisfaction in the National Student Survey, 2010-2019.
Placements are an excellent way to enhance your work-related skills and develop a network of contacts, as well as strengthen your employability prospects. We provide opportunities for you to undertake placements in a variety of contexts.
Opportunities are available working across the archaeological, heritage, planning and museum sectors including: research institutions, government organisations, local planning authorities, archaeological consultancies, field units, specialists and archivists. The University's museums, including the Department's own Ure Museum, also provide a number of voluntary work placements, ranging from helping with school visits to preparing displays and exhibitions. Alternatively you can choose a placement in a non-related business or industry, exploring different career options and enhancing your employability by drawing on the many non-vocational, transferable skills you obtain from an Ancient History and Archaeology degree.
Recent examples include:
Traineeship with Oxford Archaeology
Traineeship at the Field School
Archaeological science placement at QUEST, the University of Reading’s scientific consultancy company
Volunteering at the Ure Museum, Cole Museum of Zoology and the Museum of English Rural Life
Human remains placement
Mediterranean Palaeoclimate Project placement
Hominin Skeletal Morphology placement
Archaeological Graphics placement
Lithics Reference Collection placement
“Developing Experimental Archaeology for Research and Training” placement
“The Ecology of Crusading: Isotope Analysis and Faunal Remains” placement
Summer Enterprise Experience and Discovery internship scheme
Our Department has a dedicated member of staff in charge of placements, who can provide you with advice and support.
Students opting to undertake a standard three-year degree course will also have the opportunity to take a fully-credited placement or to spend a single term at one of our partner Universities abroad. Current options include the Universities of Malta, Aarhus (Denmark), and the University of Florida in Gainesville (USA).
More information: click here
Year 1
Compulsory modules include:
• Code, Module, Convenor
• AR1EMP, Early Empires: Mesopotamia, Egypt & Rome, PROF Roger Matthews
• AR1MET, Archaeology today: methods and practice, MS Amanda Clarke
• CL1GH, Greek History: war, society, and change in the Archaic Age, DR Emma Aston
• CL1RH, Roman History: the rise and fall of the Republic, DR Andreas Gavrielatos
Optional modules include:
• Code, Module, Convenor
• AR1FOR, Forensic Anthropology and the Archaeology of Death, DR Ceri Falys
• AR1REV, Revolutions in Human Behaviour: 4 Million Years BC to the Present, PROF Steve Mithen
• AR1SOC, Contemporary world cultures: an introduction to social anthropology, DR Alanna Cant
• CL1G1, Ancient Greek 1, MRS Jackie Baines
• CL1L1, Latin 1 (C), MRS Jackie Baines
• CL1SO, Ancient Song, PROF Ian Rutherford
• CL1TR, Texts, Readers, and Writers, PROF Eleanor Dickey
• AP1SB1, Introduction to Management, PROF Julian Park
• EC110, The Economics of Climate Change, DR Stefania Lovo
• FT1CSS, Comedy on Stage and Screen, DR Simone Knox
• MC1HPE, Museum History, Policy and Ethics, DR Rhi Smith
• MC1PP, Presenting the Past, DR Rhi Smith
• ML1IL, Introduction to Linguistics, MR Federico Faloppa
• PO1FRE, Freedom, DR Andrew Reid
• PP1GJ, Global Justice, MISS Michela Bariselli
• PP1RP, Radical Philosophy, DR George Mason
Year 2
Optional modules include:
• Code, Module, Convenor
• AR2F13, Archaeology Fieldschool Joint Honours, MS Amanda Clarke
• AR2F17, Forensic Archaeology and Crime Scene Analysis, PROF Mary Lewis
• AR2F20, Professional Practice, MS Amanda Clarke
• AR2FAO, Ancient objects: materials and meanings, DR Andrew Souter
• AR2M8, Medieval Europe: power, religion and death, DR Gabor Thomas
• AR2P14, Prehistoric Europe: the first million years, DR Rob Hosfield
• AR2R8, Rome's Mediterranean Empire, DR Andrew Souter
• AR2SBI, Bioarchaeology, DR Aleks Pluskowski
• AR2SCF2, Changing the Face of the Earth: Past, Present and Future Sustainability, DR Wendy Matthews
• AR2TAH, Archaeology and heritage: past, present and future, PROF Duncan Garrow
• CL2AE, Ancient Epic, DR Christa Gray
• CL2AEL, Ancient Egyptian Language and Hieroglyphs, PROF Rachel Mairs
• CL2APL, Academic Work Placement, DR Emma Aston
• CL2CGH, Greek History: Persian Wars to Alexander, PROF Timothy Duff
• CL2CLE, Cleopatras, PROF Rachel Mairs
• CL2DR, Ancient Drama, PROF Barbara Goff
• CL2EGR, Egypt and the Greco-Roman World, PROF Ian Rutherford
• CL2EM, Early Macedon, DR Emma Aston
• CL2G2, Ancient Greek 2 (I), DR Andreas Gavrielatos
• CL2G3, Ancient Greek 3 (I), PROF Barbara Goff
• CL2GRE, Greek Religions, PROF Ian Rutherford
• CL2GSC, Greek Sculpture, PROF Amy Smith
• CL2ILA, Introduction to Late Antiquity, DR Christa Gray
• CL2L2, Latin 2 (I), MRS Jackie Baines
• CL2L3, Latin 3 (I), DR Andreas Gavrielatos
• CL2PL, Work placement for Classicists and Ancient Historians, PROF Eleanor Dickey
• CL2PR, Prospects for Classicists and Ancient Historians, DR Hana Navratilova
• CL2RME, Rome's Mediterranean Empire; A World of Cities, DR Andrew Souter
• CL2RO, Roman History: From Republic to Empire, PROF Annalisa Marzano
• CL2SG, Sexuality and Gender in the Ancient World, PROF Barbara Goff
• CL2SI, My Mother's Sin and other Stories, DR Dimitra Tzanidaki-Kreps
• GV2GIS, Geographical Information Systems, DR Jess Neumann
• GV2MPL, Summer Micro-Placement, DR Aleks Pluskowski
• GV2PLA, Summer Placement, DR Aleks Pluskowski
• GV2QCEC, Quaternary Climate and Environmental Change, PROF Nicholas Branch
• LS2LAT, Introduction to English Language Teaching, MRS Suzanne Portch
• LS2LNM, Language and New Media, PROF Rodney Jones
• MC2CCM, Curatorship and Collections Management, DR Rhi Smith
• MC2LE, Museum Learning and Engagement, DR Rhi Smith
• ML2GF, Science, perversion, and dream in global fantastic literature, DR Alice Christensen
• ML2STA, Society, Thought, and Art in Modern Europe, DR Veronica Heath
• MM270, Practice of Entrepreneurship, DR Norbert Morawetz
• MT2CC, The Science of Climate Change, PROF Nigel Arnell
• PO2MIR, Modern International Relations, DR Joseph O' Mahoney
• PO2PWS, Politics of the Welfare State, DR Brandon Beomseob Park
• PO2THI, Political Thinking, DR Alice Baderin
• PP2EA1, Ethical Argument 1: Philosophy and How to Live, DR Luke Elson
• PP2GP1, Global Philosophy 1, MISS Michela Bariselli
• PP2HKW1, Hume, Kant, and Wittgenstein 1, DR Severin Schroeder
• PP2IDR1, Ignorance, Doubt, and Relativism 1, DR Jumbly Grindrod
• PP2MM1, Meaning and the Mind 1, DR Jumbly Grindrod
• PP2OID1, Oppression, Inequality, and the Enemies of Democracy 1, DR Charlotte Newey
Year 3
Compulsory modules include:
Year 4
Optional modules include:
• Code, Module, Convenor
• AR3D1, Dissertation, DR Andrew Souter
• AR3F1, Post-Excavation: assessment, analysis & publication in the profession, MS Amanda Clarke
• AR3HCP, The Anthropology of Heritage and Cultural Property, DR Alanna Cant
• AR3P13, Emergence of Civilisation in Mesopotamia, PROF Roger Matthews
• AR3R9, Archaeology of the City of Rome, DR Andrew Souter
• AR3S21, Biological anthropology, DR Ceri Falys
• CL3AA, Anatolia and the Aegean in the Late Bronze Age. The Context for the Trojan War, PROF Ian Rutherford
• CL3AB, Ancient Biography, PROF Timothy Duff
• CL3DN, Dissertation in Classics, DR Emma Aston
• CL3DP, Preparation for Dissertation in Classics, DR Emma Aston
• CL3FCC, From Classroom to Courtroom: Mastering the Art of Persuasion in the Ancient World, DR Christa Gray
• CL3G4, Ancient Greek 4 (H), MRS Jackie Baines
• CL3G5, Ancient Greek 5 (H), PROF Timothy Duff
• CL3G6, Ancient Greek 6, MRS Jackie Baines
• CL3INP, Independent Third Year Project, DR Emma Aston
• CL3L4, Latin 4 (H), DR Andreas Gavrielatos
• CL3L5, Latin 5 (H), DR Andreas Gavrielatos
• CL3L6, Latin 6, DR Andreas Gavrielatos
• CL3PCA, Pioneers of Classical Archaeology, PROF Rachel Mairs
• CL3ROM, City of Rome, DR Andrew Souter
• CL3SEN, Seneca:The Consul, The Philosopher, The Tragedian, MR Oliver Baldwin
• CL3SP, Ancient Sparta, DR James Lloyd
• CL3TE, Technology in the Ancient World, PROF Annalisa Marzano
• CL3UL, Urban Life: The Archaeology and Anthropology of Roman Cities, DR John Hanson
• FB3NGLA, Genes, Lifestyle and Nutrition, DR Vimal Karani
• GV3CC, Climate Change, PROF Maria Shahgedanova
• GV3ESM, Ecosystems Modelling, DR Shovonlal Roy
• GV3TRC, Tropical Rainforests, Climate & Lost Civilisations, PROF Frank Mayle
• LS3IC, Intercultural Communications, DR Erhan Aslan
• LW3CRY, Criminology, PROF Paul Almond
• ML3IC, Identity and Conflict in Modern Europe, DR Athena Leoussi
• ML3LP, Language and Power, MR Federico Faloppa
• MM302, Entrepreneurial Project, MR Keith Heron
• PO3FPT, Feminism and Political Theory, DR Maxime Lepoutre
• PO3IPE, International Political Economy, DR Jonathan Golub
• PO3USF, US Foreign and Defence Policy since 1950, DR Graham O'Dwyer
This can lead you to a variety of careers in different sectors, including:
Past graduates have gone on to work with organisations including:
Health Insurance_fee:£300/year