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Students
Tuition Fee
GBP 23,000
Start Date
Medium of studying
Duration
36 months
Program Facts
Program Details
Degree
Bachelors
Major
History | Literature
Area of study
Humanities
Course Language
English
Tuition Fee
Average International Tuition Fee
GBP 23,000
About Program

Program Overview


This Classics program immerses students in ancient Greek and Roman culture through language study, exploring texts, history, and art. By learning Latin or Greek, students gain linguistic analysis skills and insights into ancient literature in its original form, while developing transferable abilities for various career paths.

Program Outline


Degree Overview:

Build your love for, and understanding of, the ancient world to new levels. Classics is a language-based course. You will investigate the culture and history of ancient Greece and Rome by examining texts in their original language. Immerse yourself in ancient speeches, drama, epic, and satire in the original Greek or Latin, and explore how language and culture inform one another. Reading ancient texts in their original Latin or Greek is one of the greatest pleasures of studying Greek and Roman culture. You can learn either language from scratch, or build on your existing knowledge. Studying Latin and ancient Greek will give you greater insight into the texts you’re reading in translation. You can combine modules on the history, art, and culture of the ancient Mediterranean with detailed study of both Latin and Greek. Learning an ancient language also builds skills in linguistic analysis and literacy that are valued by employers.


Outline:

All modules Mandatory Optional Year 1 Studying the Greek World Learn More Mandatory Year 1 Studying the Roman World Learn More Optional Year 1 Latin or Greek Texts: 1-6 Learn More Optional Year 1 Beginners' Latin or Greek: 1 Learn More Optional Year 1 Beginners' Latin or Greek: 2 Learn More Optional Year 1 Interpreting Ancient Art and Archaeology Learn More Optional Year 1 Interpreting Ancient History Learn More Optional Year 1 Interpreting Ancient Literature Learn More Optional Year 1 Comparative World Prehistory Learn More Optional Year 1 Greek and Roman Mythology Learn More Optional Year 1 Rome to Revolution: Historical Archaeology of Britain Learn More Optional Year 1 Great Discoveries in Archaeology Learn More Optional Year 1 Understanding the Past I – Introduction to Archaeology Learn More Optional Year 1 Understanding the Past II – Landscapes and Surveying Learn More Load more modules Optional Year 2 Beginners' Latin or Greek: 1 Learn More Optional Year 2 Beginners' Latin or Greek: 2 Learn More Optional Year 2 Intermediate Latin or Greek: 1 and 2 Learn More Optional Year 2 Latin or Greek Texts: 1-6 Learn More Optional Year 2 Communicating the Past Learn More Optional Year 2 Extended Source Study Learn More Optional Year 2 Studying Classical Scholarship Learn More Optional Year 2 The Silk Road: Cultural Interactions and Perceptions Learn More Optional Year 2 The Archaeology of Mycenaean Greece Learn More Optional Year 2 Conquerors, Caliphs, and Converts: The Making of the Islamic World, c.600-800 Learn More Optional Year 2 Pompeii: Art and Culture in a Roman Town Learn More Optional Year 2 Christian Empire Learn More Optional Year 2 Virgil and the Epic Tradition Learn More Optional Year 2 Oedipus through the Ages Learn More Optional Year 2 Animals in the Ancient World Learn More Optional Year 2 Greece in the Archaic Age, c. 800-500 BC Learn More Optional Year 2 Greeks and Persians Learn More Optional Year 2 Classics and Film Learn More Optional Year 2 Coins, Cults and Cities: Coinage in the Eastern Roman Provinces (30 BC to AD 270) Learn More Optional Year 2 Employing the Arts Learn More Optional Year 2 Learn More Load more modules Optional Year 3 Advanced Latin or Greek: 1 and 2 Learn More Optional Year 3 Latin or Greek Texts: 1-6 Learn More Optional Year 3 Intermediate Latin or Greek: 1 and 2 Learn More Optional Year 3 Dissertation in Classics and Archaeology Learn More Optional Year 3 The Silk Road: Cultural Interactions and Perceptions Learn More Optional Year 3 The Archaeology of Mycenaean Greece Learn More Optional Year 3 Sparta Learn More Optional Year 3 Mapping the Humanities Learn More Optional Year 3 Heritage and the Media Learn More Optional Year 3 Pompeii: Art and Culture in a Roman Town Learn More Optional Year 3 Christian Empire Learn More Optional Year 3 Virgil and the Epic Tradition Learn More Optional Year 3 Oedipus through the Ages Learn More Optional Year 3 Animals in the Ancient World Learn More Optional Year 3 Greece in the Archaic Age, c. 800-500 BC Learn More Optional Year 3 Greeks and Persians Learn More Optional Year 3 Classics and Film Learn More Optional Year 3 Coins, Cults and Cities: Coinage in the Eastern Roman Provinces (30 BC to AD 270) Learn More Optional Year 3 Greek Tragedy Learn More Optional Year 3 Masculinity and Citizenship in Greece and Rome Learn More Optional Year 3 "Otherness" in Classical Art Learn More Load more modules


Assessment:

Assessment is based on a combination of coursework, including essays, close-reading exercises, research projects, and the dissertation, oral presentations, and formal examinations. The precise assessments vary between modules and across the years of your degree. Some of our modules (such as 'Communicating the Past', or 'Classics and Comics') include the option of producing more artistic or creative coursework projects.


Teaching:

You will be taught via a mixture of large-group lectures and smaller, interactive seminars. You might also be taught through tutorials and supervisions. These are one-to-one meetings or discussions with an academic tutor. All students are assigned a personal tutor at the start of each academic year. Your personal tutor oversees your academic development and personal welfare. Peer mentoring All new undergraduate students are allocated a peer mentor, to help you settle into life at Nottingham.


Careers:

A degree in classics gives you a wide range of transferable skills, including: ability to process and critically evaluate data applying theoretical and scientific principles to problems critical analysis and argument experience of fieldwork, post-excavation and laboratory techniques ability to interpret spatial data numerical, statistical, IT and analytical skills strong team working written, oral and visual communication

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