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Degree type

BA

Course length

3 years

Location

Durham City

UCAS code

F411

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Typical offers

Typical offers
A Level AAB
BTEC DDD
International Baccalaureate 36

Course details

This exciting degree enables you to develop your passion for studying history in combination with archaeological training in historic-period material and visual culture, museum collections, buildings, landscapes and world heritage. With a particular focus on the archaeology of the last 600 years, this course offers a strong emphasis on interdisciplinary learning and skills providing an opportunity across all three years to study a combination of modules in the Departments of Archaeology and History, and complement this with modules from other subject areas.

Classroom-led teaching and small-group seminar work are combined with practical, lab- and collections-based training, field visits and participation in the annual field school. You can choose from a range of specialist modules on the archaeology of historic period societies in Europe, the Mediterranean, North Africa, East and South East Asia, the Indian Ocean and Middle East as well as thematic modules covering aspects of the early modern and modern world, such as colonialization, transatlantic connections, slavery, trade and industrialisation.

Students studying this course can also follow a route accredited by CIfA, the Chartered Institute for Archaeologists. Choosing an accredited undergraduate degree is widely recognised as the first step on a career pathway leading to professional status. To obtain a CIfA accredited degree, you can study modules that equip you with the requisite theoretical and practical knowledge to act as a foundation for a career in the UK commercial archaeology sector.


In the first year, you will acquire the basic range of intellectual and practical archaeological skills.

In the second and third years you will move to more in-depth study of particular topics and methods working closely with staff and developing your own independent research project in the third year.

Many of our modules form a Chartered Institute for Archaeology accredited pathway. Ask us if you'd like to know more.

Course structure

Year 1 modules

Core modules:

Introduction to Archaeological Methods

provides an opening introduction to archaeological analysis, from stratigraphic excavation and artefact analysis to geographic information systems and scientific analysis.

Medieval to Modern: An Introduction to the Archaeology of the Medieval to Post-Medieval World

introduces the archaeology of early medieval to post-medieval worlds from the end of the Roman Empire to the Modern World in Europe and beyond, through focusing on key case-study artefacts and sites.

Archaeology Practicals

introduces you to the practical side of archaeology, including assessing primary archaeological materials, sites and monuments through hands-on recording, analysis and scientific techniques.

Historical Archaeology: Methods and Sources

provides a grounding in a range of investigative methods and techniques relevant to the archaeology of the historic era and contemporary archaeology, allowing you to develop a basic critical awareness of the potential and limitations of each.

Optional modules:

  • Archaeology in Britain
  • Cities in Antiquity
  • Ancient Civilizations of the East
  • Discovering World Prehistory
  • Up to two modules available in History
  • Up to one module in any other department including a modern language module.


Year 2 modules

Core modules:

Professional Training

(incorporating three weeks of fieldwork in the summer before starting Year 2) uses practical experience to give you an understanding of the objectives and operation of a fieldwork project, and how data and material produced by archaeological projects is processed.

Developing Archaeological Research

develops your understanding of how to carry out research on different scales of materials, from sites to artefacts, how to present visual information and assess quantitative information, and develop an effective research plan.

Debates in Archaeology of the Historic World

allows you to learn about key themes and engage debates in historical archaeology including the uses and abuses of different kinds of evidence, narratives about migration, identity and diversity, gender and the body, categorisations of social groups, the state and economic strategies.

Optional modules:

  • Archaeology of Medieval and Post-Medieval Britain
  • Advanced Skills (Single or Double)
  • East Mediterranean in the Bronze Age
  • Becoming Roman
  • Ancient Mediterranean Civilisations: East and West
  • Scientific Methods in Archaeology 2
  • Up to two modules available in History
  • Up to one module in any other department including a modern language module.

Year 3 modules

Core modules:

Archaeology Dissertation

significantly develops your skills in independent research, the analysis and presentation of evidence and how to structure a persuasive argument. This will involve writing an extended dissertation in your chosen specialist area of archaeology.

Specialised Aspects in Archaeology

will help you develop an understanding of specialised aspects of archaeology, chosen from a list of topics representing the main areas of research in the Department.

Optional modules:

  • Current Archaeology
  • Advanced Professional Training (incorporating placement)
  • Interpreting Heritage
  • Museum Representation
  • Archaeology and Global Sustainable Development
  • Scientific Methods in Archaeology 3
  • Up to one module available in History
  • Up to one module in any other department including a modern language module.

Additional Pathways

Students can apply to be transferred onto either the with  Year Abroad or with Placement pathway during the second year. Places on these pathways are in high demand and if you are chosen your studies will extend from three years to four.

Accreditation

Our archaeology graduates progress into a diverse range of careers and sectors, including law, publishing and civil service as well as archaeology, heritage, surveying and teaching, or going into academia.

Examples of high-profile employers include the National Trust, Ministry of Defence, Imperial War Museum, Ordnance Survey, M&S and Historic England.



Learning

Learning is supported by lectures, small group seminars, tutorials, and practical classes, as well as fieldtrips and fieldwork. Outside of class hours, you will engage in independent research, reading, and writing. All of these are supported by a virtual learning environment, Learn Ultra.

This degree is designed to move to more independent research as you move from your first to your final year, when you will develop a dissertation on a topic of special interest to you, supported by one-to-one supervision.

This transforms you from a consumer of knowledge in the classroom to a generator of knowledge, ready for professional or postgraduate life.

Assessment

On this course you will be assessed through traditional coursework such as essays and exams, but also through presentations and hands-on practical exercises, including archaeological fieldwork, as well as other kinds of alternative assessments. Depending on the department running particular modules, coursework assessment tends to predominate in Years 2 and 3, and in the final year your dissertation makes up a third of your final year credits.

Entry requirements

A level offerAAB

Contextual offer – BBC

BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma/OCR Cambridge Technical Extended Diploma – DDD

IB Diploma score36 to include 665 in higher level subjects.

In addition to satisfying the University’s general entry requirements, please note:

  • We also consider other level 3 qualifications, including T-levels.
  • 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. Please contact our Admissions Selectors.
  • If you do not satisfy our general entry requirements, the Foundation Programme offers multidisciplinary degrees to prepare you for a range of specified degree courses.
  • If you are an international student who does not meet the requirements for direct entry to this degree, you may be eligible to take an International Foundation Year pathway programme at the Durham University International Study Centre
  • We are pleased to consider applications for deferred entry.

Alternative qualifications

International students who do not meet direct entry requirements for this degree might have the option to complete an International Foundation Year.

English language requirements

Country specific information

Fees and funding

The fees for this academic year have not been confirmed yet.

Full-Time Study

The tuition fees shown for home students are for one complete academic year of full-time study and are set according to the academic year of entry. Fees for subsequent years of your course may rise in line with an inflationary uplift as determined by the government.

The tuition fees shown for overseas and EU students are for one complete academic year of full-time study, are set according to the academic year of entry, and will be subject to an annual inflationary increase expected to rise throughout the programme of study. The fee listed above is for the first year of the course only; fees for subsequent years will be confirmed not less than 3 months before the start of the academic year to which the increase is intended to apply and will be published on the Finance webpages.

In deciding the annual level of increase, the University will take into account inflationary pressures on the costs of delivery. Tuition fees will rise annually by up to the higher of:

  • 6%, or
  • the latest annual percentage increase in the Consumer Prices Index.

Part-Time Study

The tuition fees shown for home students are for one complete academic year of part-time study and are charged proportionately to the Full-Time fee. Fees for subsequent years of your course may rise in line with an inflationary uplift as determined by the government.

Please also check costs for colleges and accommodation.

Scholarships and Bursaries

We are committed to supporting the best students irrespective of financial circumstances and are delighted to offer a range of funding opportunities. 

Find out more about Scholarships and Bursaries

Career opportunities

Archaeology

Archaeology embraces a wide range of skills, which means excellent transferable skills, including in traditional areas of literacy, communication, research and critical thinking, but also in professional visual presentation and close analysis, numeracy and statistics, and uses of computing applications and scientific techniques. These skills are valued in numerous fields.

For those interested in pursuing careers in archaeology and heritage, links with industry specialists coupled with in-house facilities give you a great introduction to the sector. Subject-specific skills training includes excavation, survey, remote-sensing techniques, Geographic Informations Systems and mapping, small finds analysis, osteology, geochemistry, conservation and practical project planning. 

Our alumni work in various sectors after graduation: law, civil service, publishing, teaching, commercial archaeology, heritage institutions and academia.

Of those students who graduated in 2020-21:

  • 88% first-degree graduates in work or further study.

Of those in employment:

  • 75% first-degree graduates in high and medium skilled employment.
  • £27,750 average salary of first-degree graduates in full-time employment.
  • 50% of first-degree graduates achieve marks enabling them to go on to higher study.

(Source: HESA Graduate Outcomes Survey. This survey asks leavers from higher education what they are doing 15 months after graduation. We here highlight destinations of specifically first-degree graduates. Further information about the Graduate Outcomes survey can be found here www.graduateoutcomes.ac.uk)

Department information

Archaeology

Unlock the past to understand the present. At this world-leading Department at the heart of a UNESCO World Heritage Site, we will help you to gain an array of intellectual and practical skills that archaeology combines in an interdisciplinary subject like no other.

Archaeology at Durham is an exciting and diverse discipline that delves into the past and informs our understanding of the present. It brings together multiple techniques and methods, and covers a wide range of themes and periods, from the earliest human development through classical civilisations to colonialism, the built environment and heritage in the modern world. 

We are an inclusive international scholarly community offering opportunities for you to get involved, from seminars and reading groups to field projects. Our research-led approach to learning means you will be taught by world specialists and explore archaeological sites and historic buildings, cutting-edge scientific methods, theories, debates and computing techniques.

Fieldwork takes you around the world, with previous projects ranging from Iceland to Africa. Closer to home you will learn about the rich and varied past of the UK. Our location provides a great environment for studying archaeology and heritage, with UNESCO World Heritage Sites such as Durham Cathedral and Hadrian's Wall on our doorstep. 

We offer single and joint honour BA and BSc degrees to suit your interests and career goals. Most courses include the possibility of a work placement or year abroad.

For more information see our department pages.

Rankings

  • 6th in the world QS World University Rankings by subject 2025

  • 3rd in the UK The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2025

  • 4th in the UK The Complete University Guide 2025

Staff

For a current list of staff, please see our department web pages.

Facilities

We are based in the Dawson Building, the historic original science building on the Science Site, at University's main Mountjoy Campus. We are close to other departments, colleges, the Bill Bryson library and the Teaching and Learning Centre. Our building houses teaching rooms, and a suite of state-of-the-art laboratories for precision techniques including ancient DNA and isotope analysis, Geographic Information Systems and digital visualisation, as well as a common room for social activities of staff and students. Our teaching allows students hands on experience in labs, and our library holdings and digital resources are world-class.


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F411

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