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Start Dates
Degree type

BA

Course length

3 years full-time

Location

Durham City

UCAS code

V100

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Typical offers

Typical offers
A Level A*AA
BTEC D*DD
International Baccalaureate 38

Course details

The History degree at Durham is designed to give you a sense of the diversity of human experience – geographically and chronologically. We offer an unusually broad range of options that will take you to very different places and times. You can also explore diverse themes and approaches, such as environmental and scientific history, visual cultures, and gender and sexuality. The course will equip you with critical and presentational skills that are valuable in many careers.

Year 1 offers you an induction into advanced historical study, engaging with different periods and approaches to the study of the past.

Year 2 raises new questions about the human past, setting these in specific periods and parts of the world. It develops your understanding of historiography - the history of history-writing – and gives you experience of writing an extended historical argument. You can also apply to add a placement year or a year abroad to your degree, increasing the course from three years to four.

In Year 3 the focus is on intensive study and independent learning. The special subject guides you through the primary and secondary material on a specific period or phenomenon; the dissertation allows you to choose your own topic, and devise your own question, for an extended piece of writing. The dissertation is an opportunity to focus on a topic that fascinates you – and brings together the skills you have developed through your time at Durham.

Throughout your degree, you will be encouraged to attend an extensive programme of activities, including research seminars and public lectures from high-profile guest speakers.

Course structure

Year 1

We have one core module in Year 1: Making History. But our students do not all study the same thing on this module: we teach it through multiple strands. You will choose a ‘strand’, focused on a particular topic. With the other students on that strand you will meet regularly in a seminar group, following a course of reading and discussion that gives you a grounding in the key skills you will need at later stages of the course to interpret and explain historical information.

You will also take four optional modules in Year 1, choosing from a list of around a dozen.

Some recent examples of optional modules:

  • Decline and Crisis? Europe 1300–1500
  • Transformations in the Late Antique Mediterranean, c.300–c.700 CE
  • Connected Histories: Early Modern Europe, c.1450–1750
  • The Atlantic Archipelago, c.1500–c.1750
  • Modern Times: A Cultural History of Europe, c.1860–1960
  • Power in Africa
  • Imagining East Asia in the Modern World
  • Wars and Welfare: c. 1900–1945
  • The Rise and Fall of American Slavery, 1607–1865

Year 2

There is also a core module in Year 2: Conversations in History. As in Year 1, this is actually taught through multiple strands in seminar groups – so students do not all study the same thing. But whatever the focus of your strand, the core module will encourage you think about how history is written, and to identify and define your own questions. You will develop effective strategies for handling contrasting approaches as you plan and write an in-depth, independent project, and you will discuss and explain your ideas in a small-group context.

Again, you will take four optional modules in History in Year 2, choosing from a wide range.

Some recent examples of optional modules:

  • The Book of Hours in Medieval Life and Art
  • Medieval Islamic World
  • Inventing France, 1300–1500: Kings and Communities of the Realm
  • Law and Order in the Barbarian Kingdoms c.500–800 AD
  • The Court: Art and Power in Early Modern Europe
  • A ‘Pure’ Land? Gender, Caste and Community in South Asia, c.1750–1950
  • The “Vast” Early Modern Americas
  • Early Modern Hospitality in Global Comparative Perspective
  • Hard Times: British Society, 1815–1902

Year 3 (Year 4 if undertaking a placement or year abroad)

In your final year, you will choose your own dissertation topic, through consultation with a supervisor. The potential range of topics is very wide – in recent years, varying from representation of bandits in twentieth-century Hollywood films to ceremonial in medieval France. Guided by your supervisor, you will undertake independent research – and you will write your dissertation.

As a History student, you will also take a special subject, an entirely seminar-taught intensive course; and you will choose one other module.

Examples of recent special subjects and optional modules:

  • Developing Africa
  • Revolution and History
  • Liberty, Equality, Democracy: Progressive Thought in Nineteenth Century Britain
  • History and Its Audiences
  • Empires and States in Early Modern Asia: Nomads, Slaves, Scholars, Rulers
  • Health, Wealth, and Happiness: Investigating Standards of Living and Wellbeing in the Past
  • Beyond Feudalism

Additional pathways

Students on the BA in History 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.

Placement

You may be able to take a work placement. Find out more.

Learning

You will learn through a combination of lectures, seminars, and tutorials. Lectures are a big part of the programme in Year 1 and Year 2 – we use them to introduce broad historical questions and offer context and critical commentary. Seminars are small group sessions – 10-12 students, or 15 students for the special subject - in which we guide you in a critical discussion of readings and evidence. Tutorials are individual or very small group sessions where we offer you detailed advice or feedback on a specific piece of work.

Through the degree, you will progress from more general topics to specialised studies as you gain confidence and experience and develop as an independent, self-motivated learner. In each year you will be allocated an academic advisor to discuss module choices in line with your interests and aims

Assessment

The Durham degree involves coursework and examinations. In each year of the course, you will have to do some of both – though coursework is the larger part of the assessment. There is also an assessed spoken presentation in the second year, because we think it is important that we develop and test your skills in talking to an audience.

Entry requirements

A level offer - A*AA including History.

Contextual offer – AAB including History.

Cambridge Pre-U - D2D3D3 including History.

BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma/OCR Cambridge Technical Extended Diploma – D*DD and History A level at grade A (or equivalent) is required.

IB Diploma score - 38 with 666 at Higher Level including History.

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

  • We also consider other level 3 qualifications, including T-levels.

  • Ancient History’ is not accepted in lieu of ‘History’. 
  • 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.
  • Applications for deferred entry may be considered in special circumstances. Please contact us using durham.ac.uk/study/askus/ 
  • We welcome applicants who have taken Global and Independent Research Cambridge Pre-U and Extended Project Qualification. These qualifications, however, do not form part of our offer. 
  • 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.

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

Full Time Fees

Tuition fees
Home students £9,250 per year
EU students £27,500 per year
Island students £9,250 per year
International students £27,500 per year

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 and are 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;

  1. 6%, or,
  2. the latest annual percentage increase in the Consumer Prices Index.

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

History

Our aim is to make you better at thinking, speaking, and writing for yourself; and better at critically assessing the words that others speak and write. Thinking analytically, arguing clearly and concisely - these are fundamental skills in many jobs. Our graduates have gone on to find successful careers in a wide variety of fields. They work in teaching at schools and universities, in museums and galleries, in law, finance, banking and accountancy, the Civil Service, the charity sector, media, journalism, and the military and further study.

Of those students who graduated in 2020-21:

  • 87% are in paid employment or further study 15 months after graduation across all our programmes

Of those in employment:

  • 85% are in high skilled employment
  • With an average salary of £28,000.

(Source: HESA Graduate Outcomes Survey. The survey asks leavers from higher education what they are doing 15 months after graduation. Further information about the Graduate Outcomes survey can be found here www.graduateoutcomes.ac.uk)

Department information

History

Why study history? Our answer to that is simple: because we are human, and we need to understand ourselves, and one another. History helps us to see other ways of thinking and living – and it offers us alternative perspectives on the present.

The History programme at Durham is designed to give you a sense of the diversity of human experience – geographically and chronologically. We offer an unusually broad range of options that will take you to very different places and times. You can also explore diverse themes and approaches, such as environmental and scientific history, visual cultures, and gender and sexuality. The course will equip you with critical and presentational skills that are valuable in many careers.

Year 1 offers you an induction into advanced historical study, engaging with different periods and approaches to the study of the past.

Year 2 raises new questions about the human past, setting these in specific periods and parts of the world. It develops your understanding of historiography - the history of history-writing – and gives you experience of writing an extended historical argument. You can also apply to add a placement year or a year abroad to your degree, increasing the course from three years to four.

In Year 3 the focus is on intensive study and independent learning. The special subject guides you through the primary and secondary material on a specific period or phenomenon; the dissertation allows you to choose your own topic, and devise your own question, for an extended piece of writing. The dissertation is an opportunity to focus on a topic that fascinates you – and brings together the skills you have developed through your time at Durham.

Throughout your degree, you will be encouraged to attend an extensive programme of activities, including research seminars and public lectures from high-profile guest speakers.

For more information see our department pages.

Ranking

  • Top 50 in the world in the QS World University Subject Rankings 2023
  • Top 5  in The Guardian University Guide 2024
  • Top 5 in The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024
  • Top 5 in The Complete University Guide 2024

Staff

For a current list of staff, please see the History Department web pages.

Facilities

The Department of History occupies the heart of Durham World Heritage Site. Our location is within easy reach of all University colleges, lecture halls and libraries.

Our work incorporates everything from manuscripts to photography, printed sources to museum collections. You will work with staff on a rich array of primary sources, which range from medieval manuscripts in the cathedral archive, through the ceramics, prints and textiles held by the Oriental Museum, to the documents of the Sudan Archive, and more. Durham holds historical resources of international significance.

Apply

Find out more:

Use the UCAS code below when applying:

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V100

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  • Time: 09:00 - 16:00
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