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BA Archaeology and Theology
About this course
Archaeology and theology is a degree that brings together two disciplines with deep and natural connections. Both are fundamentally concerned with understanding the past and making sense of what earlier human communities believed, practised, and left behind. Archaeology recovers the physical traces of human activity through excavation, survey, and analysis of material culture, while theology examines the intellectual, spiritual, and textual traditions through which communities of belief have understood themselves and the world. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, this BA Archaeology and Theology is available in flexible modes of study, making it accessible to students who cannot commit to a full-time schedule. The archaeology strand develops your ability to work with material evidence rigorously, learning the methods of fieldwork, artefact analysis, and spatial reasoning that archaeological investigation requires. The archaeology of religious sites, sacred objects, and burial practices is an area where the two disciplines connect most directly, and you will engage with how material culture illuminates belief and ritual practice in ways that written texts alone cannot. The theology strand introduces you to the intellectual traditions of religious thought, biblical studies, the history of Christian theology, and comparative approaches to religious texts and practice. The Highlands and Islands context is particularly rich for both subjects: the region has a remarkable archaeological heritage, from Pictish monuments to Viking settlements to early Christian sites, and a strong tradition of Gaelic Christianity and religious culture that gives the combination a distinctive regional grounding. Graduates of archaeology and theology programmes move into careers in heritage management, museums and galleries, archaeology in the field and in local government, religious organisations, education, chaplaincy, community and social work, and public administration. The research skills, critical thinking, and capacity for deep contextual understanding that both subjects develop are applicable across a wide range of professional contexts. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in archaeology, theology, religious studies, or heritage management. The flexible mode of study makes the programme accessible to mature students and those balancing study with employment or other responsibilities.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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