

MA Classics/Geography
About this course
Classics and geography is a combination that might appear unlikely, but it reflects a genuinely productive intellectual relationship. Classics is concerned with the civilisations of ancient Greece and Rome, exploring their literature, history, art, material culture, and languages, and examining their profound and lasting influence on Western thought, law, politics, and culture. Geography, in its human and physical dimensions, is the study of places, environments, and the relationships between people and the world they inhabit. Together, the two disciplines develop historians of culture and analysts of space, asking how societies have shaped and been shaped by their physical and social environments across time. This four-year full-time programme at the University of Glasgow offers study in both Classics and Geography, with the possibility of studying Latin and Greek alongside the cultural and historical dimensions of the classical world. In geography you will engage with both human geography, exploring cities, populations, political economies, and cultures, and physical geography, covering landscape, climate, and environmental systems. A year abroad is incorporated into the programme, giving you an international academic experience that complements both disciplines. With a typical entry tariff of 200 points, this is a highly competitive programme suited to students with strong intellectual ambition across both subject areas. Graduates from classics and geography combinations bring an unusual set of analytical, research, and writing skills to the job market. The historical and cultural depth of classics, combined with the analytical frameworks of geography, produces graduates who are skilled at understanding complex human and physical systems in context. Career routes include heritage and museums work, public history and archaeology, urban planning and policy, environmental consultancy, international development, journalism, education, and the civil service. The combination of rigorous primary source engagement and spatial analysis is particularly valued in roles that require cultural intelligence alongside analytical breadth. Postgraduate study in either discipline, or in areas such as cultural geography, urban studies, or classical archaeology, is a natural progression.
Syllabus & Modules
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