

LLB Law and Celtic
About this course
Law and Celtic is an unusual and intellectually rewarding combination that brings together professional legal training with the study of Celtic languages, literatures, and cultures, a field that encompasses Welsh, Scottish Gaelic, Irish, Breton, and the broader heritage of Celtic-speaking peoples. Law provides a rigorous analytical framework, teaching you to interpret texts precisely, construct arguments from evidence, and understand how rules and institutions govern social life. Celtic Studies opens a window onto some of Europe's oldest living literary traditions and raises searching questions about language preservation, cultural identity, and the relationship between minority nations and the states that contain them. At the University of Edinburgh, this four-year full-time programme allows you to pursue both disciplines to a high level. Your legal studies will cover the foundations of Scots law and comparative perspectives, including constitutional law, contract, delict, criminal law, and public law, with the analytical depth expected of those who may go on to legal practice or postgraduate legal study. Celtic Studies at Edinburgh is taught by specialists in Welsh, Scottish Gaelic, and related traditions, and you will engage with medieval and modern texts, historical linguistics, and the cultural and political contexts in which Celtic languages have survived and evolved. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study in a Celtic-speaking country or another partner institution, which is particularly valuable for language immersion and for understanding Celtic cultures from within their own settings. The year abroad also brings an international dimension to your legal thinking, exposing you to different legal systems and strengthening your ability to work across cultural and linguistic boundaries. Graduates from this combination are well suited to careers in law, public policy, heritage, language planning, broadcasting in minority language contexts, academia, and cultural organisations. Many proceed to postgraduate legal qualifications or to research in law, Celtic studies, or sociolinguistics.
Syllabus & Modules
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