

MA Mathematics and Modern History
About this course
Combining mathematics and modern history might seem an unusual pairing, but the two subjects reward each other in ways that become clear as the degree unfolds. Mathematics trains you to think with precision, to identify patterns in complex systems, and to construct watertight arguments from evidence. Modern history trains you to interpret ambiguous sources, to understand contingency and causation, and to place events within their social and political contexts. Together they produce a graduate who can move fluently between quantitative and qualitative reasoning, a combination that is rarer and more valuable than either alone. At St Andrews, the mathematics strand introduces you to pure and applied mathematics, developing the tools to analyse complex structures and phenomena, whether drawn from physical, biological, or abstract mathematical domains. The emphasis is on understanding the processes at work, categorising them precisely, and building models that illuminate rather than merely describe. The modern history strand draws on St Andrews' strength in European, British, and world history, encouraging you to engage with primary sources, historiographical debates, and the ways that narrative and interpretation shape our understanding of the past. The programme runs over four years, including a year abroad, which deepens your historical and cultural awareness while extending your international networks. Graduates from this kind of combined degree are well positioned for careers that demand both analytical rigour and contextual judgement, including roles in data analysis, policy, finance, journalism, research, and the civil service. The capacity to think carefully about both numbers and narratives is particularly valued in organisations that need to make decisions under uncertainty. Postgraduate study in mathematics, history, economics, or data science are all natural onward routes.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 95 respondents (60% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →

