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Visual and Material Culture of Ancient Greece MA
Visual and Material Culture of Ancient Greece MA
P-V303
MA
1 year full-time;
2 years part-time
29 September 2025
Classics and Ancient History
University of Warwick
Warwick's Classics and Ancient History Department have expertly designed this MA to focus on the history and material culture of Ancient Greece. With one module taught by the British School at Athens, you will go to Athens or Crete in the late spring/early summer.
Our Visual and Material Culture of Ancient Greece MA course provides a thorough preparation in research techniques if you are considering further research in the fields of art, numismatics or epigraphy, or are working on an historical topic that involves the consideration of material evidence. It will also provide a detailed understanding of ancient visual and material culture to prepare you if you are aiming to enter a career in museums and curatorial work, or in education.
For the Visual and Material Culture of Ancient Greece course, one module is taught by the British School, Athens. It focuses on a different skill set for handling Ancient Greek material culture from year to year. Please note admission is subject to the discretion of the British Schools and cannot be guaranteed by Warwick.
The degree is designed to introduce you to major issues in the study of ancient material culture, and to key methodologies and approaches. It will help to develop your intellectual skills in the following areas:
It will also help to develop the following key transferable skills:
There are 10, two-hour seminars held weekly or fortnightly in terms one and/or two and assessed by a 5,000 word essay on a topic of your choice, decided upon negotiation with a member of academic staff.
Seminars will comprise student-led presentations and discussion centred around pre-allocated reading and questions; others will take place in museums.
The BSA course is taught via site and museum visits and lectures, with students carrying out independent research in the BSA library.
Teaching methods used for language modules vary depending on the level, but run across all three terms.
The classes of the taught modules comprise 2-10 students and up to 15-20 for Language classes. This size allows teaching to be tailored according to the students’ interests.
For this course, the contact hours are six hours per week.
This includes face-to-face guidance to direct you to identify your research topic and do your research. Additional hours are provided during the time in Greece.
Most modules (apart from language modules) are assessed by a 5,000-word essay on a topic of your choice, decided upon by negotiation with a member of academic staff. The dissertation will be a piece of work 15,000-20,000 words and built on the research carried out whilst on the programme.
If you would like to view reading lists for current or previous cohorts of students, most departments have reading lists available through Warwick Library on the Talis Aspire platformLink opens in a new window.
You can search for reading lists by module title, code or convenor. Please see the modules tab of this page or the module catalogueLink opens in a new window.
Please note that some reading lists may have restricted access or be unavailable at certain times of year due to not yet being published. If you cannot access the reading list for a particular module, please check again later or contact the module’s host department.
Your personalised timetable will be complete when you are registered for all modules, compulsory and optional, and you have been allocated to your lectures, seminars and other small group classes. Your compulsory modules will be registered for you and you will be able to choose your optional modules when you join us.
Applicants will need to have achieved or be expecting to achieve a firm 2:1 undergraduate degree in Classics/Ancient History/Archaeology or a relevant subject to be considered for entry.
There are no additional entry requirements for this course.
You will also choose one of the following language modules:
Subject to demand, the options above usually run each year.
It is also possible to take an approved module from other Departments across the Faculty.
We have revised the information on this page since publication. See the edits we have made and content history.