Bachelor of Arts (BA)

BA Archaeology

Study with researchers of international calibre on archaeological projects spanning the globe.

  • Duration: 3 years
  • Year of entry: 2025
  • UCAS course code: V400 / Institution code: M20

Full entry requirementsHow to apply

Course description

History always interested me, but I found reading books about it a bit dull.

When I realised you could touch, interact and discover history, I instantly fell in love with Archaeology; that alongside the excellent staff really makes this course at Manchester stand out!

Jason Walton / Archaeology undergraduate

Archaeology lets you explore past humanity. It spans from prehistoric times to industrialization and globalization. And, it lets you consider key challenges of modern society. These include climate change, new technology's impact, and subtle understandings of gender, culture, and conflict.

We study past people through science. We analyze artefacts, texts, inscriptions, architecture, human remains, and landscapes. In the course, you will cover Egypt, the Near East, the Mediterranean, the British Isles, and North-West Europe.

You will work in the department of Classics, Ancient History, Archaeology and Egyptology (CAHAE). You will have a great chance to use staff expertise in material culture, ancient history, language, and literature. Staff are also experts in the fields on the subjects of social complexity, ancient writing, belief systems, and funerary rites.

You'll explore artefacts, buildings, and old texts. You'll handle our object collections in our labs and get exclusive access to the archives and experts of the Manchester Museum. You'll also go on trips to amazing sites.

Fieldwork training is integral to all our courses: you will have the opportunity to dig for at least four weeks, with your first two weeks in year one, followed by a further two weeks in year two.

Our past students have worked on sites of global importance, such as Stonehenge, Star Carr, and Easter Island. They have uncovered everything from the first British Mesolithic art to a Viking boat burial in Scotland.

Use our dedicated collections, labs, study spaces, and libraries to pursue your interests. Our award-winning teachers and top researchers will support you. You'll join our community, which is passionate about understanding the ancient world.

Special features

Experience digs in the UK and abroad

Fieldwork training is a key part of our degree. You'll be introduced to excavation by experienced archaeologists.

Placement year option

Use your subject-specific knowledge in the real world. Do this through a placement year in your third year of study. It will help you improve your job prospects, clarify your career goals, and build your external networks.

Study abroad

You may apply to spend one semester studying abroad during Year 2. You'll have the opportunity to join research teams and help make discoveries that shape our knowledge of the world.

Destination-specific specialisms could support research on Inuit material culture, Australian rock art, or Scandinavian hoards, enriching your final year dissertation.

Explore in-depth collections on campus

Use our well-equipped labs to study artefacts, architecture, and ancient texts and beliefs. We also have our own teaching collections. Plus, we have access to the exclusive archives and curators at Manchester Museum .

Outreach and engagement

You'll also have the opportunity to share your passion for archaeology through community and public engagement projects.

Teaching and learning

You will be taught by world-class researchers with archaeological specialisms in identity, landscapes, monuments, material culture and social complexity.

As an archaeology student you'll benefit from a breadth of teaching methods designed to develop your transferable skills, including:

  • tutorials;
  • seminars;
  • laboratory sessions;
  • lectures;
  • fieldwork;
  • group exercises;
  • presentations;
  • reports;
  • one to one academic support sessions;
  • original research guided by academic tutors.

Subsidised fieldwork includes one-day site visits as well as extensive periods of excavation in locations such as Herefordshire, Yorkshire and Scotland. You'll also be trained in our archaeological labs and museum archives to use a wide range of equipment to analyse and record objects. You can access training in digital illustration and GIS packages to support this activity and loan landscape survey and geophysics equipment for fieldwork.

Coursework and assessment

Assessment methods may include:
  • written examinations;
  • coursework essays;
  • research reports;
  • practical tests;
  • fieldwork workbooks;
  • individual projects;
  • oral presentations;
  • third year dissertation;
  • digital posters;
  • audio performances.

In addition, archaeology field training involves a variety of assessment over a range of skills and techniques.

Course content for year 1

Gain a broad-based understanding of archaeological history and the methods and theories involved in the interpretation of past societies. 

Discover the process of archaeological fieldwork and the principles of excavation through lab-based study, artefact handling sessions, and hands-on field trips. 

Explore additional units in archaeology from both Britain and the wider world.

Course units for year 1

The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

TitleCodeCredit ratingMandatory/optional
Discoveries and Discoverers: Sights and Sites CAHE10281 20 Mandatory
Doing Archaeology 1 CAHE10502 20 Mandatory
Constructing Archaic Greek History CAHE10011 20 Optional
From Republic to Empire: Introduction to Roman History, Society & Culture 218-31BC CAHE10022 20 Optional
The Story of Britain: one million years of humanity CAHE10142 20 Optional
Cities and Citizens CAHE10232 20 Optional
Introduction to the History and Culture of Pharaonic Egypt CAHE10651 20 Optional
Introduction to Egyptian Hieroglyphs  CAHE20162 20 Optional
Standing on The Shoulders of Giants: Foundations for Study in The Arts SALC10002 20 Optional
Ice Age to Baroque: Artworks in History SALC10041 20 Optional
Climate change and societal response: Lessons from the past SALC11011 20 Optional
Displaying 10 of 11 course units for year 1

Course content for year 2

Explore the emergence of archaeology from antiquarianism, and the 'big ideas' from philosophy and theory - power and ideology, phenomenology and materialism - that help analyse past societies.

Acquire the skills to frame your research questions, collect and analyse data, and present your results. Use this knowledge to develop a research topic of your own choice, which can include discoveries from your fieldwork.

Begin to explore period and thematic specialisms through a wide breadth of optional course units which cover huge expanses of time and space. From the prehistoric origins of farming and monuments in the Neolithic and the beginnings of civilizations in the Near East, to the classical Mediterranean world, Ancient Egypt, or mortuary archaeology through time, our specialist courses offer an amazing opportunity to pursue the topics that inspire you.

Course units for year 2

The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

TitleCodeCredit ratingMandatory/optional
Thinking Archaeology CAHE20112 20 Mandatory
Artefacts and Interpretation CAHE20362 20 Mandatory
Doing Archaeology 2 CAHE20501 20 Mandatory
Data Literacy in a Digital World SALC20081 20 Mandatory
The World of Late Antiquity: Europe and the Med from the Severan Dynasty to the Rise of Islam CAHE20022 20 Optional
The Conquering Hero: The Life, Times and Legacy of Alexander The Great CAHE20042 20 Optional
The Roman Empire 31BC - AD313 Rome's Golden Age CAHE20052 20 Optional
Politics and Society in Classical Greece CAHE20061 20 Optional
Social Life in Ancient Egypt CAHE20072 20 Optional
Ancient Egyptian Literature CAHE20091 20 Optional
From Cloud Cuckoo Land to Atlantis: Utopian thinking in the Ancient World CAHE20141 20 Optional
Introduction to Egyptian Hieroglyphs  CAHE20162 20 Optional
The Emergence of Civilisation: Palaces, Peak Sanctuaries, and Politics in Minoan Crete CAHE20332 20 Optional
Roman Women in 22 Objects CAHE20531 20 Optional
Athens and Attica CAHE20632 20 Optional
Dealing with the Dead: The Archaeology of Death and Burial CAHE20721 20 Optional
National Identity and the Roman Past CAHE23022 20 Optional
Men, Beasts and Marvels: the Limits of Nature in Classical Antiquity  CAHE23361 20 Optional
Displaying 10 of 18 course units for year 2

Course content for year 3

Gain an understanding of the power of the past and the importance of heritage in the modern world, addressing the issues faced by archaeologists. You also will enhance your skills in artefact analysis, learning methods of recording and interpretation of materials that will let you understand the past in greater depth.

Continue to develop your own expertise through a range of optional course units and complete a dissertation based on your own independent research.

Course units for year 3

The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

TitleCodeCredit ratingMandatory/optional
Classics, Ancient History, Archaeology and Egyptology Dissertation CAHE30000 40 Mandatory
Artefacts and Interpretation CAHE30362 20 Mandatory
Introduction to Egyptian Hieroglyphs  CAHE20162 20 Optional
The World of Late Antiquity: Europe and the Med from the Severan Dynasty to the Rise of Islam CAHE30022 20 Optional
Social Life in Ancient Egypt CAHE30072 20 Optional
Ancient Egyptian Literature CAHE30091 20 Optional
From Cloud Cuckoo Land to Atlantis: Utopian thinking in the Ancient World CAHE30141 20 Optional
The Emergence of Civilisation: Palaces, Peak Sanctuaries, and Politics in Minoan Crete CAHE30332 20 Optional
Athens and Attica CAHE30632 20 Optional
Dealing with the Dead: The Archaeology of Death and Burial CAHE30721 20 Optional
The Roman Army and the North-West Frontiers CAHE30881 20 Optional
National Identity and the Roman Past CAHE33022 20 Optional
Men, Beasts and Marvels: the Limits of Nature in Classical Antiquity  CAHE33361 20 Optional
Displaying 10 of 13 course units for year 3

Facilities

Manchester Museum

Manchester Museum is home to important prehistoric, classical and ethnographic collections. You'll go behind the scenes to handle, analyse, and explain rare artefacts. They include one of the finest Egyptology collections in Britain.

Our ongoing collaboration is between the museum and the global archaeology staff. It offers unique chances for students to help design major exhibitions.

Whitworth Art Gallery

The Whitworth Art Gallery holds important archaeological textile collections. It also has art and sculpture on themes such as landscape. These are part of its broader, internationally significant collections.

The Granada Centre for Visual Anthropology

The Granada Centre for Visual Anthropology has a film library. It has approximately 1,500 titles. The films range from classic ethnographic to contemporary documentary and world cinema.

Archaeological laboratories

You'll learn in our archaeological labs. You'll use microscopes, digital cameras, delicate measuring tools, and portable XRF to analyse and record objects. You can also access training in digital illustration and GIS packages to support this activity and loan landscape survey and geophysics equipment for fieldwork. A dedicated technician supports our labs. They can offer training and help.

Field survey equipment

Equipment to support your studies includes three total stations and a traverse kit. Also, a sub metre GPS survey system, a drone, and pro photography gear. Several of our lab-based resources can also be used in the field, including our PXRF instrument, ProScope and 3D scanner.

Disability support

Practical support and advice for current students and applicants from the Disability Support Office. Email: disability@manchester.ac.uk