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University of Glasgow: Early Modern History
| Institution | University of Glasgow View institution profile |
|---|---|
| Department | College of Arts and Humanities |
| Web | glasgow.ac.uk |
| jochen.schenk@glasgow.ac.uk | |
| Study type | Taught |
MSc
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow offers exceptional resources for the historian, including our university museum, The Hunterian, Scotland’s oldest public museum with over a million items, and our library, one of Europe’s oldest and largest university libraries, with extensive collections from the medieval to the present.
-
The Hunterian provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography, while the library offers collections like the Baillie Collection, which contains printed medieval and modern sources on Scottish, Irish, and English history.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world-class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research-led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
You will take:
One core course Five optional courses. These should be split over the two semesters with two taken in one of the semesters and three taken in the other. With the permission of the programme convenor and subject to availability, the options taken may include courses from other subjects.
You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1 Core course
- Doing History: Sources and Skills for Historians
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
The Global History of Inequalities
-
The Medievalists: the Middle Ages in 20th century Eastern and Central Europe
Semester 2
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
Military Scotland in the Age of Proto-globalization, c.1600-c.1800
-
Medieval Palaeography: An Introduction to Reading Medieval Documents
Other courses offered by History and available to you include: - Issues, Ideologies And Institutions Of Modern Scotland
-
Gender, Politics And Power
-
Gender, Culture and Text
-
Making a Living: Work, Gender and Society 1700-1850
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff availability. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer Dissertation (MSc History)
CAREER PROSPECTS
The research skills and methods you’ll gain on this programme give you the transferable skills you need for positions in the public and private sectors, including heritage policy and projects, media and teaching. The programme is also a good foundation for a PhD.
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | 2.1 Hons (or non-UK equivalent) in History or Politics or International Relations or Archaeology or Archives/Library Studies. We may also accept degrees in other subjects. Work experience may be considered in lieu of qualifications. A personal statement containing a short (one paragraph) statement of interest in this programme should be submitted with your application. International students with academic qualifications below those required should contact our partner institution, Glasgow International College, who offer a range of pre-Masters courses. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow offers exceptional resources for the historian, including our university museum, The Hunterian, Scotland’s oldest public museum with over a million items, and our library, one of Europe’s oldest and largest university libraries, with extensive collections from the medieval to the present.
-
The Hunterian provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography, while the library offers collections like the Baillie Collection, which contains printed medieval and modern sources on Scottish, Irish, and English history.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world-class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research-led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
You will take:
One core course Five optional courses. These should be split over the two semesters with two taken in one of the semesters and three taken in the other. With the permission of the programme convenor and subject to availability, the options taken may include courses from other subjects.
You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1 Core course
- Doing History: Sources and Skills for Historians
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
The Global History of Inequalities
-
The Medievalists: the Middle Ages in 20th century Eastern and Central Europe
Semester 2
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
Military Scotland in the Age of Proto-globalization, c.1600-c.1800
-
Medieval Palaeography: An Introduction to Reading Medieval Documents
Other courses offered by History and available to you include: - Issues, Ideologies And Institutions Of Modern Scotland
-
Gender, Politics And Power
-
Gender, Culture and Text
-
Making a Living: Work, Gender and Society 1700-1850
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff availability. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer Dissertation (MSc History)
CAREER PROSPECTS
The research skills and methods you’ll gain on this programme give you the transferable skills you need for positions in the public and private sectors, including heritage policy and projects, media and teaching. The programme is also a good foundation for a PhD.
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | 2.1 Hons (or non-UK equivalent) in History or Politics or International Relations or Archaeology or Archives/Library Studies. We may also accept degrees in other subjects. Work experience may be considered in lieu of qualifications. A personal statement containing a short (one paragraph) statement of interest in this programme should be submitted with your application. International students with academic qualifications below those required should contact our partner institution, Glasgow International College, who offer a range of pre-Masters courses. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow is an outstanding resource hub for the study of Early Modern History. On campus, the university library holds superb printed and manuscript collections from the medieval to the present. You can also use the Baillie Collection of printed medieval and modern sources in Scottish, Irish and English history. The University’s Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
-You will take:
One core course Five optional courses (these courses may include languages offered by other subjects, and (with the permission of the programme convenor) courses offered by other subjects.) You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1: September to December
Core course
DOING HISTORY: SOURCES AND SKILLS FOR HISTORIANS Two or three optional courses (which can include, but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
HERETICS AND INQUISITORS IN EUROPE,800-1600 MEDIEVAL PALAEOGRAPHY: AN INTRODUCTION TO READING MEDIEVAL DOCUMENTS
Semester 2: January to March
Two or three optional courses (which can include but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
MILITARY SCOTLAND IN THE AGE OF PROTO-GLOBALIZATION, C.1600-C.1800 WORKING WITH MANUSCRIPTS AS HISTORIANS THE LIFE AND AFTERLIFE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
Other courses offered by History and available to you in include:
CULTURE, POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN THE HIGHLAND CLEARANCES ISSUES, IDEOLOGIES AND INSTITUTIONS OF MODERN SCOTLAND APPROACHES TO HISTORY (FOR POSTGRADUATES) GENDER, POLITICS AND POWER GENDER, CULTURE AND TEXT THE UNITED STATES SINCE 1945 THE GLOBAL HISTORY OF INEQUALITIES
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff leave. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer: April to September DISSERTATION (MSC HISTORY)
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | Entry requirements for postgraduate taught programmes are a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise specified. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow is an outstanding resource hub for the study of Early Modern History. On campus, the university library holds superb printed and manuscript collections from the medieval to the present. You can also use the Baillie Collection of printed medieval and modern sources in Scottish, Irish and English history. The University’s Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
-You will take:
One core course Five optional courses (these courses may include languages offered by other subjects, and (with the permission of the programme convenor) courses offered by other subjects.) You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1: September to December
Core course
DOING HISTORY: SOURCES AND SKILLS FOR HISTORIANS Two or three optional courses (which can include, but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
HERETICS AND INQUISITORS IN EUROPE,800-1600 MEDIEVAL PALAEOGRAPHY: AN INTRODUCTION TO READING MEDIEVAL DOCUMENTS
Semester 2: January to March
Two or three optional courses (which can include but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
MILITARY SCOTLAND IN THE AGE OF PROTO-GLOBALIZATION, C.1600-C.1800 WORKING WITH MANUSCRIPTS AS HISTORIANS THE LIFE AND AFTERLIFE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
Other courses offered by History and available to you in include:
CULTURE, POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN THE HIGHLAND CLEARANCES ISSUES, IDEOLOGIES AND INSTITUTIONS OF MODERN SCOTLAND APPROACHES TO HISTORY (FOR POSTGRADUATES) GENDER, POLITICS AND POWER GENDER, CULTURE AND TEXT THE UNITED STATES SINCE 1945 THE GLOBAL HISTORY OF INEQUALITIES
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff leave. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer: April to September DISSERTATION (MSC HISTORY)
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | Entry requirements for postgraduate taught programmes are a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise specified. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Postgraduate Diploma - PgDip
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow offers exceptional resources for the historian, including our university museum, The Hunterian, Scotland’s oldest public museum with over a million items, and our library, one of Europe’s oldest and largest university libraries, with extensive collections from the medieval to the present.
-
The Hunterian provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography, while the library offers collections like the Baillie Collection, which contains printed medieval and modern sources on Scottish, Irish, and English history.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world-class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research-led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
You will take:
One core course Five optional courses. These should be split over the two semesters with two taken in one of the semesters and three taken in the other. With the permission of the programme convenor and subject to availability, the options taken may include courses from other subjects.
You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1 Core course
- Doing History: Sources and Skills for Historians
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
The Global History of Inequalities
-
The Medievalists: the Middle Ages in 20th century Eastern and Central Europe
Semester 2
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
Military Scotland in the Age of Proto-globalization, c.1600-c.1800
-
Medieval Palaeography: An Introduction to Reading Medieval Documents
Other courses offered by History and available to you include: - Issues, Ideologies And Institutions Of Modern Scotland
-
Gender, Politics And Power
-
Gender, Culture and Text
-
Making a Living: Work, Gender and Society 1700-1850
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff availability. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer Dissertation (MSc History)
CAREER PROSPECTS
The research skills and methods you’ll gain on this programme give you the transferable skills you need for positions in the public and private sectors, including heritage policy and projects, media and teaching. The programme is also a good foundation for a PhD.
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | 2.1 Hons (or non-UK equivalent) in History or Politics or International Relations or Archaeology or Archives/Library Studies. We may also accept degrees in other subjects. Work experience may be considered in lieu of qualifications. A personal statement containing a short (one paragraph) statement of interest in this programme should be submitted with your application. International students with academic qualifications below those required should contact our partner institution, Glasgow International College, who offer a range of pre-Masters courses. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow offers exceptional resources for the historian, including our university museum, The Hunterian, Scotland’s oldest public museum with over a million items, and our library, one of Europe’s oldest and largest university libraries, with extensive collections from the medieval to the present.
-
The Hunterian provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography, while the library offers collections like the Baillie Collection, which contains printed medieval and modern sources on Scottish, Irish, and English history.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world-class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research-led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
You will take:
One core course Five optional courses. These should be split over the two semesters with two taken in one of the semesters and three taken in the other. With the permission of the programme convenor and subject to availability, the options taken may include courses from other subjects.
You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1 Core course
- Doing History: Sources and Skills for Historians
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
The Global History of Inequalities
-
The Medievalists: the Middle Ages in 20th century Eastern and Central Europe
Semester 2
Two or three optional courses (which can include but are not limited to Early Modern History). Early Modern History courses include:
-
Military Scotland in the Age of Proto-globalization, c.1600-c.1800
-
Medieval Palaeography: An Introduction to Reading Medieval Documents
Other courses offered by History and available to you include: - Issues, Ideologies And Institutions Of Modern Scotland
-
Gender, Politics And Power
-
Gender, Culture and Text
-
Making a Living: Work, Gender and Society 1700-1850
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff availability. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer Dissertation (MSc History)
CAREER PROSPECTS
The research skills and methods you’ll gain on this programme give you the transferable skills you need for positions in the public and private sectors, including heritage policy and projects, media and teaching. The programme is also a good foundation for a PhD.
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | 2.1 Hons (or non-UK equivalent) in History or Politics or International Relations or Archaeology or Archives/Library Studies. We may also accept degrees in other subjects. Work experience may be considered in lieu of qualifications. A personal statement containing a short (one paragraph) statement of interest in this programme should be submitted with your application. International students with academic qualifications below those required should contact our partner institution, Glasgow International College, who offer a range of pre-Masters courses. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow is an outstanding resource hub for the study of Early Modern History. On campus, the university library holds superb printed and manuscript collections from the medieval to the present. You can also use the Baillie Collection of printed medieval and modern sources in Scottish, Irish and English history. The University’s Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
-You will take:
One core course Five optional courses (these courses may include languages offered by other subjects, and (with the permission of the programme convenor) courses offered by other subjects.) You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1: September to December
Core course
DOING HISTORY: SOURCES AND SKILLS FOR HISTORIANS Two or three optional courses (which can include, but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
HERETICS AND INQUISITORS IN EUROPE,800-1600 MEDIEVAL PALAEOGRAPHY: AN INTRODUCTION TO READING MEDIEVAL DOCUMENTS
Semester 2: January to March
Two or three optional courses (which can include but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
MILITARY SCOTLAND IN THE AGE OF PROTO-GLOBALIZATION, C.1600-C.1800 WORKING WITH MANUSCRIPTS AS HISTORIANS THE LIFE AND AFTERLIFE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
Other courses offered by History and available to you in include:
CULTURE, POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN THE HIGHLAND CLEARANCES ISSUES, IDEOLOGIES AND INSTITUTIONS OF MODERN SCOTLAND APPROACHES TO HISTORY (FOR POSTGRADUATES) GENDER, POLITICS AND POWER GENDER, CULTURE AND TEXT THE UNITED STATES SINCE 1945 THE GLOBAL HISTORY OF INEQUALITIES
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff leave. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer: April to September DISSERTATION (MSC HISTORY)
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | Entry requirements for postgraduate taught programmes are a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise specified. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
Summary
This Masters focuses on the late 15th to 18th centuries, providing opportunities to explore social, political, religious and cultural historical themes across wide geographic and chronological ranges in a university with extensive library, museum and archive collections for this period. Experts in Early Modern Scotland, England, Europe, Africa, and the Americas contribute to our teaching. You will take a core course in Research, Resources and Skills alongside other History students and five optional courses.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
-
Glasgow is an outstanding resource hub for the study of Early Modern History. On campus, the university library holds superb printed and manuscript collections from the medieval to the present. You can also use the Baillie Collection of printed medieval and modern sources in Scottish, Irish and English history. The University’s Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery provides access to primary source materials in fields such as fine art, numismatics and ethnography.
-
Members of staff teaching on this programme have close links with the city’s world class museums.
-
Early Modern History at Glasgow is a dynamic and supportive research community with an increasingly global perspective, where you’re encouraged to take part in many research led initiatives such as seminar programmes, reading and research groups.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
-You will take:
One core course Five optional courses (these courses may include languages offered by other subjects, and (with the permission of the programme convenor) courses offered by other subjects.) You will also produce a dissertation.
Semester 1: September to December
Core course
DOING HISTORY: SOURCES AND SKILLS FOR HISTORIANS Two or three optional courses (which can include, but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
HERETICS AND INQUISITORS IN EUROPE,800-1600 MEDIEVAL PALAEOGRAPHY: AN INTRODUCTION TO READING MEDIEVAL DOCUMENTS
Semester 2: January to March
Two or three optional courses (which can include but which are not limited to Early Modern History).
Early Modern courses running in session 2021-22 within History this semester are:
MILITARY SCOTLAND IN THE AGE OF PROTO-GLOBALIZATION, C.1600-C.1800 WORKING WITH MANUSCRIPTS AS HISTORIANS THE LIFE AND AFTERLIFE OF MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS
Other courses offered by History and available to you in include:
CULTURE, POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN THE HIGHLAND CLEARANCES ISSUES, IDEOLOGIES AND INSTITUTIONS OF MODERN SCOTLAND APPROACHES TO HISTORY (FOR POSTGRADUATES) GENDER, POLITICS AND POWER GENDER, CULTURE AND TEXT THE UNITED STATES SINCE 1945 THE GLOBAL HISTORY OF INEQUALITIES
Please note the availability of a particular course depends on student numbers and patterns of staff leave. Not all courses will be available every year.
Summer: April to September DISSERTATION (MSC HISTORY)
| Level | SCQF Level 11 |
|---|---|
| Entry requirements | Entry requirements for postgraduate taught programmes are a 2.1 Honours degree or equivalent qualification (for example, GPA 3.0 or above) in a relevant subject unless otherwise specified. |
| Location | Gilmorehill (Main) Campus University Of Glasgow University Avenue Glasgow G12 8QQ |
The University of Glasgow is one of the UK’s most prestigious seats of learning, and the fourth oldest university in the English speaking world. Established in 1451 and recognised for its world-changing research and teaching, our people have always been at the forefront of innovation, including eight Nobel Laureates, two UK Prime Ministers, three First Ministers of Scotland, 10 Fellows of the Royal Society and 11 Fellows of the British Academy. Our past achievements inspire our current world changers.
Rankings
The University:
- is ranked 79th in the world: QS World University Rankings 2025
- is …
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