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Classics & Ancient History PhD

Durham university, different course options.

  • Key information

Course Summary

Tuition fees, entry requirements, similar courses at different universities, key information data source : idp connect, qualification type.

PhD/DPhil - Doctor of Philosophy

Subject areas

Ancient History Classics

Course type

Classics and Ancient History at Durham University belongs to the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and is one of the most vibrant Classics departments in the UK. Our academic staff specialise in a wide range of artistic, historical, literary, linguistic, cultural and philosophical aspects of the Graeco-Roman world. If you intend to study for the PhD and do not already hold a Master's degree (or equivalent), you will normally be required to register for one of our taught MA programmes, which are designed to function as research training degrees, and offer the best possible introduction to higher research in the Classics, and the research culture of our Department in particular. Classics students from universities such as Durham are highly valued by employers, who realise that, in studying for your degree, you have not only mastered the intricacies of Latin grammar, Augustan foreign policy or Aristotelian metaphysics, but have also acquired skills which are readily transferable in the jobs market. You have learned, for example, to think logically, to compile and evaluate evidence and to express yourself clearly and succinctly both orally and in writing. The aptitude of classicists for careers in computing is well-known, but our graduates have also found their way into careers as diverse as the civil service, gold dealing, insurance, journalism, law, accountancy, public relations and the theatre.

UK fees Course fees for UK students

To be confirmed

International fees Course fees for EU and international students

For this course (per year)

The standard minimum entry requirements to study a postgraduate programme at Durham University are normally: Achievement of an upper second class honours degree (2:1) from a UK university or an equivalent degree qualification from an overseas university.

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durham university phd classics

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durham university phd classics

Classics and Ancient History

Classics and Ancient History research degrees

We encourage applications from those who seek to develop a distinctive Masters or Doctoral Thesis on any aspect of Classics and Ancient History. As a centre of world-class research, we have a strong commitment to postgraduate provision, and welcome applications for MA and PhD work in any of the (many) research specialities we represent. With one of the largest permanent staff teams of any UK Classics department, we have an unusually wide range of expertise and scope for cross-disciplinary work.

Our research community is underpinned by our:

  • Weekly Research Seminar with distinguished visiting speakers
  • Weekly Work-in-Progress Seminar
  • Annual Departmental Research Project, which explores particular areas of overlapping interest among staff and postgraduate researchers in the Department through international-level conferences, seminars and publications.

We also are home to three Research Centres:

  • Centre for the Study of the Ancient Mediterranean and the Near East
  • Durham Centre for Classical Reception
  • Durham Centre for Ancient and Medieval Philosophy.

MA by Thesis in Classics and Ancient History

The MA by Thesis requires the completion of a mid-sized research project (50,000 words) on a well-shaped topic, with close personal supervision. This does not offer you the opportunity to take MA modules; hence, applicants may also wish to consider the various taught MA courses we offer.

Course length 1 year full-time. 2 years part-time.

PhD in Classics and Ancient History

Our principal research degree. The highest level in the subject, producing an extended thesis (up to 100,000 words) aiming to provide a lasting contribution to the field. You will have a supervisory team of two staff with most students working very closely with a principal supervisor. When applying, please use our Departmental web page to identify and contact the person you think may be best suited as your principal supervisor.

Course length 3 years full-time. 6 years part-time.

See all country specific qualifications

I’ve presented in various conferences and workshops, and gained a highly valuable experience in presenting the results of my research. I also convened two interdisciplinary workshops and coorganised a conference on Roman literature. Simona Martorana

durham university phd classics

Durham University and Durham University logo are registered Trade Marks of the University of Durham™. Unless otherwise stated, all material in this prospectus is copyright of the University of Durham. 

The University makes every effort to ensure that the information contained here is accurate. The University prospectus is intended as a general guide to the University of Durham’s facilities and forms no part of any contract between you and the University. The prospectus is prepared in advance of the academic year to which it relates. 

Please note that the University’s website is the most up-to-date source of information and we strongly recommend that you always visit the website before making any commitments.

Please help us to improve our prospectus by leaving feedback. Responses are anonymous and will only be used to enhance our services.

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Classics & Ancient History PhD Durham University

Durham University

Course options

Qualification.

PhD/DPhil - Doctor of Philosophy

Durham University

  • TUITION FEES
  • ENTRY REQUIREMENT
  • UNIVERSITY INFO

Course summary

Classics and Ancient History at Durham University belongs to the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and is one of the most vibrant Classics departments in the UK. Our academic staff specialise in a wide range of artistic, historical, literary, linguistic, cultural and philosophical aspects of the Graeco-Roman world. If you intend to study for the PhD and do not already hold a Master's degree (or equivalent), you will normally be required to register for one of our taught MA programmes, which are designed to function as research training degrees, and offer the best possible introduction to higher research in the Classics, and the research culture of our Department in particular. Classics students from universities such as Durham are highly valued by employers, who realise that, in studying for your degree, you have not only mastered the intricacies of Latin grammar, Augustan foreign policy or Aristotelian metaphysics, but have also acquired skills which are readily transferable in the jobs market. You have learned, for example, to think logically, to compile and evaluate evidence and to express yourself clearly and succinctly both orally and in writing. The aptitude of classicists for careers in computing is well-known, but our graduates have also found their way into careers as diverse as the civil service, gold dealing, insurance, journalism, law, accountancy, public relations and the theatre.

Tuition fees

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£ 24,500 per year

Tuition fees shown are for indicative purposes and may vary. Please check with the institution for most up to date details.

University information

Durham University

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Durham University, The Palatine Centre, Stockton Road, Durham, Durham, DH1 3LE, England

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Classics & Ancient History PhD

Want to know what it's like to study this course at uni? We've got all the key info, from entry requirements to the modules on offer. If that all sounds good, why not check out reviews from real students or even book onto an upcoming open days ?

Different course options

PhD/DPhil - Doctor of Philosophy

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Entry requirements, tuition fees, latest reviews.

Classics and Ancient History at Durham University belongs to the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and is one of the most vibrant Classics departments in the UK. Our academic staff specialise in a wide range of artistic, historical, literary, linguistic, cultural and philosophical aspects of the Graeco-Roman world. If you intend to study for the PhD and do not already hold a Master's degree (or equivalent), you will normally be required to register for one of our taught MA programmes, which are designed to function as research training degrees, and offer the best possible introduction to higher research in the Classics, and the research culture of our Department in particular. Classics students from universities such as Durham are highly valued by employers, who realise that, in studying for your degree, you have not only mastered the intricacies of Latin grammar, Augustan foreign policy or Aristotelian metaphysics, but have also acquired skills which are readily transferable in the jobs market. You have learned, for example, to think logically, to compile and evaluate evidence and to express yourself clearly and succinctly both orally and in writing. The aptitude of classicists for careers in computing is well-known, but our graduates have also found their way into careers as diverse as the civil service, gold dealing, insurance, journalism, law, accountancy, public relations and the theatre.

What students say

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The standard minimum entry requirements to study a postgraduate programme at Durham University are normally: Achievement of an upper second class honours degree (2:1) from a UK university or an equivalent degree qualification from an overseas university.

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2020 Complete University Guide

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We have been ranked as the 3rd best Classics department in the UK.

We are delighted to announce that Durham Classics has been ranked as the 3rd best Classics department in the UK in the 2020 Complete University Guide. We placed 5th overall for student satisfaction and 2nd overall for research quality and for graduate prospects.

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Successes in 2023 Rankings for Durham Classics & Ancient History

  • Research news

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Durham's Classics & Ancient History is pleased to announce its successes in 2023 rankings. Our department ranked overall 2nd best in the UK in the Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide, 3rd best in the Complete University Guide, and 4th best in the Guardian University Guide. We are proud of the education and support we provide to our students.

QS World University Rankings 2023

The QS rankings assessed over 18,300 subjects globally from 1,597 institutions, where 12 of our subjects are ranked in the world top 50 and 19 in the world top 100 again.

Nine of Durham University's subjects have enhanced their world top 100 ranking.

Additionally, two subject areas are in the world top 100 – Arts and Humanities is placed 32 nd , up from 41 st   last year, and Natural Sciences ranks joint 74 th , up from 99 th   in 2022.

Durham is a world-leading university. Our academic excellence and impact is reflected in our global rankings and this is a true credit to the outstanding teaching and research carried out at our University.   

Durham is consistently ranked as one of the world’s leading universities. It is ranked 92nd in the QS World University Rankings 2023, 6th in the Guardian University Guide 2023 and Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2023, and The Complete University Guide 2022. Durham is also regularly ranked in the top ten universities in the UK.  

Ph.D. in Classical Studies

General info.

  • Faculty working with students: 12 primary, 4 affiliated
  • Students: 16
  • Students receiving Financial Aid: 100%
  • Part time study available: No
  • Application Terms: Fall
  • Application Deadline: December 20

Joshua Sosin Director of Graduate Studies Department of Classical Studies Duke University Box 90103 Durham, NC 27708-0103

Phone: (919) 681-4292

Email:  [email protected]

Website:  http://classicalstudies.duke.edu/graduate

Program Description

The department sponsors work across many aspects of the study of the ancient Mediterranean, including Greek and Latin literature,  history, philosophy, art, and archeology. Successful applicants to the Ph.D. track in Literature or in History must have at least three years of one ancient language (Greek and Latin), and at least two of the other; successful applicants to the Ph.D. track in Archaeology must have at least three years of one ancient language (Latin or Greek). We have a strong, balanced program in literary, historical, cultural, and archaeological studies, including special expertise in documentary studies-- papyrology, palaeography, and epigraphy. Our department is an integral part of both Duke's Center for Late Ancient Studies and Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Resources for Classical Studies include large collections of ancient Greek papyri and medieval Greek and Latin manuscripts, the Rostovtzeff-Welles library, and the Duke Immersive Environment and other virtual reality labs, and the Classical Collection of Greek and Roman Art in the Nasher Museum of Art. We participate in the programs of the American Academy in Rome and the American School in Athens; many students spend a year or a summer at one or the other. Students in our program are able, through course work, directed research, and their own teaching, to prepare for careers within the academy as broadly trained classical scholars and also to prepare for equally valued careers outside the academy through Duke’s robust programming for humanities Ph.Ds and through departmental programming and alumni networks.

  • Classical Studies: PhD Admissions and Enrollment Statistics
  • Classical Studies: PhD Completion Rate Statistics
  • Classical Studies: PhD Time to Degree Statistics
  • Classical Studies: PhD Career Outcomes Statistics

Application Information

Application Terms Available:  Fall

Application Deadline:  December 20

Graduate School Application Requirements See the Application Instructions page for important details about each Graduate School requirement.

  • Transcripts: Unofficial transcripts required with application submission; official transcripts required upon admission
  • Letters of Recommendation: 3 Required
  • Statement of Purpose: Required
  • Résumé: Required
  • GRE Scores: GRE General (Optional)
  • English Language Exam: TOEFL, IELTS, or Duolingo English Test required* for applicants whose first language is not English *test waiver may apply for some applicants
  • GPA: Undergraduate GPA calculated on 4.0 scale required

Department-Specific Application Requirements (submitted through online application)

Statement of Purpose Guidelines The Statement of Purpose is a fundamentally different genre than the kind of Personal Statement you wrote in applications for undergraduate programs. Successful Statements of Purpose for our program give the committee a snapshot of you as a scholar. This means describing (1) your intellectual interests, (2) the preparation behind those interests, and (3) potential future pursuits (although these need not be highly specific). The statement as a whole implicitly answers the following questions. What intersecting interests or questions about Classical Antiquity are motivating you to pursue a graduate degree in Classical Studies? What coursework, research, and work/opportunities outside of class have helped shape these questions? In what areas are you looking to grow in graduate school? And why are we, at Duke Classical Studies, a good place for you to achieve these goals?

The best Statements of Purpose are highly individual. This means you don’t want to say something that anyone could say, but rather keep the focus on you and your candidacy. It can help to include specific information, e.g., about research papers you have written of which you are proud, theories or methodologies or approaches or even a single secondary source that really grabbed your attention, programs you have attended, special skills you have acquired (inside or outside of your previous coursework), or aspects of your resume that you wish to explain which have special bearing on your future studies with us. You might also comment on anything you wish to explain about your profile.

Note that you need not outline for us a completely formed future research agenda; in fact, we prefer students open to exploring the wide breadth of what we study here. Rather, your statement tells us about what most sparks your interest in the ancient world (and you can have many sparks!) and about the intellectual trajectory that led you to approach those interests. We hope, of course, that answering those questions will help us see why you are interested in pursuing your education in Duke Classical Studies and what sort of research you will be interested in pursuing with us; if you know the names of specific faculty you would like to work with, feel free to name them, but more important for us is that you took the time to get to know our program as outlined on our website and that your wider intellectual snapshot speaks to why we would be a good intellectual home for you.

Note: applicants must also include directly in the first paragraph of your Statement of Purpose to which of our two tracks you are applying: Archaeology or Literature/History.

Greek and Latin Works Read A list of the Greek and Latin authors/texts you have read in the original languages.

Writing Sample A writing sample (20-25 pages) is required. Successful writing samples showcase research and analysis of primary sources within a subfield field of Classical Studies or within a related discipline.

These two documents can be uploaded as one file directly with your online application in the Departmental Requirements section. 

We strongly encourage you to review additional department-specific application guidance from the program to which you are applying: Departmental Application Guidance

List of Graduate School Programs and Degrees

durham university phd classics

Prof. Phillip Horky (Research Interests: Ancient Philosophy, esp. Presocratics, Plato, the Early Academy, Aristotle, Hellenistic Philosophy)

Co-director, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link | twitter: @neo_pythagorean.

Phillip Horky is Professor of Ancient Philosophy in the Department of Classics & Ancient History, Durham University. His specialisms include the history of Platonism, Pythagoreanism, and the Presocratics. He has written a monograph, Plato and Pythagoreanism (Oxford, 2013), as well as edited a volume Cosmos in the Ancient World (Cambridge, 2019). He has also written numerous articles on topics and figures ranging from theories of justice among the Socratics to the reception of Platonic philosophy in the writings of Antonio Gramsci. He is co-editor of the book series Cambridge Texts and Studies in Platonism , published by Cambridge University Press. 

durham university phd classics

Dr Michael Huxtable

E-mail: website: link.

Dr Mike Huxtable studied Philosophy and English at the University of York and has obtained Masters degrees in both subjects. He completed a doctorate in 2008 in Durham on the phenomenology of colour and its perception in medieval literature. Mike's research interests include medieval philosophy, theology and the history of ideas; the semiology of medieval art and culture (in particular heraldry), and the influence of visuality on literary creativity.

Staff and Research Fellows

Prof. lewis ayres, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr thomas ball, e-mail: [email protected], dr krastu banev, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. john barclay, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr elizabeth biggs (research interests: priory library project), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr giulia bonasio (research interests: ancient philosophy (esp. aristotle's ethics, early greek philosophy, and plato), greek lyric poetry), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. nancy cartwright (research interests: aristotelian metaphysics and its role in modern science ), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. andrea capra (research interests: classical philosophy (especially plato) and poetry), dr annalisa cipollone, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. serafina cuomo (research interests: ancient mathematics and technology), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr jeremy dunham (research interests: 17th-19th-century philosophy), prof. giles gasper, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr nathan gilbert (research interests: cicero, stoicism, epicureanism), dr patrick gray (research interests: shakespeare; montaigne; renaissance literature; classical reception; intellectual history; history of emotions), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. edith hall fba (research interests: ancient philosophy and literature; aristotle; the sophists; reception of greek literature in philosophy), e-mail: twitter: @edithmayhall, dr jane heath (research interests: clement of alexandria; new testament; theology of the image / embodiment), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. arlene holmes-henderson mbe (research interests: reception of aristotle), professor of classics education and public policy, research fellow, aristotle beyond the academy in britain and ireland since the restoration, prof. christopher insole, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. jane macnaughton, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. anna marmodoro, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. stephen mumford (research interests: the eleatics, heraclitus, plato’s protagoras and sophist, aristotle’s physics and metaphysics), e-mail: website: link | twitter: @sdmumford, prof. daniel newman, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr alberto rigolio, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link | twitter: @albertorigolio, prof. christopher rowe (emeritus), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. corinne saunders, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. martin ferguson smith (emeritus) (research interests: epicureanism, esp. diogenes of oinoanda and lucretius), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr edmund thomas, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link.

durham university phd classics

Dr Sara L. Uckelman

E-mail: [email protected] | website: link | twitter: @saraluckelman.

Dr Sara Uckelman is an Associate Professor of Logic in the Department of Philosophy at Durham University. She joined the department in 2014, having previously held research posts in Heidelberg, Tilburg, and Amsterdam.

Her primary research is in the realm of formal modeling and interactive logic. She is interested in bringing togther tools and techniques from modern logic and artificial intelligence to help explore and understand practices of reasoning and argumentation in historical contexts. Her personal research is primarily focused on developments in medieval Western Europe, particularly in medieval theories of obligationes.

She is also interested in abstract dialogue and argumentation systems, the influence of theology on the development of medieval logic, computational social choice and medieval economic and trade history.

Her research interests include Mathematical Logic; Medieval Modal, Temporal and Tense Logic; Onomastics; Philosophical Logic; Philosophy of Fiction and Philosophy of Language.

She is the Editor-in-Chief and Principal Investigator of the  Dictionary of Medieval Names from European Sources , and an Associate Editor of  Journal of Logic, Language, and Information .

Dr Rik Van Nieuwenhove (Research Interests: Medieval theology, especially theology of the Trinity and soteriology; late-medieval spirituality of the Low Countries (especially Ruusbroec))

Assistant professor of medieval thought, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, ms j t wolfenden (research interests: hellenistic philosophy, esp. literary philosophy incl. lucretius, philodemus, seneca, and lucan), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, prof. ioannis ziogas (research interests: roman law and latin literature; legal humanities; latin poetry; greek epic), postgraduates, justin allison (research interests: epicurean and early christian communities ), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, marta antola (research interests: plato, socrates, greek philosophy and literature), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, giulia bernardini (research interests: ancient philosophy and literature, esp. philosophical uses of comedy in plato), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, matilde berti (research interests: plato, metaphysics (ancient and contemporary)), marco collatuzzo (research interests: aristotle: writing styles, fragments, esoteric vs. exoteric writings), visiting phd student, universities of pisa and florence, fani goutsiou (research interests: seneca, stoicism, psychology), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, e-mail: [email protected], nosheena jabeen (research interests: ancient philosophy and cosmology, esp. political philosophy (incl. aristotle and cicero)), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, maria cristina mennuti (research interests: middle platonism, pythagoreanism, cosmology, philip of opus), valerio ricciardi (research interests: ancient philosophy, esp. political philosophy incl. plato, aristotle and cicero), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, giovanni trovato (research interests: pythagoreanism, platonism and the peripatetic tradition), visiting phd student, university of pisa, annalisa wilson (research interests: stoic adiaphora and paul), e-mail: [email protected], visitors and recent postdoctoral fellows, dr myrthe bartels (research interests: ancient philosophy, plato, interpretation (incl. hermeneutics), philosophical approaches to legislation, ancient ethics & political philosophy, philosophy of music, reception studies), cofund jrf 2018-20; now research fellow, dipartimento di civiltà e forme del sapere, university of pisa, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr edoardo benati (research interests: plato, early academy), visiting student (2018-2019); currently at scuola normale superiore, e-mail: [email protected], dr graziana ciola (research interests: logic and science in the 14th century), zks/priory library postdoctoral research fellow 2019-20; now associate professor of philosophy, radboud university, dr matthew duncombe (research interests: plato, stoicism, metaphysics), british academy ecf 2014-16; now assistant professor of philosophy, university of nottingham, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr claire hall (research interests: divination, prophecy, ancient philosophy of time, astrology, ancient science), leverhulme early career fellow 2022-25, dr benjamin harriman (research interests: presocratics, stoicism), lecturer in classics 2016-17; now leverhulme ecf, classics, the university of edinburgh, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr monica hellström (research interests: late antique philosophy, history, culture), leverhulme ecrf 2016-20; now lecturer of ancient history, oxford university, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr anthony hooper (research interests: plato, presocratics, 18-19th century german philosophy), cofund jrf 2016-19; currently lecturer of philosophy, university of woolongong, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr mara nicosia (research interests: syriac and arabic rhetoric, semitic languages, the transmission of aristotelian philosophy, late antique contacts between greek and aramaic), british academy newton international fellow, 'the syriac rhetorical tradition between greco-roman paideia and arabic aristotelianism', dr federico petrucci (research interests: plato, middle platonism), cofund jrf 2016-18; currently professore associato in philosophy, the university of torino, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr liam preston (research interests: latin literature (specifically lucan, seneca, lucretius, and petronius); epicurean philosophy (especially epicurean ethical thought); early presocratic thought (especially xenophanes and empedocles); translation theory), teaching fellow, dr elsa simonetti (research interests: plutarch, divination), newton international fellow 2017-19; now research fellow, de wulf-mansion centre for ancient, medieval and renaissance philosophy, ku leuven, e-mail: [email protected], dr anders dahl sørensen (research interests: plato, political theory), cofund jrf 2018-19; now carlsberg foundation fellow, university of copenhagen, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr peter swallow (research interests: aristotle, ancient science, gender and sexuality, reception studies), postdoctoral research fellow, leverhulme-funded research project 'aristotle beyond the academy', dr alessandro vatri (research interests: stylistics and linguistics in aristotle), postdoctoral research fellow, ukri frontiers research project aristoteles pezographos, dr rosie wyles (research interests: greek literature, aristotle, vocabulary of emotions, reception), postdoctoral research fellow, ukri frontiers research project 'aristoteles pezographos', phd alumni/ae, dr richard beniston (research interests: stoicism, seneca, natural science), phd in classics, durham university, 2017, dr nicolò benzi (research interests: plato, sophists, presocratics, greek poetry), phd in classics, durham university, 2016; now teaching associate at the university of nottingham, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr carlo cacciatori (research interests: plato, aristotle, moral epistemology), phd in classics, durham university, 2022, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr giulia de cesaris (research interests: aristotle, the old academy, hellenistic philosophy, neopythagoreanism, iamblichus), phd in classics, durham university, 2020; now junior postdoctoral fellow, de wulf-mansion centre for ancient, medieval, and renaissance philosophy, ku leuven, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr atsushi hayase (research interests: plato, dialectic), phd in classics, durham university, 2010; now associate professor of ancient philosophy, kyoto university, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr yoon cheol lee (research interests: plato, logic, sophists), phd in classics, durham university, 2012; now assistant professor, department of philosophy, chungnam national university, dr esther meijer (research interests: ancient philosophy and poetry (esp. lucretius, seneca, and flavian poetry), cosmology, and ancient political philosophy), phd in classics, durham university, 2021; now associate lecturer in latin, department of classics, university of st andrews, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr sebastiano molinelli (research interests: plato, sophists, logic), phd in classics, durham university, 2018, dr cesare sinatti (research interests: stoicism, cosmology), e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr mark wildish (research interests: ancient philosophy, kierkegaard, later wittgenstein), phd in classics, durham university, 2015; now assistant lecturer, department of philosophy, hong kong university, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr logan williams (research interests: christian ethics, aesthetics, priesthood in early judaism), phd in theology, durham university, 2020; now lecturer of theology, durham university, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link, dr ugo zilioli (research interests: ancient philosophy), phd in classics, durham university, 2002; marie curie research fellow 2015-17; now leverhulme researcher, faculty of theology and religion, university of oxford, e-mail: [email protected] | website: link.

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Related Organisations

The following groups are also supportred by members of the Durham Centre for Ancient and Medieval Philosophy:

Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies

Durham Centre for Classical Reception

Northern Association for Ancient Philosophy

Yorkshire Ancient Philosophy Network

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Classics and Ancient History Resources

JSTOR

  • Reference Works
  • Databases, Journals, E-books
  • Greek & Latin
  • Visual Culture
  • Epigraphy & Papyrology
  • Classical Reception
  • De imperatoribus Romanis DIR is an on-line encyclopedia on the rulers of the Roman empire from Augustus (27 BC-AD 14) to Constantine XI Palaeologus (1449-1453). The encyclopedia consists of (1) an index of all the emperors who ruled during the empire's 1500 years, (2) a growing number of biographical essays on the individual emperors, (3) family trees ("stemmata") of important imperial dynasties, (4) an index of significant battles in the empire's history, (5) a growing number of capsule descriptions and maps of these battles, and (6) maps of the empire at different times. Wherever possible, these materials are cross-referenced by live links. These contents are supplemented by an ancient and medieval atlas, a link to a virtual catalog of Roman coins, and other recommended links to related sites. The contents of DIR have been prepared by scholars but are meant to be accessible to non-specialists as well. They have been peer- reviewed for quality and accuracy before publication on this site.
  • Neue Pauly. Online version of: Der neue Pauly, which was published in 18 volumes (13 on Antiquity, 5 on the Classical Tradition) and one index volume, and: Brill's New Pauly (included as English volumes become available).
  • The Oxford classical dictionary "Completely revised and updated, the fourth edition of this established dictionary offers entries on all aspects of the classical world. With reception and anthropology as new focus areas and numerous new entries, it is an essential reference work for students, scholars, and teachers of classics and for anyone with an interest in the classical era"--
  • Brill Dictionary of Ancient Greek Online English translation of Franco Montanari's Vocabolario della Lingua Greca
  • Brill Indo-European Etymological Dictionaries Online Reference resource which reconstructs the lexicon for the most important languages and language branches of Indo-European
  • L'année philologique L’Année philologique is a specialized bibliographic database of scholarly works relating to all aspects of Ancient Greek and Roman civilizations published since 1928.
  • Aris & Phillips Classical Texts Modern editions of Classical Greek and Latin texts, with substantial introductions and commentaries, as well as the original text with facing-page English translation.
  • Hathi Trust As a digital repository for the nation's great research libraries, HathiTrust brings together the immense collections of partner institutions. It was initially conceived as a collaboration of the thirteen universities of the Committee on Institutional Cooperation, the University of California system, and the University of Virginia to establish a repository for those universities to archive and share their digitized collections, and quickly expanded to include additional partners with fast growing treasure of digitized collections.
  • Internet archive "The Internet Archive "was founded [in 1996] to build an 'Internet library,' with the purpose of offering permanent access for researchers, historians, and scholars to historical collections that exist in digital format," such as Internet sites and other cultural digital artifacts (i.e. movies, interviews, images, etc.). Using the Internet Archive's "Wayback Machine," users can look at their own Web site and track how it has evolved. Plug-ins are made available as needed. "Special Wayback Collections" provide a sense of how events such as September 11, 2001, were recorded digitally. This site is appropriate for anyone doing research on the history of the Internet and for those who want to see how the Internet has changed over the years." "Best Free Reference Web Sites 2002." RUSA Quarterly, Fall 2002; reviewed Feb. 19, 2002.
  • JSTOR Provides image and full-text online access to back issues of selected scholarly journals in history, economics, political science, demography, mathematics and other fields of the humanities and social sciences. Consult the online tables of contents for holdings, as coverage varies for each title.
  • Library of Latin texts "CLCLT is the world's leading database for Latin texts. It contains texts from the beginning of Latin literature (Livius Andronicus, 240 BC) through to the texts of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965). It covers all the works from the classical period, the most important patristic works, a very extensive corpus of Medieval Latin literature as well as works of recentior latinitas. The complete works of writers such as Cicero, Virgil, Augustine, Jerome, Gregory the Great, Anselm of Canterbury, Bernard of Clairvaux and Thomas a Kempis can thus be consulted. The texts have been taken from the Corpus Christianorum series and from many other leading editions"--Publisher's website.
  • Loeb classical library Website will include more than 520 volumes of Classical Greek and Latin literature.
  • Oxford bibliographies. Classics Identifies key publications for studying classical authors and aspects of life and culture in the Ancient World
  • Oxford Handbooks for Classics and Ancient History multi-disciplinary collection of ebooks, including Classics, Ancient History and Archaeology
  • Oxford Scholarly Editions: Classics The Classics wing of OSEO contains texts and translations of all the major Latin authors — from Horace, Ovid, and Virgil, to Pliny The Younger, Plautus, Sallust, and Tacitus — as well as the Greek tragedians Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides, comedians Menander and Aristophanes, and philosophers Plato and Aristotle.
  • Oxford Text Archive Based within the Humanities Computing Unit of Oxford University Computing Services, The Oxford Text Archive holds several thousand electronic texts and linguistic corpora, in a variety of languages. Its holdings include electronic editions of works by individual authors, standard reference works such as the Bible and mono-/bilingual dictionaries, and a range of language corpora. The archive itself was founded in 1976. The website probably dates from the late 1990s.
  • Patrologia Latina A full-text electronic version of the Latin portion of the Patrologiae Cursus Completus, published by nineteenth-century ecclesiastical publisher Jacques-Paul Migne. Its 221 volumes cover the works of the Latin Fathers, from Tertullian in 200 A.D. to Pope Innocent III in 1216. [For subscribers who own both Patrologia Latina Database and Acta Sanctorum database a cross-searchable facility allows users to find entries on search terms and texts that are included in both corpora, in one search].
  • The Perseus digital library Includes a large database of images (coins, vases, sculpture), Greek and Latin texts and translations, resources for textual studies, and English word searches of the texts.
  • TLG The TLG digital library now contains virtually all ancient Greek texts surviving from the period between Homer (8th century B.C.) and A.D. 600, and a large number of texts deriving from the period between A.D. 600 and 1453, in excess of 80 million words. Topics include Greek literature, history, and culture.
  • Trismegistos
  • Web of Science ISI Web of Science is an integrated platform designed to support research in academic, corporate, government, and not for profit organizations. ISI citation databases are multidisciplinary databases of bibliographic information indexed to be searched by subject, author, journal, and/or author address. They can also be searched for articles that cite a known author or work. Cited reference searching allows use of a given work as if it were a subject term, to identify more recent articles on the same topic.
  • Academic Complete Over 200,000 ebooks from major academic publishers in all subjects.
  • Gnomon online Database to locate sources including books, journal articles and theses.
  • JISC Library Hub for UK research libraries Search for details of materials held in over 170 UK national, academic and specialist libraries.
  • Wiley Digital Archives Journal archives of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Royal College of Physicians and Royal Geographical Society
  • Archive of Celtic-Latin literature Contains the texts processed thus far from the corpus of Celtic-Latin literature from the period 400-1200 as part of the Royal Irish Academy's Dictionary of Medieval Latin from Celtic Sources project.
  • Aristoteles Latinus The complete corpus of medieval Greek-Latin translations of the works of Aristotle as published in the printed work, Aristoteles Latinus.
  • Supplementum epigraphicum graecum A collected bibliography of books and articles on aspects of Greek epigraphy, as well as summaries of Greek inscriptions. Inscriptions are listed by their provenance, region, and assigned area (Greece, North, Aegean, West, Asia Minor, East, Unknown provenance, and Varia) and each lemma has a unique identifier made up from the printed SEG volume and sequence number, as well as additional hyperlinked metadata. This online edition includes the electronic equivalent of all 55 SEG volumes (beginning with v. 1 (1923)) published so far, and will incorporate all future volumes in the series.
  • Trismegistos "Trismegistos [TM] ... is a platform aiming to surmount barriers of language and discipline in the study of texts from the ancient world, particularly late period Egypt and the Nile valley (roughly BC 800 - 800 AD). The core component of TM is Trismegistos Texts ... Trismegistos increasingly wants to be a platform where information can be found about all texts from antiquity, thus facilitating cross-cultural and cross-linguistic research"--'About' page, viewed May 20, 2020.
  • Corpus Medicorum Graecorum/Latinorum The Corpus Medicorum Graecorum/Latinorum (CMG & CML) is run by the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences. Particularly important is the following overview which gives free access to textual editions and translations: http://cmg.bbaw.de/online-publikationen/werkverzeichnisse . For those working on ancient science, especially on ancient medicine, the CMG and CML volumes are absolutely indispensable.
  • ArtStor Artstor is a digital library of images covering the arts, architecture, humanities, and social sciences. The collections comprise contributions from outstanding museums, photographers, libraries, scholars, photo archives, and artists and artists' estates.
  • Bridgeman education "[Searchable database of over] 300,000 [art] images from 2,000 sources, 8,000 locations and 30,000 artists. The site offers an excellent quality of image and metadata (captions and keywords) as well as the legal right to use the images within your institution. Search all media including photography, fine art, engravings, sculpture, architecture, archaeology & ethnography, history, science & medicine, decorative arts and artifacts."--About us.
  • British Museum collections
  • Classical collections in Great North Museum Egyptian, Greek, Etruscan and Roman collections
  • DYABOLA DYABOLA is a navigable, source-oriented text and image registration system equipped with a semantic network, a syntax generator and a data-scrolling machine. Developed for the humanities and the arts, it contains electronic subject catalogs of publications on the history of art and the ancient world and includes the subject catalogs of the German Archaeological Institute in Rome, the Bibliography of Iberian Archaeology from the German Archaeological Institute in Madrid, and the Archaeology of Roman Provinces from RGK Frankfurt.
  • Getty images
  • Louvre Collections
  • Odysseus - Greek National Museums
  • Parthenon Frieze
  • Perseus digital library Includes a large database of images (coins, vases, sculpture), Greek and Latin texts and translations, resources for textual studies, and English word searches of the texts.
  • Uffizi Galleries
  • Vatican Museums
  • ATTIC Inscriptions Online English translations of the inscriptions of ancient Athens and Attica.
  • PHI Database of Greek Inscriptions Searchable Greek Inscriptions
  • Papyri Collection, John Rylands University Library, University of Manchester The John Rylands University Library, The University of Manchester, holds one of the richest and most wide-ranging papyrus collections in Britain. It includes religious, devotional, literary and administrative texts. Click on “Category Pages” to see links to all the digitised papyri.
  • Papyrology Collection, University of Michigan This world-renowned collection of ancient papyri is the largest in North America. Its texts and documents date from about 1,000 BCE to 1,000 CE, and include personal letters, school primers, sales contracts, and other records that paint a unique picture of ordinary life in the ancient world. Of special interest are pages from the oldest-known copy of the Epistles of Paul. The collection continues to be preserved, inventoried, and digitized. Inventoried papyrus can be found in the Advanced Papyrological Information System (APIS), and at Papyri.info, which also includes papyrus held at other institutions.
  • Papyrology Collection University of Michigan: Ancient Philosophy This links directly to papyri on Ancient Philosophy held at University of Michigan with information on the work of Richard Janko at UM.
  • Papyrus Oxyrhynchus Collection Online This is an incredible online catalogue with access to digitised papyri and full inventory. You can search by papyrus number, or click on the link “The Papyrus” top left to browse the database. This resource allows you to view a large number of fragments of Greek texts. including many from Greek literature, on papyrus.
  • APGRD [Archive of Performance Greek & Roman Drama] The Productions Database is an online resource that details quantitative information about performances of Greek and Roman drama from antiquity to the present day. The Ancient Performances Database covers the history of over 1,000 performances, 750 ancient works, and 300 authors, actors, and choregoi; the database spans the Ancient world from the 6th century BC to the 5th century AD.
  • BoB box of broadcasts BoB (Box of Broadcasts) National is an innovative shared online off-air TV and radio recording service for UK higher and further education institutions. BoB enables all staff and students in subscribing institutions to choose and record any broadcast programme from 60+ TV and radio channels. The recorded programmes are then kept indefinitely (no expiry) and added to a growing media archive (currently at over 1 million programmes), with all content shared by users across all subscribing institutions. The user-friendly system allows staff and students to record and catch-up on missed programmes on and off-campus, schedule recordings in advance, edit programmes into clips, create playlists, embed clips into VLEs, share what they are watching with others, search a growing archive of material, plus more. Discover more about BoB National features by viewing our video tutorials.
  • National Theatre Collection
  • Oxford Handbooks for Classics and Ancient History
  • Proquest archive collections African Diaspora, 1860-present; Black Drama Third Edition; Black Thought and Culture; ProQuest History Vault: Black Freedom Struggle in the 20th Century; Border and Migration Studies Online; Environmental Issues Online; LGBT Thought and Culture; LGBT Magazine Archive 1954-2015; Human Rights Studies Online; Anthropological Fieldwork Online; Social Work Online; British and Irish Women's Letters and Diaries; North American Women's Letters and Diaries; Women and Social Movements in Modern Empires Since 1820; Gerritsen Collection Women's History; Women's Magazine Archive 1846-2015; American Periodicals Series 1740-1940; British Periodicals Collection; C19: the 19th Century Index; Periodicals Archive Online Collections; Art & Architecture Archive 1895-2005; Country Life Archive 1897-2005; Entertainment Industry Magazine Archive; Early European Books Collections; Performance Design Archive Online; Music Online: Classical Scores Library; Music Online: Music Periodicals of the 19th Century; Royal Shakespeare Company Collection; Luther's Werke; Religious Magazine Archive 1845-2015; Twentieth Century Religious Thought; ProQuest Congressional Digital Collection 1789-2010; Colonial State Papers 1574-1757; Documents on British Policy Overseas 1898-1980; Trench Journals and Unit Magazines 1914-1919; Digital National Security Archive; Revolution and Protest Online; Security Issues Online; Jerusalem Post; Korea Times; Chinese Newspaper Collection 1832-1953; Leftist Newspapers 1845-2015; News Policy & Politics Magazine Archive; Selected US newspaper archives

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The Department of Classical Studies explores the languages (ancient Greek and Latin) and literatures, archaeology, art history, and histories of Greco-Roman antiquity, from 3000 BCE to 900 CE, from the Nile to the North Sea, from Britain to Bactria. Our students have the opportunity to work with renowned scholars, discussing big ideas in small classes. Our many resources include papyri and manuscripts in the Rubenstein Library, as well as the rich antiquities collection of the Nasher Museum. The Department enjoys close ties with AAHVS, History, Medieval/Renaissance Studies, Philosophy, Political Science, Religious Studies, and Gender, Sexuality & Feminist Studies, as well as with UNC Chapel Hill, especially through the Consortium for Classical and Mediterranean Archaeology.

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  1. Classics and Ancient History Department

    Our Durham Department of Classics & Ancient History is a large and successful department. We consistently rank as one of the top Classics and Ancient History Departments in the UK for research and teaching, and came 8th in the 2023 QS World University Rankings. Our degrees offer both academic rigour and an outstanding student experience.

  2. PhD degrees

    The Department of Classics & Ancient History at Durham University invites applications for PhD studentships, through the AHRC-funded Northern Bridge Doctoral Training Partnership. The Northern Bridge Doctoral Training Partnership runs an annual competition to select the best doctoral candidates and provide a comprehensive and attractive package ...

  3. Classics & Ancient History PhD at Durham University

    Course Summary. Classics and Ancient History at Durham University belongs to the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and is one of the most vibrant Classics departments in the UK. Our academic staff specialise in a wide range of artistic, historical, literary, linguistic, cultural and philosophical aspects of the Graeco-Roman world.

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    Durham Classics and Ancient History graduates in the past have progressed to Master's courses in a wide range of inter-disciplinary subject areas, including many of the following: MA Risk, Security & Politics. MSc Management Programmes. Master of Data Science. MA Intercultural Communication and Education.

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  7. Classics & Ancient History PhD at Durham University

    Classics and Ancient History at Durham University belongs to the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and is one of the most vibrant Classics departments in the UK. Our academic staff specialise in a wide range of artistic, historical, literary, linguistic, cultural and philosophical aspects of the Graeco-Roman world.

  8. Classics and Ancient History, Ph.D.

    At Durham University, we are committed to the study of Graeco-Roman antiquity as a subject with global relevance and the inherent potential for social and pedagogical benefit. This PhD is offered within the Department of Classics and Ancient History. Durham University. Durham , England , United Kingdom. Top 1% worldwide.

  9. Research and Impact

    The Durham Centre for Classical Reception (DCCR) fosters the study of the reception of classical culture within and beyond antiquity; The Durham Centre for Ancient and Medieval Philosophy (DCAMP) aims to use existing, wide-ranging interests in the study of ancient philosophy at Durham as the basis for growing institutional strength in medieval ...

  10. Classics and Ancient History (Research) Program By Durham University

    Learn more about Classics and Ancient History (Research) Program including the program highlights, fees, scholarships, events and further course information

  11. 2020 Complete University Guide

    1 May 2019. We have been ranked as the 3rd best Classics department in the UK. We are delighted to announce that Durham Classics has been ranked as the 3rd best Classics department in the UK in the 2020 Complete University Guide. We placed 5th overall for student satisfaction and 2nd overall for research quality and for graduate prospects.

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    Welcome. Welcome to the guide for Classics and Ancient History. From here you can search for resources via Discover, get help via our chat and FAQs system and contact your Faculty Librarian. We offer help and support with all aspects of Library and Collections for staff and students in the Department of Classics and Ancient History.

  13. 2023 Rankings for Durham Classics & Ancient History

    25 September 2022. Durham's Classics & Ancient History is pleased to announce its successes in 2023 rankings. Our department ranked overall 2nd best in the UK in the Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide, 3rd best in the Complete University Guide, and 4th best in the Guardian University Guide. We are proud of the education and support we ...

  14. Ph.D. in Classical Studies

    Joshua Sosin Director of Graduate Studies Department of Classical Studies Duke University Box 90103 Durham, NC 27708-0103 Phone: (919) 681-4292 Email: [email protected]

  15. People

    Phillip Horky is Professor of Ancient Philosophy in the Department of Classics & Ancient History, Durham University. His specialisms include the history of Platonism, Pythagoreanism, and the Presocratics. He has written a monograph, Plato and Pythagoreanism (Oxford, 2013), as well as edited a volume Cosmos in the Ancient World (Cambridge, 2019).

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    Find every English-taught PhD degree from Department of Classics and Ancient History, organised by subjects and best info to help you select the right degree. ... Durham University. Durham, United Kingdom . Independent provider. Grant. 40000 AUD. Deadline. 13 Oct 2024. Veterans' Fund Indigenous Scholarships .

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    Classical Reception. De imperatoribus Romanis. DIR is an on-line encyclopedia on the rulers of the Roman empire from Augustus (27 BC-AD 14) to Constantine XI Palaeologus (1449-1453). The encyclopedia consists of (1) an index of all the emperors who ruled during the empire's 1500 years, (2) a growing number of biographical essays on the ...

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    Graduate Program. Our Ph.D. program is dedicated to training students in the broad and integrated field of Classical Studies, including Greek and Latin languages and literatures, and the history, art, and archaeology of the ancient Greek and Roman world. ... Duke University Durham, NC 27708 TEL: 919-681-4292 FAX: 919-681-4262. About. About Us ...