25 Bachelor Degrees in Archaeology 2024

Bachelor Degrees in Archaeology 2024Filter
  • Anthropology - Archaeology

    California State University, Dominguez Hills

    • Carson, USA

    On-Campus

    English

    The Department of Anthropology offers undergraduate students course work in the five anthropological subdisciplines: Ethnology, Archaeology, Biological Anthropology, Applied Anthropology and Anthropological Linguistics. In addition, courses focus on contemporary disciplinary research, area studies and societal applications of anthropological knowledge.

  • Archaeology

    Cardiff University

    • Cardiff, United Kingdom

    Full time

    3 years

    On-Campus

    English

    Archaeology provides a unique perspective as the only subject which deals with all the temporal and spatial dimensions of the human past. Defined as the study of the human past through its material remains, it studies a very broad range of evidence including landscapes, buildings and monuments; buried material such as artefacts, biological remains, and structures; and written sources.

  • Archaeology/History

    Cardiff University

    • Cardiff, United Kingdom

    Full time

    3 years

    On-Campus

    English

    The BA in Archaeology and History gives students the opportunity to combining the study of History with the study of the human past from the earliest human origins through to the recent past. 

    • Cardiff, United Kingdom

    Full time

    3 years

    On-Campus

    English

    Our BSc Conservation of Objects in Museums and Archaeology will equip you with the skill set required to be a practising conservator. As a graduate of this programme, you will be able to develop, execute, report and record evidence based strategies and actions for preserving historic and archaeological objects.

  • Bachelor in Archaeology

    Bilkent University

    • Ankara, Turkey

    Full time

    4 years

    On-Campus

    English

    The Department of Archaeology's location in Anatolia, the historical crossroads connecting the so-called Oriental and Occidental cultures, offers a unique opportunity to study in-depth the emergence, flowering, and transformation of prehistoric, classical, and medieval societies.

  • Full time

    3 years

    On-Campus

    English

    This interdisciplinary programme combines archaeological and historical approaches to the study of Europe and the Mediterranean across five millennia [4th millennium BC to 11th century AD].

    • Lethbridge, Canada

    Full time

    4 years

    On-Campus

    English

    Archeology and geography explore past human cultures and societies through the analysis of material remains. It is the interpretation of these artifacts that help us understand our past, allowing us to learn more about ourselves today. Learn various aspects of archaeological interpretation and have the opportunity to put them into practice in the field and in the laboratory. Combine the theoretical and methodological approaches of the discipline to give you a balanced and in-depth look at the subject.

  • Bachelor of Arts in Classics

    Sapienza University of Rome

    • Rome, Italy

    Full time

    3 years

    On-Campus

    English

    To study Classics means dealing with the people and societies that have shaped Cultures, Languages, and Politics in the Western world. Artifacts and texts surviving from ancient Italy, Greece, and other “Provinces” of the Roman Empire (Europe, Near East, and North Africa) are still substantial and relevant markers in today's physical and cultural landscapes all around Europe and the Mediterranean.

  • Bachelor in Archaeology

    University of Cambridge Pembroke College

    • Cambridge, United Kingdom

    On-Campus

    English

    Archaeology spans a vast subject area, and the course allows the study of topics ranging across the humanities, the social sciences and the sciences. Applicants with almost any combination of subjects can apply; there are no specific required or recommended subjects.

  • Bachelor of Archaeology

    University of Cambridge Corpus Christi College

    • Cambridge, United Kingdom

    English

    Archaeology is the study of the past from its material remains, meaning everything that past generations have left behind for us to study from their artefacts to the DNA in their bones. Its theories and methods embrace the humanities and sciences. Its time range extends from the evolution of humans millions of years ago to the archaeology of the 21st century, through major transitions in human history including the beginnings of farming, states, empires and globalization. The complex role of the archaeological heritage for our own societies is another major interest of Cambridge archaeologists.

  • Bachelor in Archaeology

    College of Wooster

    • Wooster, USA

    On-Campus

    English

    Wooster offers a robust curriculum in both anthropological (or prehistoric) archaeology and historical archaeology. The program is designed both for majors and those students with an interest in archaeology as a significant, but not a major, emphasis in their liberal arts education. Wooster graduates make significant contributions to the field of archaeology, working in archaeology jobs at the National Park Service, in academia and as museum curators.

  • Archaeology and Art History Major

    Korea University Sejong Campus

    • Yeongi-gun, South Korea

    On-Campus

    Kanuri

    The Archaeology and Art History major provides research and education in two areas of archaeology and art history. Archaeology is a study on ancient human culture and its traces. It covers research and investigation into the past traces of human beings through historic remains or relics and is in complementary relationships with history. The major covers research and education in the two areas of archaeology and art history. The common primary research subject of these two areas is the past relics, and they have become sophisticated through interactions in the process of their development into contemporary studies.

  • Bachelor of Archaeology

    University of Cambridge Hughes Hall College

    • Cambridge, United Kingdom

    English

    The Archaeology course encompasses Archaeology, Assyriology, Egyptology and Biological Anthropology. Archaeology uses material evidence to explore the nature and development of particular societies and to explain the variations and commonalities of the human past. Assyriology is the study of the languages, cultures, history and archaeology of ancient Mesopotamia (Sumer, Babylonia and Assyria).

  • Bachelor of Archaeology

    University of Cambridge St. Edmund's College

    • Cambridge, United Kingdom

    English

    Course Overview: The degree encompasses multiple tracks: Archaeology, Biological Anthropology, Assyriology and Egyptology. You can specialise in your chosen track already in Year 1, or combine them in Year 1 and specialise from Year 2.

  • Bachelor of Archaeology

    University of Cambridge Emmanuel College

    • Cambridge, United Kingdom

    English

    Archaeology covers a broad range of topics, from the evolution of humans through the development of farming, ancient societies, and world empires, to heritage in modern societies. Students can choose to specialise in Archaeology (covering all world cultures), Biological Anthropology, Egyptology or Assyriology.