Scottish Ethnology and Archaeology

The University of Edinburgh
Undergraduate MA (Hons) Full-time 4 Years SociologyHistory of artArchaeology

A-Level Entry

ABB

Avg. Graduate Salary

£25,000

About this course

Uncover Scotland’s past and help shape its future, while gaining skills that you can apply to any country, culture or place.

This innovative joint honours programme combines two related yet distinct approaches to the study of human cultures, past and present.

Taking this programme shows an openness to ideas and perspectives other than your own, an essential attribute in many careers and a global marketplace.

Over the course of your four years with us, you will gain the practical and intellectual tools to handle and interpret:

* historic remains and artefacts

* print and traditional resources

* modern media and digital data

Scottish Ethnology

Ethnology is the study of the culture and traditions of developed societies. It is sometimes described as being at the intersection where history and anthropology meet.

While ethnology is commonly offered in universities across Europe, this is the only full undergraduate programme of its kind in the UK.

Focusing on Scotland, but also looking at comparative material from elsewhere, you will study the varying ways in which a modern European nation expresses itself culturally. Our courses explore questions like:

* how do customs, beliefs, social organisation, language, music and song help to create and shape identity in the modern world?

* how do we use and make sense of the past from within our present?

* how can this understanding help us to shape our future?

Follow in the footsteps of fieldworkers

A highlight of our programme is the chance to work with the rich range of materials in the School of Scottish Studies Archives and Scottish Studies Library.

You will explore the work of former staff and students who, since 1951, have been capturing elements of life in Scotland's farming and fishing communities, towns and cities.

Today, the Archives include:

* 33,000 recordings of songs, music, stories, rhyme and verse in Scots, Gaelic and English, as well as in dialects now extinct

* thousands of photographs and rarely-seen historic documents which capture exceptional and everyday aspects of Scottish culture and heritage

These materials are kept alive through our teaching, undergraduate and postgraduate research, and through the work of our Traditional Artist and Gaelic Writer in Residence.

Archaeology

Complementing the ethnology side of your programme, which explores the recent past and present, your studies in archaeology take you further back in time. Our courses will help you develop a parallel range of skills in the interpretation of social and cultural change. The programme also develops your understanding of:

* the material basis of archaeology

* the contested nature of objects

* the social relationships that are spun around them

* the people who use and interpret them

You will gain practical experience in archaeological fieldwork, and use excellent on-campus laboratories.

Entry Requirements

A-Level Grades ABB
Scottish Higher ABBB

Career Prospects

Graduates from this course typically go into the following occupations:

3412 Authors, writers and translators
1133 Public relations and communications directors
2435 Professional/Chartered company secretaries
2472 Archivists, conservators and curators
4135 Library clerks and assistants
4112 Local government administrative occupations

Course Details

Qualification
Master of Arts (with Honours) - MA (Hons)
Study Mode
Full-time
Duration
4 Years
Start Date
2025
Academic Year
2025
Campus / Location
Edinburgh
Scheme
Undergraduate
Subjects
Sociology, History of art, Archaeology
Avg. Graduate Salary
£25,000