This Early Modern History MA examines the history of Britain, Europe, and the wider world between 1500 and 1800, highlighting themes of political, cultural, religious, and social history.
You’ll learn about the various approaches to writing the history of early modern Europe whilst developing the specific skills you’ll need to research early modern topics. This includes mastering archives and gaining the linguistic and palaeographic skills to work with early modern documents from Britain, Ireland, France, the German lands, Portugal, the Iberian world, and beyond.
During your Early Modern History master’s, you will learn how to critically evaluate a range of theories, methods, and approaches in the field. You’ll learn from academics about their areas of expertise and you’ll enjoy visits to libraries, archives, and museums as part of your degree.
Thanks to a wide range of optional modules, you can tailor your Early Modern History MA to specialise in the areas that interest you most. At the end of your postgraduate study, you will get to work on your own piece of research and produce a dissertation.
This Early Modern History MA looks at the ways in which cultural, political, and social themes stretch across the period c.1500–1800 while bridging the division between British and European history.
You’ll learn from experts in the histories of the Reformation and the Enlightenment, gender, the material world of the Renaissance, race, and racism, covering Britain, Ireland, the German lands, France, Italy, and the Iberian world.
The first required module in your master’s will introduce you to methodological and theoretical approaches to writing early modern history that you will then interrogate and deploy yourself. It’s taught by the entire early modern history team in rotation, which means you’ll get to know each of our academic experts early in your degree.
You will test concepts such as identity, mentality, and religion by challenging models of change, including modernisation, state-building, the civilising process, Renaissance, Reformation, Enlightenment, and revolution. You will also get the chance to try out different methodologies, such as cultural history, gender, thinking with material objects, global history, and using digital data.
You will also become equipped with the essential skills you’ll need to study early modern history at an advanced level with a particular emphasis on research-specific skills to prepare you for your own independent research. Opportunities to study Latin or other languages, and to learn palaeographic skills to work with original materials, can usually also be provided.
The second required module in this Early Modern History MA addresses the nature of historical practice. You will explore history as a discipline–and its interdisciplinarity–to empower you to use and critically evaluate a range of theories, methods, and approaches.
You’ll also learn how to interrogate the archive by questioning its power structures and political implications, who controls access to it, how to read material against the grain, how to explore the history of underrepresented groups and more. You’ll do this alongside King’s historians, who are experts in, among other approaches, feminist history, decolonising curricula, histories of slavery and ‘race’, histories of sexuality, and disability history.
Your research skills in quantitative approaches, visual and textual analysis, and oral presentation of materials will all be strengthened, preparing you to conduct your own research, whether diving into physical or digital archives. As you write your own essays, you’ll master the skill of critical synthesis, which is vital for further research and transferrable to many other fields of work and study.
The rest of this MA in Early Modern History is comprised of optional modules. This flexibility allows you to craft your own curriculum and choose the topics that interest you most. You’ll delve into primary sources and analyse the most recent historiographical interpretations.
For example, you could study the body and society in early modern Europe, learn about the public history of science, technology, and medicine, explore British moral and political thought in early modernity, and consider God, man, and nature in Europe.
You can focus your optional modules on the study of early modern history or broaden your experience with interdisciplinary modules offered by a selection of other master’s programmes at King’s. For example, you could take modules in early modern English, French literature, the Iberian world, or Digital Humanities. You could also choose to learn or improve another language by taking a module at the King's Language Centre, and you can even take modules from the wide range of options elsewhere in the University of London.
You may also be able to undertake an internship as part of your master’s. This exciting opportunity will see you work on a research project, either with
Standard requirement: 2:1
Bachelor's degree with 2:1 honours in History or a related humanities or social science subject. Students without a history degree may be required to show relevant research skills in order to be accepted.
In order to meet the academic entry requirements for this programme you should have a minimum 2:1 undergraduate degree with a final mark of at least 60% or above in the UK marking scheme. If you are still studying you should be achieving an average of at least 60% or above in the UK marking scheme.
Graduates of the MA in Early Modern History go on to careers in museums, journalism, finance and the cultural sector, as well as further study in History and related subjects.
Early Modern History MA graduates have found employment, for example, in the following roles:
Historical consultant for theatre, books and TV
Sound technician at a university
PhD and lecturing
Museum curator
See our website for modules
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