The following modules are what students typically study, but this may change year to year in response to new developments and innovations.
Stage 1:
Compulsory modules currently include the following:
Understanding Military History;
Battles in Military History;
Redcoats: The British Army and Society c. 1660-1902;
The British Army in the Age of Total War.
Optional modules may include the following:
A Global History of Empire;
Histories of Health and Medicine since 1800;
Renaissance to the Enlightenment;
War and Society in Europe, c. 1789 - 1945.
Stage 2:
Compulsory modules currently include the following:
The Modern World: Revolution and Crisis;
Undergraduate Dissertation: Design and Planning;
Armies at War, 1914-1918.
Optional modules may include the following:
A History of Eastern Europe in 10 Objects;
Armies at War, 1792-1815;
Blitzkrieg to Baghdad: Armoured Warfare in the Theory, Practice and Imagery, 1916-2003;
Cholera to Climate Change: Environment and Society in Modern Britain;
Churchill's Armies: The Armies of the British Empire and the Second World War;
Civil War America, 1848-1877;
Conquest and Resistance in Southern Africa, 1750-1918;
Europe in Extremes: Communism, Fascism and Nazism, 1917-1939;
From Crisis to Revolution: France 1774-1799;
How The West was Won (or Lost): The American West in the 19th Century;
Marvels, Monsters and Freaks 1780-1920;
Modern German History since 1918;
Surgery, Science and Society since 1750;
Telegraph to Television: War and the British Media, 1853-1945;
The Art of Death: Representations, Rituals and Records in Medieval Europe;
The Cold War;
The Crusades;
The German Wars of Unification, c. 1813-1871;
The Imperial Presidency: U.S. Foreign Policy from Franklin Roosevelt to Barack Obama;
'The Jewel in the Crown': India and the Making of Imperial Britain;
Vikings: A Global Saga;
Violence and Justice in Medieval Europe (c. 500 - c. 1400);
War and Modern Medicine 1850-1950;
Warriors: Myths and Migrants: The Early Medieval Kingdoms.
Stage 3:
Compulsory modules currently include the following:
Undergraduate History Dissertation.
Optional modules may include the following:
Fight The Power: African American History from Jim Crow to Black Lives Matter;
From Buffalo Bill to Bison Burgers: The American West in the 20th Century;
Global Insurgency and Counterinsurgency in the Modern Era;
Gothic Art: Image and Imagination in Europe;
Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes: A History of the Modern Body (1800-1950);
To Do No Harm: Medical Ethics and Patient Rights in the Modern World, 1800-2000;
From 'Madness' to Mindfulness: Mental Health since 1850;
Terror, Murder and Bloodshed: The Renaissance in Italy and beyond, c. 1400- c. 1550;
The American Revolution;
Cultural History of the Great War: Britain, France and Germany in Comparison;
The Hundred Years' War, c. 1337-1453;
The Nature of Command;
Capitalism, Classes, Cultures & Conflicts;
Conquests, Cultures and Identities: England AD 800-1100;
From Mercenaries to Freedom Fighters: Transnational Soldiering, c. 1700-2020;
Ireland: A Military History since 1689;
Liberation Struggles in Southern Africa;
Loyalists: The Wrong Side of the American Independence;
Making Room for Medicine: Medical Space, Environment and Health;
Napoleon and the World, 1799-1815;
Saints, Relics & Churches in Medieval Europe, C. 500-1500;
Sex, Health and Deviance in Britain since 1800;
The Carolingians and the Invention of Order;
The Eternal Nazi: Global Legacies of the Third Reich;
The International History of the Vietnam Wars;
The Legacy of the Second World War;
The Renaissance: Nature, Magic and Knowledge;
The Spanish Second Republic and Civil War, 1931-1939;
War, Peace and Diplomacy in the Late Middle Ages, c. 1200 - c. 1450.