History

BA Hons

  • UCAS code V100
  • Entry year 2026 or 2025
  • A level requirements AAB
  • Duration Full time 3 years

We welcome applications from the United States of America

We've put together information and resources to guide your application journey as a student from the United States of America.

Overview

Top reasons to study with us

  • 16

    16th for History

    The Complete University Guide (2025)

  • Internship opportunities at the Richard Institute for Peace Studies

  • Specialist placements in heritage organisations

As a historian at Lancaster, you’ll explore the challenges that confront our world. You'll build the skills to hunt down and analyse evidence to solve these challenges, making your home in a city whose castle, cathedral and cobbled streets are part of the stories you’ll discover. Our expert historians will guide you through hands-on training, as you prepare to take your place in the world.

Why Lancaster?

  • Address the challenges of our world past, present and future, from environmental change to war and conflict, human rights and scientific revolutions
  • Develop your skills through training by expert historians with international reputations
  • Hone expertise in analysis, critical thinking and persuasive argument to prepare you for a range of ambitious careers
  • Study in historic Lancaster, a city steeped in centuries and culture
  • Be inspired by the latest research through our centres in Regional Heritage, War and Diplomacy, and Digital Humanities, and benefit from extensive historical resources and archives

Lancaster’s rich history

The city of Lancaster and its surrounds – from the Lake District to the Bay coastline and the Forest of Bowland – are steeped in history. From Bronze Age stone circles to Viking-age graves and medieval abbeys, and from Roman fort to memorials of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, the region is rich in the living remains of past cultures for you to explore. Over ten centuries, Lancaster’s Norman castle has been a fortress, court and prison, now the heart of a vibrant historic city.

Discover more

Become a historian

Our team of expert historians will guide you through hands-on training in primary source analysis, with one-to-one advice and feedback from expert historians. From your first days at Lancaster, you’ll build your skills, knowledge and confidence in source analysis, critical thinking and argument.

You’ll learn how to understand the world of others: their cultures, values and beliefs. You’ll observe how individuals coalesce – into families, mobs and gangs, into companies and unions, into parties, armies, nations and empires – and know why and how these units break apart.

From the medieval world to the twenty-first century, across Europe, the Americas, Asia and Africa you'll learn how to master understanding of a place, from villages to cities, countries and continents. You’ll see how landscapes have shaped peoples and been shaped in turn, and how populations and lands are ravaged and reformed by war, famine, and flood. And you’ll learn how money, knowledge and technology, people and disease, are moved from one place to the next around the world.

You’ll understand how societies across history have struggled with what it means to be human – how to cure and how to die, when to pardon and to kill, the balance of our rights and what we owe to others.

As a historian, you’ll have honed a special skill: how to seek out evidence, and how to analyse and interpret it – from laws, letters and diaries to paintings, photographs and maps, and physical remnants such as buildings and burial places. Sifting false claims and faulty data, you’ll reveal what that evidence can tell us. With your discoveries, you’ll build the big interpretations that illuminate how humanity carves out its course.

Be inspired by our research

You’ll be trained by our world-class historians, whose research expertise stretches across Britain and Europe, the Americas, Asia and Africa. Lancaster historians work at the cutting edge of the discipline addressing world challenges past and future, from global conflict and trade to the ethics of government and human rights, and from environmental transformations to technological revolutions. This research shapes our high-quality teaching. We invite you to join us at the cutting edge of History.

With Lancaster historians you’ll explore the history of:

  • War and diplomatic relations
  • Rights, crimes and punishments
  • Medicine, science and technology
  • Societies, nations and empires
  • Finance, trade and globalisation
  • Environment, landscape and technologies

Develop your expertise through our History Seminar Series with guest historians from across the UK, and our specialist research centres, where academics, practitioners and students across disciplines gather for public talks, conferences and training.These include:

  • Centre for War and Diplomacy – experts on History, Law, Politics, Contemporary Arts and more provide historical context and strategic analysis of geopolitical challenges
  • Regional Heritage Centre - promoting the social and cultural heritage of North West England
  • Digital Humanities Centre - uniting excellence in spatial humanities, corpus linguistics and natural language processing

Access Lancaster University’s rich archival resources that include thousands of items, from sixteenth-century books from Cartmel Priory to Victorian photography. Investigate regional archives in Preston and Carlisle and join the student-led History Society for organised trips and talks.

Careers

Our world is changing: geopolitical challenges, advances in technology, and demographic transformations create new jobs and reshape existing roles.

As a History graduate, you’ll be skilled in analysing and interpreting evidence, confident, flexible, quick to learn new skills and able to communicate your analysis to others. You’ll know how to present a case with the explanatory power to change another person’s view of the world.

With your awareness of societies across the world, you’ll have the cultural dexterity for a leadership role in government, business or the third sector. Historians are in demand as cabinet ministers, government advisors, intelligence operatives and diplomats, as leaders of the armed forces, in the charity sector and in business, banking and investment analysis.

You'll also develop a high level of creative skills during your History degree: you’ll know how to excite, inspire and inform, how to find the stories that enthral, how to craft your interpretations in nimble prose, and how to win round your audience with expertise and confidence. These talents are prized in the creative sector: in heritage and the arts, in journalism and marketing and as writers and editors.

Read about our Alumni

Previous graduates have pursued successful careers in:

  • Government
  • The Armed Forces
  • Banking and Finance
  • Business and Marketing
  • Creative Industries, including Computer Gaming
  • Journalism
  • Teaching
  • Academia
  • Heritage and Museums

Many of our students take their skills to the next level by continuing with postgraduate studies.

Careers and employability support

Our degrees open up an extremely wide array of career pathways in businesses and organisations, large and small, in the UK and overseas.

We run a paid internship scheme specifically for our arts, humanities and social sciences students, supported by a specialist Employability Team. The team offer individual consultations and tailored application guidance, as well as careers events, development opportunities, and resources.

Whether you have a clear idea of your potential career path or need some help considering the options, our friendly team is on hand.

Lancaster is unique in that every student is eligible to participate in The Lancaster Award which recognises activities such as work experience, community engagement or volunteering and social development. A valuable addition to your CV!

Find out more about Lancaster’s careers events, extensive resources and personal support for Careers and Employability.

Entry requirements

These are the typical grades that you will need to study this course. You may need to have qualifications in relevant subjects. In some cases we may also ask you to attend an interview or submit a portfolio. You must also meet our English language requirements.

Find more about these qualifications and others not shown here

Learn about how we will assess your application

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Contact Admissions

If you are thinking of applying to Lancaster and you would like to ask us a question, please complete our enquiry form and one of our team will get back to you.

International foundation programmes

Delivered in partnership with INTO Lancaster University, our one-year tailored foundation pathways are designed to improve your subject knowledge and English language skills to the level required by a range of Lancaster University degrees. Visit the INTO Lancaster University website for more details and a list of eligible degrees you can progress onto.

Contextual admissions

Contextual admissions could help you gain a place at university if you have faced additional challenges during your education which might have impacted your results. Visit our contextual admissions page to find out about how this works and whether you could be eligible.

Course structure

Enhancing our curriculum

We continually review and enhance our curriculum to ensure we are delivering the best possible learning experience, and to make sure that the subject knowledge and transferable skills you develop will prepare you for your future.

We will publish more detailed information about the structure of this degree course for 2026-entry in June 2025, ahead of our summer undergraduate open days. This will include overviews of the core modules you will take and examples of optional modules which may be available to you.

Fees and funding

We set our fees on an annual basis and the 2026/27 entry fees have not yet been set.

As a guide, our fees in 2025/26 were:

Home International
£9,535 £24,700

Fees and funding information

Additional fees and funding information accordion

Scholarships and bursaries

Details of our scholarships and bursaries for students starting in 2026 are not yet available.

You can use our scholarships for 2025-entry applicants as guidance.

Important information

The information on this site relates primarily to 2026/2027 entry to the University and every effort has been taken to ensure the information is correct at the time of publication.

The University will use all reasonable effort to deliver the courses as described, but the University reserves the right to make changes to advertised courses. In exceptional circumstances that are beyond the University’s reasonable control (Force Majeure Events), we may need to amend the programmes and provision advertised. In this event, the University will take reasonable steps to minimise the disruption to your studies. If a course is withdrawn or if there are any fundamental changes to your course, we will give you reasonable notice and you will be entitled to request that you are considered for an alternative course or withdraw your application. You are advised to revisit our website for up-to-date course information before you submit your application.

More information on limits to the University’s liability can be found in our legal information.

Our Students’ Charter

We believe in the importance of a strong and productive partnership between our students and staff. In order to ensure your time at Lancaster is a positive experience we have worked with the Students’ Union to articulate this relationship and the standards to which the University and its students aspire. View our Charter and other policies.

Undergraduate open days 2025

Our summer and autumn open days will give you Lancaster University in a day. Visit campus and put yourself in the picture.

Undergraduate Open Days
two students sitting and reading on some outdoor steps
  • Virtual tour

    Take five minutes and let us show you what Lancaster has to offer, from our beautiful green campus to our colleges, teaching and sports facilities.

  • Accommodation guide

    Most first-year undergraduate students choose to live on campus, where you’ll find accommodation to suit different preferences and budgets.

  • The city and beyond

    Our historic city is student-friendly and home to a diverse and welcoming community. Beyond the city you'll find a stunning coastline and the picturesque Lake District.