History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese)
BA (Hons)
Key information
Key information for 2026-27
Key information for 2027-28
Course Overview
This BA History and Language is a carefully structured, wide-ranging course combining history, culture and language study. Alongside developing the critical and analytical skills for assessing historical evidence and questioning conventional wisdom on the past, you will also learn to formulate and communicate your own ideas effectively in English and in your chosen language of study.
-
Why choose this course?
- Birkbeck has one of the very few schools in the UK to include archaeologists, classicists and historians working on every period from prehistoric humans to Ancient Greece to medieval, early modern and modern societies.
- It offers you modules that will hone your broader analytical, critical and writing skills, train you in collaborative discussion and debate, and develop your research skills.
- As well as the chance to pursue your interests in British, Irish, European and global history, and explore themes within histories of ‘race’, migration, gender and sexuality, you will have the opportunity to take modules from allied disciplines like politics and geography.
- You will also become competent in a modern foreign language, choosing from French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean or Mandarin Chinese, and study the culture associated with that language.
-
What will I learn?
You will acquire wide-ranging knowledge of the history of different nations, periods and civilisations, learn how to assess historical evidence critically and master the process of scholarly argumentation and writing.
You will gain skills in:
- critically analysing narratives about the past and its role in the present across a range of contexts
- understanding and interrogating primary and secondary sources in discussion and writing
- navigating archives, collections, oral history sources and libraries.
The language component of this course complements these skills by training you in one of a range of important modern languages and the cultures in which they are spoken. It will equip you to reach near-native standard in French, German, Italian or Spanish, and upper-intermediate or advanced level in Japanese, depending on your starting level. If you opt to study either Korean or Mandarin Chinese, your final degree award will be a ‘with’ degree, so for example BA History with Korean, because we currently offer these languages up to intermediate level only.
This dual competence will help ensure your access to an extensive range of careers and fields of further study, including academic research, curatorship, journalism, translation and creative writing.
-
How will I learn?
History teaching on this course combines lectures from our leading academics who will introduce you to the critical ideas, debates and figures of the past, with seminars where you will pursue collaborative knowledge alongside your fellow students.
Language teaching gives you plenty of opportunities to participate actively and interact with your peers as well as with our experienced tutors. It is also delivered in the target language, allowing you full immersion in your chosen linguistic area.
This course is available to study full- or part-time with classes taking place in the evening.
-
How often will I attend classes?
Full-time: Three to four evenings a week, October to July.
Part-time: Two to three evenings a week, October to July.
-
Foundation year
If you opt for the Foundation Year route, this will fully prepare you for undergraduate study during an additional year (full-time) or two years (part-time) of supported study. This option is ideal if you are returning to study after a gap, if you have not previously studied the relevant subjects, or if you didn't achieve the grades you need for a place on your chosen undergraduate degree.
Once you successfully complete your Foundation Year studies, you will automatically advance onto the main full-time degree.
-
Pathways
This course is a pathway of BA History
-
Course disclaimer
Birkbeck makes all reasonable efforts to deliver educational services, modules and programmes of study as described on our website. In the event that there are material changes to our offering (for example, due to matters beyond our control), we will update applicant and student facing information as quickly as possible and offer alternatives to applicants, offer-holders and current students.
Most of our courses are taught in the evenings, however some of our courses offer a daytime timetable. Where there is an option to attend daytime teaching sessions, this is stated in the How will I learn? section.
More Highlights
- Birkbeck was ranked in the top eight universities in the UK for its History research in the 2021 Research Excellence Framework.
- Situated in historic Bloomsbury, we are at the heart of academic London with access to unparalleled research resources. Very close by are: the Institute of Historical Research and the Institute of Classical Studies, with their specialist libraries, training facilities and seminars; the British Museum and other world-class galleries and museums; and the British Library, the largest national library in the world.
- The School of Historical Studies at Birkbeck is home to thriving student societies and a number of affiliated research centres that actively run seminars, conferences and other events where some of the world's best scholars present their latest research.
- Get a flavour of our teaching and research in this area through a wide range of free online and in-person seminars, workshops and tasters; also check out events at the Raphael Samuel History Centre, a leading centre for public history.
- Ours is a community of scholars with shared interests in interdisciplinary topics and cross-cultural research. Our affiliated research centres, the Centre for French, Francophone and Comparative Studies (CFFCS) and the Centre for Iberian and Latin American Visual Studies (CILAVS), provide an important platform for this exchange. We also convene the Eighteenth-Century Research Group.
Modules and Teaching
-
Starting in October 2026
-
Three years full-time, on campus
Course structure
You must complete modules worth a total of 360 credits.
Year 1
- Compulsory module: Approaching the Past
- Language learning module 1, 2, 3 or 4
- Two options in history or history and language-specific culture
Year 2
- Compulsory module: Exploring the Past
- Language learning module 2, 3, 4 or 5
- History option
- Choose between:
- a language-specific culture option
- a comparative culture option, e.g. Reading Transnational Cultures
Year 3
- Language learning module 3, 4 or 5/Language-specific culture option if a language 5 module is taken in Year 2
- One or two language-specific culture options
- Dissertation: Writing the Past
Depending on entry level, a maximum of three of the language modules will be from one of the languages on offer, forming a language pathway.
Compulsory modules
History option modules
- Britannia's Embrace: The British Empire and the World
- Crime, Poverty and Protest in England and Beyond, 1500-1800
- Crossing Borders: Passports, Bodies and the State, 1600 to Today
- Global Environmental Histories
- Histories of Magic and Witchcraft in the Pre-Modern World (Level 5)
- Intimate Britain: Family, Society and Culture, 1832-1918
- Italy and the World: Conflict and the Incomplete Nation, 1815-present
- Late Medieval and Early Modern London: Community, Politics and Religion
- London 1600-2000: people and power in the making of a global city
- Mind, Body, Self from Antiquity to the Present
- The Ancient World
- The Birth of a Superpower: China from 1900 to the Present Day
- The Cold War: A Global History
- The Colonial Gaze: Western Perceptions of Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 1600-1960
- The Early Modern World, 1500-1800: Reformations and Revolutions
- The Holocaust's Shadow: Germany and the Jews, 1871 to the present
- The Medieval World: From Constantine to the Khans
- The Modern World
- The Third Reich
Language learning modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- Chinese 2 (Level 4)
- Chinese 3 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Korean 2 (Level 4)
- Korean 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
Comparative culture option modules
- Cities and Cultures: Urban Experience in Comparative Perspective (Level 5)
- Culture and Image
- Culture and Text: 'Imagined Communities'
- Reading Transnational Cultures (Level 5)
- Representations of Gender, Love and Sexuality (Level 5)
- Word and Image: Creative Encounters across Cultures and Media (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: French studies
- Contemporary Literature in French (Level 5)
- Fictions of Enlightenment (Level 5)
- Masterpieces of French Literature and Culture: From the Enlightenment to Postmodernity (Level 5)
- Poetics, Politics, History: Themes in African and Caribbean Literatures in French (Level 5)
- The French Novel of Disillusionment (Level 5)
- Voice, Identity, Gender: Women's Writing in France (Level 6)
Language-specific culture option modules: Italian and German studies
- Berlin since 1945: History and Culture (Level 6)
- Culture in the Weimar Republic (Level 6)
- German and Italian Fascism: History, Culture and Memory (Level 5)
- Sex, survival and la dolce vita: Neorealist to Contemporary Italian Film (level 6)
- Telling the Twentieth Century: Sexuality, Race and Storytelling in Twentieth Century Italian Literature & Film (Level 6)
- The German Novelle
- Transformation, Transgression and Tradition: German and Italian Culture across the Centuries (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: Japanese studies
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Culture and Society
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Linguistics and Translation
- Contemporary Literature in French (Level 5)
- Manga and Anime (Level 6)
- Popular Culture of East Asia (Level 5)
- Theorising Japanese Cinema
Language-specific culture option modules: Spanish and Latin American studies
- Approaches to Spanish Culture and Society (Level 6)
- Culture, Space and the Environment in Brazil (Level 6)
- Iberian Political Cultures: Multilingual Approaches to 20th and 21st Century Spain (Level 6)
- Survey of Spanish Film (Level 5)
- The Auteurist Tradition in Spanish Cinema
- The Spanish Noir: Crime and Detection in Contemporary Fiction (Level 6)
- The Urban Experience in Brazil
- Visual Cultures of Travel and Exploration in Latin America (Level 5)
Please note, the language modules listed above are for Year 1 only; other language modules are available. Option modules are indicative and may change each year.
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
Four years part-time, on campus
Course structure
You must complete modules worth a total of 360 credits.
Year 1
- Compulsory module: Approaching the Past
- Language learning module 1, 2, 3 or 4
- History option
Year 2
- Language learning module 2, 3, 4 or 5
- Two history options or a history and a language-specific culture option
Year 3
- Compulsory module: Exploring the Past
- Language learning module 3, 4 or 5/Language-specific culture option(s) if a language 5 module is taken in Year 2
- Choose between:
- a language-specific culture option
- a comparative culture option, e.g. Reading Transnational Cultures
Year 4
- Language module 3, 4 or 5/Language-specific culture option(s) if the language pathway has been completed
- Dissertation: Writing the Past
Depending on entry level, a maximum of three of the language modules will be from one of the languages on offer, forming a language pathway.
Compulsory modules
History option modules
- Britannia's Embrace: The British Empire and the World
- Crime, Poverty and Protest in England and Beyond, 1500-1800
- Crossing Borders: Passports, Bodies and the State, 1600 to Today
- Global Environmental Histories
- Histories of Magic and Witchcraft in the Pre-Modern World (Level 5)
- Intimate Britain: Family, Society and Culture, 1832-1918
- Italy and the World: Conflict and the Incomplete Nation, 1815-present
- Late Medieval and Early Modern London: Community, Politics and Religion
- London 1600-2000: people and power in the making of a global city
- Mind, Body, Self from Antiquity to the Present
- The Ancient World
- The Birth of a Superpower: China from 1900 to the Present Day
- The Cold War: A Global History
- The Colonial Gaze: Western Perceptions of Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 1600-1960
- The Early Modern World, 1500-1800: Reformations and Revolutions
- The Holocaust's Shadow: Germany and the Jews, 1871 to the present
- The Medieval World: From Constantine to the Khans
- The Modern World
- The Third Reich
Language learning modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- Chinese 2 (Level 4)
- Chinese 3 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Korean 2 (Level 4)
- Korean 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
Comparative culture option modules
- Cities and Cultures: Urban Experience in Comparative Perspective (Level 5)
- Culture and Image
- Culture and Text: 'Imagined Communities'
- Reading Transnational Cultures (Level 5)
- Representations of Gender, Love and Sexuality (Level 5)
- Word and Image: Creative Encounters across Cultures and Media (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: French studies
- Contemporary Literature in French (Level 5)
- Fictions of Enlightenment (Level 5)
- Masterpieces of French Literature and Culture: From the Enlightenment to Postmodernity (Level 5)
- Poetics, Politics, History: Themes in African and Caribbean Literatures in French (Level 5)
- The French Novel of Disillusionment (Level 5)
- Voice, Identity, Gender: Women's Writing in France (Level 6)
Language-specific culture option modules: Italian and German studies
- Berlin since 1945: History and Culture (Level 6)
- Culture in the Weimar Republic (Level 6)
- German and Italian Fascism: History, Culture and Memory (Level 5)
- Sex, survival and la dolce vita: Neorealist to Contemporary Italian Film (level 6)
- Telling the Twentieth Century: Sexuality, Race and Storytelling in Twentieth Century Italian Literature & Film (Level 6)
- The German Novelle
- Transformation, Transgression and Tradition: German and Italian Culture across the Centuries (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: Japanese studies
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Culture and Society
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Linguistics and Translation
- Contemporary Literature in French (Level 5)
- Manga and Anime (Level 6)
- Popular Culture of East Asia (Level 5)
- Theorising Japanese Cinema
Language-specific culture option modules: Spanish and Latin American studies
- Approaches to Spanish Culture and Society (Level 6)
- Culture, Space and the Environment in Brazil (Level 6)
- Iberian Political Cultures: Multilingual Approaches to 20th and 21st Century Spain (Level 6)
- Survey of Spanish Film (Level 5)
- The Auteurist Tradition in Spanish Cinema
- The Spanish Noir: Crime and Detection in Contemporary Fiction (Level 6)
- The Urban Experience in Brazil
- Visual Cultures of Travel and Exploration in Latin America (Level 5)
Please note, the language modules listed above are for Year 1 only; other language modules are available. Option modules are indicative and may change each year.
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
Four years full-time, on campus, with Foundation Year
Course structure
For the Foundation Year, you take three core modules and an option module to a total of 120 credits.
If you successfully complete the year, you will automatically advance on to the three-year, full-time, evening study BA History and Language.
Foundation Year core modules
Foundation Year option modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
- The Humanities and Social Sciences: Global Issues in Historical Perspective
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
Six years part-time, on campus, with Foundation Year
Course structure
Our part-time Foundation Year degrees allow you to spread out your Foundation Year studies over two years. As the 'Foundation Year' is made up of 120 credits, as a part-time student you can take 60 credits in each of your first and second years before starting the main four-year BA History and Language. This means that you can take six years to complete the part-time degree with Foundation Year.
You take two core modules in Foundation Year 1 and a core and option module in Foundation Year 2.
If you successfully complete these modules, you will automatically advance on to our four-year, part-time, evening study BA History and Language.
Foundation Year 1 core modules
Foundation Year 2 core module
Foundation Year 2 option modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
- The Humanities and Social Sciences: Global Issues in Historical Perspective
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
-
Starting in October 2027
-
Three years full-time, on campus
Course structure
You must complete modules worth a total of 360 credits.
Year 1
- Compulsory module: Approaching the Past
- Language learning module 1, 2, 3 or 4
- Two options in history or history and language-specific culture
Year 2
- Compulsory module: Exploring the Past
- Language learning module 2, 3, 4 or 5
- History option
- Choose between:
- a language-specific culture option
- Comparative Themes in the Novel or Themes in European and Japanese Cinema option
- a comparative culture option, e.g. Reading Transnational Cultures
Year 3
- Language learning module 3, 4 or 5/Language-specific culture option if a language 5 module is taken in Year 2
- One or two language-specific culture options
- Dissertation: Writing the Past
Depending on entry level, a maximum of three of the language modules will be from one of the languages on offer, forming a language pathway.
Compulsory modules
History option modules
- Britannia's Embrace: The British Empire and the World
- Crime, Poverty and Protest in England and Beyond, 1500-1800
- Crossing Borders: Passports, Bodies and the State, 1600 to Today
- Global Environmental Histories
- Histories of Magic and Witchcraft in the Pre-Modern World (Level 5)
- Intimate Britain: Family, Society and Culture, 1832-1918
- Italy and the World: Conflict and the Incomplete Nation, 1815-present
- Late Medieval and Early Modern London: Community, Politics and Religion
- London 1600-2000: people and power in the making of a global city
- Mind, Body, Self from Antiquity to the Present
- The Ancient World
- The Birth of a Superpower: China from 1900 to the Present Day
- The Cold War: A Global History
- The Colonial Gaze: Western Perceptions of Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 1600-1960
- The Early Modern World, 1500-1800: Reformations and Revolutions
- The Holocaust's Shadow: Germany and the Jews, 1871 to the present
- The Medieval World: From Constantine to the Khans
- The Modern World
- The Third Reich
Language learning modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- Chinese 2 (Level 4)
- Chinese 3 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Korean 2 (Level 4)
- Korean 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
Comparative culture option modules
- Cities and Cultures: Urban Experience in Comparative Perspective (Level 5)
- Culture and Image
- Culture and Text: 'Imagined Communities'
- Reading Transnational Cultures (Level 5)
- Representations of Gender, Love and Sexuality (Level 5)
- Word and Image: Creative Encounters across Cultures and Media (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: French studies
- Contemporary Literature in French (Level 5)
- Fictions of Enlightenment (Level 5)
- Masterpieces of French Literature and Culture: From the Enlightenment to Postmodernity (Level 5)
- Poetics, Politics, History: Themes in African and Caribbean Literatures in French (Level 5)
- The French Novel of Disillusionment (Level 5)
- Voice, Identity, Gender: Women's Writing in France (Level 6)
Language-specific culture option modules: Italian and German studies
- Berlin since 1945: History and Culture (Level 6)
- Culture in the Weimar Republic (Level 6)
- German and Italian Fascism: History, Culture and Memory (Level 5)
- Sex, survival and la dolce vita: Neorealist to Contemporary Italian Film (level 6)
- Telling the Twentieth Century: Sexuality, Race and Storytelling in Twentieth Century Italian Literature & Film (Level 6)
- The German Novelle
- Transformation, Transgression and Tradition: German and Italian Culture across the Centuries (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: Japanese studies
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Culture and Society
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Linguistics and Translation
- Manga and Anime (Level 6)
- Popular Culture of East Asia (Level 5)
- Theorising Japanese Cinema
Language-specific culture option modules: Spanish and Latin American studies
- Approaches to Spanish Culture and Society (Level 6)
- Culture, Space and the Environment in Brazil (Level 6)
- Iberian Political Cultures: Multilingual Approaches to 20th and 21st Century Spain (Level 6)
- Survey of Spanish Film (Level 5)
- The Auteurist Tradition in Spanish Cinema
- The Spanish Noir: Crime and Detection in Contemporary Fiction (Level 6)
- The Urban Experience in Brazil
- Visual Cultures of Travel and Exploration in Latin America (Level 5)
Please note, the language modules listed above are for Year 1 only; other language modules are available. Option modules are indicative and may change each year.
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
Four years part-time, on campus
Course structure
You must complete modules worth a total of 360 credits.
Year 1
- Compulsory module: Approaching the Past
- Language learning module 1, 2, 3 or 4
- History option
Year 2
- Language learning module 2, 3, 4 or 5
- Two history options or a history and a language-specific culture option
Year 3
- Compulsory module: Exploring the Past
- Language learning module 3, 4 or 5/Language-specific culture option(s) if a language 5 module is taken in Year 2
- Choose between:
- a language-specific culture option
- Comparative Themes in the Novel or Themes in European and Japanese Cinema option
- a comparative culture option, e.g. Reading Transnational Cultures
Year 4
- Language module 3, 4 or 5/Language-specific culture option(s) if the language pathway has been completed
- Dissertation: Writing the Past
Depending on entry level, a maximum of three of the language modules will be from one of the languages on offer, forming a language pathway.
Compulsory modules
History option modules
- Britannia's Embrace: The British Empire and the World
- Crime, Poverty and Protest in England and Beyond, 1500-1800
- Crossing Borders: Passports, Bodies and the State, 1600 to Today
- Global Environmental Histories
- Histories of Magic and Witchcraft in the Pre-Modern World (Level 5)
- Intimate Britain: Family, Society and Culture, 1832-1918
- Italy and the World: Conflict and the Incomplete Nation, 1815-present
- Late Medieval and Early Modern London: Community, Politics and Religion
- London 1600-2000: people and power in the making of a global city
- Mind, Body, Self from Antiquity to the Present
- The Ancient World
- The Birth of a Superpower: China from 1900 to the Present Day
- The Cold War: A Global History
- The Colonial Gaze: Western Perceptions of Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 1600-1960
- The Early Modern World, 1500-1800: Reformations and Revolutions
- The Holocaust's Shadow: Germany and the Jews, 1871 to the present
- The Medieval World: From Constantine to the Khans
- The Modern World
- The Third Reich
Language learning modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- Chinese 2 (Level 4)
- Chinese 3 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Korean 2 (Level 4)
- Korean 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
Comparative culture option modules
- Cities and Cultures: Urban Experience in Comparative Perspective (Level 5)
- Culture and Image
- Culture and Text: 'Imagined Communities'
- Reading Transnational Cultures (Level 5)
- Representations of Gender, Love and Sexuality (Level 5)
- Word and Image: Creative Encounters across Cultures and Media (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: French studies
- Contemporary Literature in French (Level 5)
- Fictions of Enlightenment (Level 5)
- Masterpieces of French Literature and Culture: From the Enlightenment to Postmodernity (Level 5)
- Poetics, Politics, History: Themes in African and Caribbean Literatures in French (Level 5)
- The French Novel of Disillusionment (Level 5)
- Voice, Identity, Gender: Women's Writing in France (Level 6)
Language-specific culture option modules: Italian and German studies
- Berlin since 1945: History and Culture (Level 6)
- Culture in the Weimar Republic (Level 6)
- German and Italian Fascism: History, Culture and Memory (Level 5)
- Sex, survival and la dolce vita: Neorealist to Contemporary Italian Film (level 6)
- Telling the Twentieth Century: Sexuality, Race and Storytelling in Twentieth Century Italian Literature & Film (Level 6)
- The German Novelle
- Transformation, Transgression and Tradition: German and Italian Culture across the Centuries (Level 5)
Language-specific culture option modules: Japanese studies
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Culture and Society
- Advanced Seminar in Japanese Linguistics and Translation
- Manga and Anime (Level 6)
- Popular Culture of East Asia (Level 5)
- Theorising Japanese Cinema
Language-specific culture option modules: Spanish and Latin American studies
- Approaches to Spanish Culture and Society (Level 6)
- Culture, Space and the Environment in Brazil (Level 6)
- Iberian Political Cultures: Multilingual Approaches to 20th and 21st Century Spain (Level 6)
- Survey of Spanish Film (Level 5)
- The Auteurist Tradition in Spanish Cinema
- The Spanish Noir: Crime and Detection in Contemporary Fiction (Level 6)
- The Urban Experience in Brazil
- Visual Cultures of Travel and Exploration in Latin America (Level 5)
Please note, the language modules listed above are for Year 1 only; other language modules are available. Option modules are indicative and may change each year.
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
Four years full-time, on campus, with Foundation Year
Course structure
For the Foundation Year, you take three core modules and an option module to a total of 120 credits.
If you successfully complete the year, you will automatically advance on to the three-year, full-time, evening study BA History and Language.
Foundation Year core modules
Foundation Year option modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
- The Humanities and Social Sciences: Global Issues in Historical Perspective
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
Six years part-time, on campus, with Foundation Year
Course structure
Our part-time Foundation Year degrees allow you to spread out your Foundation Year studies over two years. As the 'Foundation Year' is made up of 120 credits, as a part-time student you can take 60 credits in each of your first and second years before starting the main four-year BA History and Language. This means that you can take six years to complete the part-time degree with Foundation Year.
You take two core modules in Foundation Year 1 and a core and option module in Foundation Year 2.
If you successfully complete these modules, you will automatically advance on to our four-year, part-time, evening study BA History and Language.
Foundation Year 1 core modules
Foundation Year 2 core module
Foundation Year 2 option modules
- Chinese 1 (Level 4)
- French 1
- French 2
- French 3 (Level 4)
- French 4 (Level 4)
- German 1
- German 2
- German 3 (Level 4)
- German 4 (Level 4)
- Italian 1
- Italian 2
- Italian 3 (Level 4)
- Italian 4 (Level 4)
- Japanese 1 (Level 4)
- Japanese 2 (Level 4)
- Japanese 3 (Level 4)
- Japanese 4 (Level 4)
- Korean 1 (Level 4)
- Spanish 1
- Spanish 2
- Spanish 3 (Level 4)
- Spanish 4 (Level 4)
- The Humanities and Social Sciences: Global Issues in Historical Perspective
If you complete more than 150 credits in the language you will graduate with:
- BA History and French
- BA History and German
- BA History and Italian
- BA History and Japanese, or
- BA History and Spanish
Otherwise the award will be BA History with French, BA History with Korean etc.
-
-
Teaching
We encourage innovative and engaging ways of teaching to help ensure you have the best learning experience and provide a range of different modes of learning to help you juggle study with work and other commitments.
What are the methods of teaching?
A combination of lectures and seminars. Modules at all levels include the analysis of primary and secondary text sources, as well as images, material culture, music and film.
The Foundation Year is composed mainly of interactive lectures for large groups and tutorial-style classes that support the development of your knowledge, skills, confidence and self-awareness.
-
How will I be assessed?
This history and language degree is formed of diverse forms of assessment, including source analyses, quizzes, presentations, in-class written tests, oral and listening comprehension and research essays, all designed to build your skills cumulatively across the course.
Every module you take includes some form of assessment.
Please see individual modules for more details.
Find out more about assessment at Birkbeck, including guidance on assessment, feedback and our assessment offences policy.
Entry Requirements
We welcome applicants without traditional entry qualifications as we base decisions on our own assessment of qualifications, knowledge and previous work experience. We may waive formal entry requirements based on judgement of academic potential.
-
Full-time study - how many UCAS points do I need?
- Three years full-time: 112 points (e.g. A-levels BBC)
- Four years full-time with Foundation Year: 48 points
For full-time study on this course, you apply via UCAS. The UCAS tariff score applies if you have recently studied a qualification that has a UCAS tariff equivalence. UCAS provides a tariff calculator for you to work out what your qualification is worth.
-
Part-time study
For part-time study our standard requirements are a minimum of two A-levels or equivalent.
-
Alternative entry routes
Pearson BTEC Level 3 National Extended Diploma: DMM.
-
What are the English language requirements?
If English is not your first language or you have not previously studied in English, our usual requirement is the equivalent of an International English Language Testing System (IELTS Academic Test) score of 6.5, with not less than 6.0 in each of the sub-tests. We also accept other English language tests.
If you don't meet the minimum English language requirements, please contact us or see our international study skills page for more details about how we can help.
Visit the International section of our website to find out more about our English language entry requirements and relevant requirements by country.
-
What are the visa and funding requirements?
If you are not from the UK and you do not already have residency here, you may need to apply for a visa.
The visa you apply for varies according to the length of your course:
- Courses of more than six months' duration: Student visa
- Courses of less than six months' duration: Standard Visitor visa
International students who require a Student visa should apply to study on our courses full-time as these qualify for Student visa sponsorship. If you are living in the UK on a Student visa, you will not be eligible to enrol to study part-time courses at Birkbeck (with the exception of some modules).
As a Student visa student, you should also apply to study on campus only, as online and flexible options of study (if they are available for your course) may affect the conditions of your visa.
For full information, read our visa information for international students page.
Please also visit the international section of our website to find out more about relevant visa and funding requirements by country.
Please note students receiving US Federal Aid are only able to apply for in-person, on-campus programmes which will have no elements of online study.
-
Credits and accredited prior learning (APL)
If you have studied at university (or have an HND or Foundation Degree), you may have accumulated credits. It may be possible to transfer these from your previous study to Birkbeck or another institution.
Fees
Three years full-time, on campus
Academic year 2026-27, starting in October 2026
Full-time home students: £9,790 per year
Full-time international students: £18,500 per year
Academic year 2027-28, starting in October 2027
Full-time home students: £10,050 per year
Full-time international students: £19,320 per year
Four years part-time, on campus
Academic year 2026-27, starting in October 2026
Part-time home students: £7,335 per year
Part-time international students: £13,875 per year
Academic year 2027-28, starting in October 2027
Part-time home students: £7,530 per year
Part-time international students: £14,490 per year
Four years full-time with Foundation Year, on campus
Academic year 2026-27, starting in October 2026
Full-time home students, Year 1: £5,760 per year
Full-time international students, Year 1: £18,500 per year
Full-time home students, Year 2+: £9,790 per year
Full-time international students, Year 2+: £18,500 per year
Academic year 2027-28, starting in October 2027
Full-time home students, Year 1: £5,760 per year
Full-time international students, Year 1: £19,320 per year
Full-time home students, Year 2+: £10,050 per year
Full-time international students, Year 2+: £19,320 per year
Six years part-time with Foundation Year, on campus
Academic year 2026-27, starting in October 2026
Part-time home students, Year 1&2: £2,880 per year
Part-time international students, Year 1&2: £9,250 per year
Part-time home students, Year 3+: £7,335 per year
Part-time international students, Year 3+: £13,875 per year
Academic year 2027-28, starting in October 2027
Part-time home students, Year 1&2: £2,880 per year
Part-time international students, Year 1&2: £9,660 per year
Part-time home students, Year 3+: £7,530 per year
Part-time international students, Year 3+: £14,490 per year
Students are charged a tuition fee in each year of their course. Tuition fees for students continuing their course may be subject to annual inflationary increases. For more information, please see our Fees Policy.
-
Birkbeck's Lifelong Learning Guarantee
If you've studied at Birkbeck before and successfully completed an award with us, take advantage of our Lifelong Learning Guarantee to gain a reduction on the tuition fee of this course.
-
Tuition fees and maintenance loans
Eligible full-time and part-time students from the UK don't have to pay any tuition fees upfront, as government loans are available to cover them.
Maintenance loans are also available for eligible full-time and part-time UK students, to help cover living costs, such as accommodation, food, travel, books and study materials. The amount you receive is means-tested and depends on where you live and study and your household income.
-
Can I apply for an international scholarship?
We provide a range of scholarships for eligible international students, including our Global Future Scholarship. View Birkbeck's available scholarships.
Birkbeck's campus is located in the historic and vibrant Bloomsbury area of central London - named one of the best places to live in London 2025 by The Times.
Careers and employability
On successfully graduating from this BA History and Language you will have gained an array of important transferable skills, including:
- locating, contextualising and interpreting a range of historical sources
- assessing reliability of different varieties of evidence
- presenting your findings
- speaking, reading and writing in your chosen language
- knowledge about the lands and peoples associated with your chosen language.
A degree in history and language prepares you for any role which benefits from skills in research, communication and engagement. Graduates can work across professions and disciplines in education, business, the arts, museums and galleries, the heritage sector, social work or government. Possible professions include:
- heritage manager
- museum/gallery curator
- archivist
- translator
- higher education lecturer
- primary/secondary school teacher.
We offer a comprehensive careers service - Careers and Enterprise - your career partner during your time at Birkbeck and beyond. At every stage of your career journey, we empower you to take ownership of your future, helping you to make the connection between your experience, education and future ambitions.
Student Support
Birkbeck offers study, learning and wellbeing support to undergraduate and postgraduate students to help them succeed.
Our Learning Development Service provides a lively programme of free weekly workshops building essential academic skills - from writing and critical thinking to maths and referencing - offering flexible sessions, practical tips, and online resources to boost your skills and confidence.
Our Disability and Mental Health Service can support you if you have disabilities, specific learning differences, mental health conditions or neurodivergence, by providing practical support to help you achieve your academic potential.
Our Counselling Service aims to support you with any emotional and psychological difficulties that are affecting your experience and engagement with your studies at university. It is a free, non-judgemental and confidential service which consists of a consultation process followed by time limited counselling contact.
Find out more about the full range of student services we offer at Birkbeck.
How to Apply
You apply via UCAS for our full-time undergraduate courses or directly to Birkbeck for our part-time undergraduate courses. For more detailed, step-by-step guidance on how to apply, visit our How to apply page.
-
How do I apply to study full-time (UCAS entry)?
If you are applying for a full-time undergraduate course at Birkbeck you apply through UCAS. Use the Apply now button on this course page which will direct you to UCAS. There you will be prompted to sign in and create an account. You will have to give UCAS a few personal details, including your name, address and date of birth, and then you can start working on your application.
The first UCAS deadline is in January, and the majority of university applications through UCAS are made by then. Find the exact deadline date on the UCAS website. We welcome applications outside of the UCAS deadlines, so you can still apply through UCAS after the January deadline, depending on the availability of places. We also take late applications via the UCAS Clearing system in August.
-
How do I apply to study part-time?
If you are applying for a part-time undergraduate course (usually four or six years), you apply directly to Birkbeck online by using the Apply now button. You will need to prove your identity when you apply.
Please note that online application opens in September.
-
When should I apply?
You are strongly advised to apply now, to ensure there are still places left, and to give you enough time to complete the admissions process, to arrange funding and to enrol.
You don't need to complete your current programme of study before you apply - Birkbeck can offer you a place that is conditional on your results.
-
How can I get help with my application?
Get all the information you need about the application, admission and enrolment process at Birkbeck.
Our online personal statement tool will guide you through every step of writing the personal statement part of your application.
-
International agents
If you are an international agent applying to Birkbeck on behalf of an international student, please use Birkbeck's agent portal.
Study routes for History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons))
Please select a study route below to continue your application.
Please note that international students who require a Student visa to study in the UK can only apply for full-time, on campus routes.
Important: Applications to study part-time in 2027/28 will open in October 2026.
2026-27
Full-time
-
Three years full-time, on campus starting in October 2026
Apply now via Clearing History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons)) Three years full-time, on campus starting in October 2026 -
Four years full-time, on campus with Foundation Year starting in October 2026
Apply now via Clearing History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons)) Four years full-time, on campus with Foundation Year starting in October 2026
Part-time
-
Four years part-time, on campus starting in October 2026
Apply Now History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons)) Four years part-time, on campus starting in October 2026 -
Six years part-time, on campus with Foundation Year starting in October 2026
Apply Now History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons)) Six years part-time, on campus with Foundation Year starting in October 2026
2027-28
Full-time
-
Three years full-time, on campus starting in October 2027
Apply now via UCAS History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons)) Three years full-time, on campus starting in October 2027 -
Four years full-time, on campus with Foundation Year starting in October 2027
Apply now via UCAS History and Language (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Chinese) (BA (Hons)) Four years full-time, on campus with Foundation Year starting in October 2027