

MA Arabic and Medieval History
About this course
Arabic is the language of the Quran, of a vast classical literary and philosophical tradition, and of some 400 million speakers across the Middle East and North Africa today. It is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations, making it strategically significant in diplomacy, journalism, and international affairs. Medieval history, as a discipline, reconstructs the societies, cultures, and political formations of roughly the fifth to the fifteenth centuries, a period in which Arabic-speaking civilisations played a central role in the transmission and development of knowledge in philosophy, medicine, mathematics, and astronomy. The combination of Arabic language and medieval history therefore has an unusually strong internal logic, each discipline enriching the other in ways that neither could achieve alone. This five-year degree at the University of St Andrews combines rigorous Arabic language training with the historical study of the medieval world. You will develop practical competence in both Modern Standard Arabic and an engagement with classical Arabic texts, building the linguistic foundations needed to engage directly with primary sources from the medieval Islamic world. On the history side, you will examine the political, social, religious, and cultural developments of the medieval period across a broad geographical range, with opportunities to explore the connections and contrasts between the Islamic world, Byzantium, and Latin Christendom. The degree develops comparative analytical skills, encouraging you to think across linguistic, cultural, and chronological boundaries. The specialised combination of Arabic and medieval expertise that this degree provides is valued in areas including diplomatic and government work, international journalism, translation and interpreting, academic research, and cultural heritage roles. The depth of linguistic competence developed over five years positions graduates well for work with international organisations, policy bodies, and NGOs engaged with the Arab world. Many graduates proceed to doctoral research in Arabic studies, Islamic history, medieval history, or related fields, where the ability to work with primary sources in Arabic is a significant advantage. Roles in education, museum curation, and cultural diplomacy also draw on the breadth of historical and linguistic understanding the degree develops.
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