Archaeology and History of the Roman provincesfull time
Master of Arts
Master
Degree2 semesters
Standard period of study (amount)
Frankfurt am Main
Location
expired (Germans and inhabitants)
February 2025 (Non-EU)
Overview and admission
Study Type
graduate
Admission semester
Summer and Winter Semester
Area of study
Archaeology
Focus
Provinces of the Western Part of the Roman Empire, Roman Provinces, Western Roman Empire, Material, Spiritual and Religious Culture, Documentation of Natural Conditions, General Roman Provinces, Materials Practice, Research Practice, Current Research
Annotation
Application deadline: 01.12. - 28.02. for the summer semester 01.06. - 31.08. for the winter semester
Admission modus
Without admission restriction
Admission requirements
Proof of a Bachelor's degree in Archaeology and History of the Roman Provinces or in the same subject area with a standard period of study of eight semesters or proof of a Bachelor's degree in Archaeology and History of the Roman Provinces or in the same subject area with a standard period of study of six semesters or proof of a degree that is at least equivalent at a German university or a German university of applied sciences in a related subject area with a standard period of study of at least six semesters or proof of a foreign degree that is at least equivalent in the same or a related subject area with a standard period of study of at least six semesters.
Lecture period
- 22.04.2025 - 25.07.2025
- 13.10.2025 - 13.02.2026
Application deadlines
Winter semester (2025/2026)
Enrollment deadline for Germans and foreign students
as per letter of acceptance
Deadlines for international students from countries that are not members of the European Union
01.06.2025 - 31.08.2025 (Universitywide deadline)
Application deadline for Germans and inhabitants
Expired
Summer semester (2025)
Deadlines for international students from countries that are not members of the European Union
01.12.2024 - 28.02.2025 (Universitywide deadline)
Languages of instruction
Main language
German