Department of History
Durham is a leading British centre for the study of History, ranked as the top UK History Department by the Sunday Times in 2010, and by the Complete University Guide for 2012. Our research expertise and teaching provision extends from the early medieval to recent times, from Britain and Europe (including Russia), to America, Africa and China, and across social, cultural, gender, media, political and economic history.
One of the seven departments which make up the Faculty of Arts & Humanities and located in the historic heart of Durham, the History Department is close to the World Heritage site of Cathedral and Castle. The University has excellent libraries, with archives and book collections of international significance and which provide access to a huge range of online resources, making us a perfect choice for both undergraduate and postgraduate study.
Events at the History Department
Professor Bailey to present his paper 'Globalisation and Chinese education in the Early Twentieth Century' in Shanghai, September 2012
(21 May 2012)
Professor Paul Bailey has been invited to attend and present a paper at a one day workshop organised by the Department of Education, East China Normal University, Shanghai, in late September 2012. The workshop marks the launch of Frontiers of Education in China, an English-language academic journal on Chinese education (past and present) published in China. The paper will be entitled 'Globalisation and Chinese education in the Early Twentieth Century'.
Contact Details
43 North BaileyDurham DH1 3EX
tel: +44 (0)191 334 1040
fax: +44 (0)191 334 1041
IMRS/IMEMS Conference Series Summer 2013
- Early Modern Catholicism
- Intellectual Networks in the Long Seventeenth Century
- Producing Text and Gospel Commentary in Medieval Perspective
Three conferences in June and July will mark the launch of the University’s Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies and the Durham exhibition of the Lindisfarne Gospels, and celebrate the rich resources of the city’s historic libraries – Cosin’s Library, the Cathedral Library, and the Library of Ushaw College.
Full programme details PDF

