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Blood and Smoke: New Perspectives on Religion in Ancient Rome

Course
AN2045
Master’s level
15 credits (ECTS)
Study pace
100%
Time
Day
Location
Göteborg
Study form
Campus
Language
English
Duration
-
Application period
-
Application code
GU-20042
Tuition
Full education cost: 24 000 SEK
First payment: 24 000 SEK

No fees are charged for EU and EEA citizens, Swedish residence permit holders and exchange students.

More information about tuition fees

About

Do You Want to Understand How Religion Shaped Life in Ancient Rome?

From everyday rituals to the grand ceremonies of the Empire, Roman religion was anything but simple. It was colorful, loud, and full of scents, animals, gods, and people. Religion permeated all aspects of Roman society—from private prayers at home to public rituals in temples and city streets. Children learned to pray and sacrifice from an early age, and each stage of life was marked by religious rites.

This course offers you the opportunity to deepen your understanding of Roman religion, from the beginning of the Republic to the fall of the Empire (c. 509 BCE – 476 CE).

In the course, you will:

Explore ancient texts, inscriptions, coins, buildings, and sculptures (all texts are provided in translation, with the option to read in Greek and Latin)

Analyze modern scholarship on Roman religion

Apply anthropological, cognitive, and psychological perpectives to understand belief and ritual

By combining ancient sources with contemporary theoretical perspectives, you will gain tools to understand religion as lived experience—not just as ideas, but as actions, emotions, and social structures.

The course can be taken as a stand-alone module or as part of elective studies within a Master's degree.  

Prerequisites and selection

Entry requirements

For entry to the course a bachelor's degree is required in one of the following fields: Classical Archaeology and/or Ancient History, Archaeology, Classics, History, or Cultural Heritage Studies.

Selection

Selection is based upon the number of credits from previous university studies, maximum 285 credits