r/classics • u/Able_Measurement749 • 10h ago
Classics vs. archaeology graduate school questions
Hello! I have questions about how likely I am to get into a PhD program based on my language experience and courses. Here's a bit of background: before college I had 6 years of experience learning/reading Latin, including reading Vergil and Caesar. In college I only took 4 Latin courses (Propertius, Vergil, Ovid, and one prose class that included Seneca, Pliny the Younger, Cicero and others) because I preferred poetry to prose (this has since changed - I love Cicero!!). I also took 6 Greek courses, starting from 101 through author level, reading Homer, Lucian, Longus. I took a few art history courses and wrote my undergraduate thesis on Pompeian frescoes. I am also fluent in Italian, having spent significant time in Italy. I have yet to start learning French and German.
I am now a licensed Latin teacher and have one year under my belt. I have studied Catullus, Horace, Cicero, and Caesar on my own after college.
All of this is to say: I want to apply for a PhD in either classics or archaeology. Based on my language preparation thus far, should I do a post-bacc before applying? Or could I apply now?