Centre for British Studies
Part of Humboldt University of Berlin, the Centre for British Studies /Großbritannienzentrum is an interdisciplinary institute committed to teaching and research focused on the United Kingdom. In addition to interdisciplinary research projects and its postgraduate "M.A. British Studies" course, the Centre offers a broad range of events for the public. The GBZ is the only of its kind in the German-speaking world.
History
The Centre for British Studies is an interdisciplinary research and teaching institute at Humboldt University. Inaugurated on 15 July 1995 by the governing mayor of Berlin and the British ambassador, the Centre celebrated its twentieth anniversary in the summer of 2015. The Centre was established in recognition of the UK’s role as one of the Western powers which protected West-Berlin during the Cold War. Queen Elizabeth II had already taken an interest in the plan to establish such a centre on her state visit to Berlin in 1992. Subsequently, the Prince of Wales paid his respect to the GBZ on the occasion of his visit at the end of 1995. The purpose of the Centre is to offer an institutional framework for interdisciplinary research, for teaching British Studies, and for furthering public relations between Britain and Germany. As an area studies institute the Centre is part of a larger network of area studies departments of the Berlin universities: The Centre for French Studies, the John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, the Department for Northern European Studies at the and the Centre for Modern Oriental StudiesDue to its interdisciplinary nature the GBZ is not part of one of the faculties of the Humboldt University, but enjoys the status of an independent institute with three chairs: for British Literature and Culture, for legal, economic and social structures of the UK, and for British History.