ELTE Faculty of Humanities


The Faculty of Humanities is the oldest faculty of Eötvös Loránd University in Józsefváros, Budapest, Hungary. It was founded by the Cardinal Archbishop of Esztergom Prince Primate of Hungary, Péter Pázmány, in 1635.

History

The Faculty of Humanities of the Eötvös Loránd University was founded by Péter Pázmány, Archbishop of Esztergom, on May 12, 1635. The university was operated by the Society of Jesus and it consisted of two faculties: The Faculty of Humanities and the Faculty of Theology. At that time, students could obtain three academic titles: Bachelor's degree, Master's degree, and Doctor of Philosophy.
In 1770, the Faculty of Humanities adopted the reforms introduced at the University of Vienna. The university then became state-owned, and a dean and a director of the Faculty were appointed to monitor its functioning. In 1777, the Faculty of Humanities was moved to Buda, the western part of today's Budapest, along with the faculty of Theology and the Faculty of Law. However, the faculties were moved back seven years later.
The late 18th century also saw changes in the university. The changes closely followed the pattern employed at the University of Vienna, but the language of teaching remained Latin until 1844. The Hungarian Revolution of 1848 leading to a university reform program designed by József Eötvös in 1850, being implemented.
The Faculty of Primary and Pre-school Education was established in 2000. The Faculty of Psychology and Education and the Faculty of Sociology were created in 2003.
In 2018, Viktor Orbán's chief of staff announced that government would no longer finance any university programmes on gender studies.
In 2018, many institutes of the Faculty expressed their solidarity with the George Soros-founded Central European University.
On August 12, 2019, the Faculty's former student and professor, Agnes Heller, died.
On September 5, 2022, the Dean of the Faculty announced that the autumn break would be postponed to December and the exams would be held online due to the energy crisis caused by the Russo-Ukrainian war.

Institutes

The Faculty of Humanities consists of 16 institutes:
Institute of Ancient and Classical StudiesInstitute of Archaeological Sciences
Institute of Arts Communication and MusicInstitute of Art History
Institute of East Asian StudiesInstitute of Ethnography and Folklore
Institute of Germanic StudiesInstitute of Hungarian Linguistics and Finno-Ugric Studies
Institute of Hungarian Literature and Cultural StudiesInstitute of Historical Studies
Institute of Language MediationInstitute of Library and Information Science
Institute of Oriental StudiesInstitute of Philosophy
Institute of Romance StudiesInstitute of Slavonic and Baltic Philology
Institute for The Theory of Art and Media StudiesSchool of English and American Studies

Organisation

The current leadership consists of 1 dean and 4 vice-deans.

Former Deans

Honorary doctors

The following people were awarded with Honorary titles by the Faculty of Humanities.

Research

Currently, there are twenty-four research centres at the department level, institution level, and faculty level.

Notable alumni

Library

The Faculty has one main library, located in Trefort Garden, and 13 libraries at institutional levels. The Institute of Romance Studies has libraries at the departmental level.
  • School of English and American Studies Library
  • Institute of Philosophy Library
  • Institute of Germanic Studies Library
  • Institute of Library and Information Science Library
  • Institute of Hungarian Literature and Cultural Studies Toldy Ferenc Library
  • Institute of Hungarian Linguistics and Finno-Ugric Studies Library
  • Institute of Art History Library
  • Institute of Ethnography and Folklore Library
  • Institute of Ancient and Classical Studies Harmatta János Library
  • Institute of Archaeological Sciences Library
  • Institute of Slavonic and Baltic Philology Library
  • Institute of East Asian Studies Library
  • Institute of Historical Studies Szekfű Gyula Library
The library of Medieval Studies of the Central European University was located in the building of ELTE's Faculty of Humanities.