Rahul Sharma (Editor)

University of Belgrade Faculty of Philology

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Type
  
Public

Location
  
Belgrade, Serbia

Website
  
fil.bg.ac.rs

Dean
  
Aleksandra Vraneš

Number of students
  
8,029

Parent institution
  
University of Belgrade

Established
  
1808

Campus
  
Urban

Phone
  
+381 11 2638622

Founded
  
1808, Belgrade, Serbia

Academic staff
  
311

University of Belgrade Faculty of Philology

Address
  
Studentski trg 3, Beograd 103932, Serbia

Notable alumni
  
Dragan Lukić, Aleksandar Prokopiev, Slobodan Rakitić, Milka Canić, Snežana Samardžić‑Marković

Similar
  
University of Belgrade, University of Novi Sad, University of Kragujevac, Megatrend University, University of Niš

Profiles

The Faculty of Philology is one of the constituent schools of the University of Belgrade. The school's purpose is to train and educate its students in the academic study or practice in linguistics and philology.

Contents

History

The study of philology was established in Belgrade within the Belgrade Higher School's Department of Philosophy in 1808. The Department of Philology gained independence from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy in 1960. Foremost Belgrade academics in this field include authorities, such as Đura Daničić and Stojan Novaković. Many eminent international philologists contributed to the development of the Faculty of Philology, e.g. Russian Slavist Platon Kulikovsky, who was a visiting professor at the Higher School between 1877 and 1882, was the founder of Russian studies in Serbia; Englishman David Law started teaching English language and literature classes in 1907 and paved the way for the English Department (founded in 1929). Bruno Gujon from Italy worked at the Faculty from 1912 to 1914 and paved the way for Italian studies. During the post Second World War period the school established new departments, e.g. Romanian Language and Literature (1963), Spanish Language and Literature (1971), Arabic and Turkish Language and Literature Departments (1960), Chinese Language and Literature (1974), Japanese Language and Literature (1985), Scandinavian Languages (Swedish, Danish, Norwegian in 1986, starting with Norwegian Lectorate in 1979), Lectorates for Dutch (1987), Ukrainian (1989), Hebrew (1990), Library Science Department (1963), General Linguistics Department (1990), Hungarian Studies Department (1994), Greek Language and Literature Department (1995), et at.

Organization

The school is divided into departments, including: Romance Studies, Iberian Studies, Italian Studies, Oriental Studies, Library Science and Information Technology, General Linguistics, Central and South-East Europe Studies, and 8.Social Sciences and Humanities Seminar. The departments offer academic courses in Serbian, Slavic, Bulgarian, Russian, Polish, Czech, Slovakian, Ukrainian, Italian language, French language, Romanian language, Spanish language, German language, Scandinavian languages, Dutch, English, Arabic, Turkish language, Oriental philology, Japanese, Chinese, Albanian, Greek, Hungarian, General linguistics, and library studies. A number of other languages are available as minor fields of study.

Department libraries

All school's departments possess their own libraries with unique collections built up over the years. In year 2000 the stock of all libraries comprised about 600 thousand items.

Periodical publications

The school's most known periodicals include: Prilozi za književnost, jezik, istoriju i folklor (as of 1921), Anali Filološkog fakulteta (1961) and Filološki pregled (as of 1997).

Research centers

The school hosts several centers, such as: Postgraduate and Doctoral Studies Center, International Center for Slavic Studies, Center for Serbian as a Foreign Language, Publishing, Science and Research Center, and East Asian Studies Center.

Notable faculty and alumni

Famous scholars and better-known students include: Jovan Cvijić, Mihailo Petrović, Milan Budimir, Milka Canić, Radoje Domanović, Ljiljana Crepajac, Veselin Čajkanović, Borislav Jovanović, Ivan Klajn, Dragan Lukić, Milan Milišić, Désirée Miloshevic, Nikola Milošević, Asim Peco, Goran Petrović, Aleksandar Prokopiev, Slobodan Rakitić, Snežana Samardžić-Marković, Meša Selimović, Milovan Vitezović and Zoran Živković.

References

University of Belgrade Faculty of Philology Wikipedia