Results of search 2011/2012
List of courses
Number of courses available : 12
| Title | Faculty | Type | Class | System | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Communication sciences | Arts and Humanities | Three-year degree course | L-20 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Foreign languages and cultures | Arts and Humanities | Three-year degree course | L-11 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Historic preservation | Arts and Humanities | Three-year degree course | L-1 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Humanities | Arts and Humanities | Three-year degree course | L-10 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Philosophy | Arts and Humanities | Three-year degree course | L-5 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Archeology and classical civilizations | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-2 , LM-15 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Art history | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-89 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Cultural anthropology and ethnology | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-1 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Europeon history | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-84 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Italian studies | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-14 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Modern languages and literature | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-37 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
| Philosophy and ethics of relationships | Arts and Humanities | Master's degree | LM-78 | D.M. 270/2004 | Perugia |
Information about the Faculty
| Presentation | The study of Literature at university level is an ancient tradition in Perugia. During the 14th Century, the University only had two faculties: the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of the Arts. The latter included both Literary and Philosophical Studies, as well as Medicine. The term “arts” has a double meaning: on one hand, it denotes the disciplines which constitute the basic studies, while on the other, it refers to literary and philosophical studies at a specialised level. In the ancient traditional Faculty of Arts, not only at the forefront were advanced studies of Logics and Philosophy, but also schools with a more practical emphasis like that of Abacus, Geometry and arte notarile? and lastly those of Grammar, located at the gates of the city. During the 14th century, interest shifted to more practical, basic teachings: the most well-known master is Maffeo di Riguccio di Porta Santa Susanna, who taught notary studies for the entire first half of the century. In 1389, sages in charge of studies reduced to four the Chairs of grammar destined to the gates and dedicated the fifth to the teachings of Rhetoric, Eloquence and classical authors. Humanities thus began to flourish at the University of Perugia. 1400s-1500s During the course of the 15th century, institutional unity of the Faculty of Arts and Medicine was maintained. However, more emphasis was gradually placed on advanced literary teachings, and the humanae litterae acquired prestige and autonomy both in relation to Medicine and Philosophy. In fact, on one hand, Medicine highlighted its specialistic profile, while on the other, the Chairs of Philosophy became the privilege of doctors or prelates, whose point of reference was in the schools of the orders. The philosophical teachings are increasingly subject to the monopolistic tendencies of university theologians who, having established themselves in the Faculty as early as 1371, went as far as disputing with their colleagues from the Faculty of Arts over the right to obtain a degree in Philosophy. During the 15th century, the University of Perugia enjoyed the presence of many distinguished professors from the ranks of religious orders including the Franciscan, Francesco della Rovere and Pope Sixtus IV, and in the next century, the Augustinian Taddeo Guidelli, a prominent figure at the Council of Trento. The teaching of Maths was illustrated by Luca Pacioli during the 15th century, a number of times in Perugia between 1477 and 1510, and maintained a good tradition in subsequent periods: worthy of note is Giuseppe Neri, in contact with Galileo during a phase in which the Faculty of Perugia was overwhelmed with disputes regarding its scientific revolution. The 15th century flowering of the Liberal Arts was also nurtured by patronage which in the case of Perugia, came from Papal bequests and Perugia’s Baglioni family. Among the most illustrious professors worthy of mention include Tommaso Pontano and Giannantonio Campano, who was in contact with Demetrio Calcondila, a guest of the Baglioni family. In 1467, the Faculty endowed itself with an official Chair of Greek, a position entrusted to Angelo Decembrio.During the last quarter of the 15th Century, he taught humanities at the Studio Giovanni Sulpizio da Veroli, whose name is linked with the beginning of printing in Perugia. At the turn of the century, the University of Perugia enjoyed a moment of splendour with Francesco Maturanzio, who held the Chair of Public Speaking and Poetry from 1498 (and from 1503 the post of Chancellor) until 1518. Over the subsequent decades, the most competent humanists ensured the teaching of eloquence. During this period, the cultural debate was enriched also thanks to the flourishing of numerous Academies. 1625 saw a notable impulse to teach Logic, hence Urbano VIII’s reform according to which those aspiring to the Chairs of Medicine or of Arts had to have previously taught this discipline. An eminent figure of the 17th Century Faculty of Arts was Ottavio Lancellotti, who from 1620 for some forty years, was capable of attracting multitudes of students through his cultural, literary, philosophical and theological charm. From the end of the 17th Century through the18th Century, in Perugia as elsewhere, Literary Studies became a more scholarly course of study From 1810, such studies were introduced into the national education system of the French empire, with radical reforms which interested the structure itself of the Faculty. The traditional articulation of the Medieval University in the three Faculties of Law, of Arts and Medicine, and of Theology, underwent a radical transformation during the Napoleonic era. During this period the University had five faculties: Theology, Law, Medicine, Physics and Mathematics and Belles-Lettres. This institutional map was to remain as such also with the restoration, when the University of Perugia returned under papal rule. The University of Perugia was to be profoundly marked by the subsequent institutional turning point, that of the constitution of the unitary Italian State. Against the backdrop of a heated debate which developed in the political and cultural contexts of new Italy with regard to the fate of the Universities of the ancient states, the University of Perugia was classified among the Liberal Universities and comprised just three faculties: Law, Medicine and Natural and Mathematical Sciences. The Faculty of Arts and Humanities, in which only the Archeological-Philological course has survived, entered a long period of quiescence. This period continued even after 1925 when the University was promoted to the rank of Università Statale e Regia or “State and Royal University”. Almost 100 years have passed from the time of the Faculty’s abolition in 1860 to its reinstatement during the Chancellorship of Giuseppe Ermini in 1957. Giuseppe Antinori contributed to the radical transformations which took place towards the end of the 18th Century, maintaining under the Republican government the Chair of Poetics and Mythology, and in the reformed University of which he was also Rector, that of Italian Literature, up to his demise (1839). For some 40 years, up and till 1850 the Faculty availed itself of the teachings of the prominent Hellenist Antonio Mezzanotte. The sector of learning and ancient research was exemplified by names such as Giovanni Battista Vermiglioli, Giancarlo Conestabile della Staffa and Ariodante Fabbretti, the latter an exile from the mid-century (died in Turin in 1894). During the first decades of the 19th Century, the abbot Vincenzo Bini taught philosophical disciplines, author of the most important summary work on the University of Perugia’s history (1814), prior to that of Giuseppe Ermini (1971, II ed.), which is the chief bibliographical point of reference also for the history of the Faculty of Arts. Map: The Faculty of Arts and Humanities is located in a series of buildings in the historical centre of Perugia (at the Teatro F. Morlacchi, less than 100 metres from the Cathedral and Palazzo dei Priori) and proposes students an urban campus experience, offering facilities all centred within a delimited area, inside a fine monumental city fabric. The lecture halls, Departments and laboratories are all distributed in recently restructured historical buildings, in which efficiency marries style. Perugia – Palazzo della Sapienza (Palazzo Manzoni) P.za Morlacchi, 11 (Concièrge’s Office tel. 075.5853074). Dean’s Office, Student Guidance/Counselling Office, the Department of Ancient, Modern and Comparative Languages and Literature (Section of Musicology), the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Literature (Section of Studies of early-Christianity, late Antiquity, Middle Ages and Section of Linguistics), the Department of Historical Sciences, the Department of Man and Territory (Section of History of Art) and of the Mobility Manager Office. Teaching structures: Lecture halls I. II. III. IV. V, the Aula Magna, Lecturer, and Department lecture halls. Perugia – Palazzo Peiro via Aquilone, 8 (tel. 075. 5854711). Seat of the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Literature (Section of Philosophy), and of the Library of Philosophical and Psycho-Pedagogical Sciences. Teaching structures: Lecture halls VIII. IX. X, Journal room. Perugia – Palazzo Pontani via Aquilone, 5/7 (tel. 075.5853106). Library of Anthropology and Pedagogy, the Department of Historical Sciences (Section of Historical Sciences of Antiquity), the Department of Man and Territory (anthropological Section), the Laboratory of Geography and Historical Cartography, the Laboratory of Classification and Illustration of Archaeological Material and the Laboratory of Latin Epigraphy. Didactic Structures: 2 Lecture halls within the Department, Greek Gipsoteca, Storage area of archaeological finds. Perugia – Palazzo Meoni via del Verzaro, 49 (tel. 075 5854632). SSIS (Specialisation School for Teaching) Secretariat, of the Centre for Compostela Studies, the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Literature (Section of Foreign Romance and Slavonic Languages and Literature), the Department of Man and Territory (Section of Geography) and Geo-cartographic Laboratory. Didactic Structures: Classrooms A, B, C, D, E. Perugia – Palazzo San Bernardo via degli Offici, 14 (tel. 075.5854828). Department of Ancient, Modern and Comparative Languages and Literature (Section of Italian Studies, and Linguistic and philological-literary Sciences within the Anglo-Germanic ambit) and the Laboratory of Town-planning and Surveying. Didactic Structures: Classrooms A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H. Perugia – Palazzo ex Salesiani via Armonica, 3. Department of Man and Territory (Section of Comparative Studies on ancient societies) and the Laboratory for the study of images of antiquity. Didactic Structures: Department classroom. Perugia – Palazzo Silvi via del Verzaro, 61 (tel. 075.5854907). Department of Ancient, Modern and Comparative Languages and Literature (Section of Philology and Greek and Latin Tradition) and the LIFU (Computer Lab for the Humanities Faculties) (075.5854984). Perugia – Palazzo Stocchi. P.zza Morlacchi, 30. Department of Man and Territory (Section of Anthropology), the Audio-visual Lab and Laboratory for the Archives of Umbrian oral traditions. Didactic Structures: Department classrooms. |
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| Map | Map: The Faculty of Arts and Humanities is located in a series of buildings in the historical centre of Perugia (at the Teatro F. Morlacchi, less than 100 metres from the Cathedral and Palazzo dei Priori) and proposes students an urban campus experience, offering facilities all centred within a delimited area, inside a fine monumental city fabric. The lecture halls, Departments and laboratories are all distributed in recently restructured historical buildings, in which efficiency marries style. Perugia – Palazzo della Sapienza (Palazzo Manzoni) P.za Morlacchi, 11 (Concièrge’s Office tel. 075.5853074). Dean’s Office, Student Guidance/Counselling Office, the Department of Ancient, Modern and Comparative Languages and Literature (Section of Musicology), the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Literature (Section of Studies of early-Christianity, late Antiquity, Middle Ages and Section of Linguistics), the Department of Historical Sciences, the Department of Man and Territory (Section of History of Art) and of the Mobility Manager Office. Teaching structures: Lecture halls I. II. III. IV. V, the Aula Magna, Lecturer, and Department lecture halls. Perugia – Palazzo Peiro via Aquilone, 8 (tel. 075. 5854711). Seat of the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Literature (Section of Philosophy), and of the Library of Philosophical and Psycho-Pedagogical Sciences. Teaching structures: Lecture halls VIII. IX. X, Journal room. Perugia – Palazzo Pontani via Aquilone, 5/7 (tel. 075.5853106). Library of Anthropology and Pedagogy, the Department of Historical Sciences (Section of Historical Sciences of Antiquity), the Department of Man and Territory (anthropological Section), the Laboratory of Geography and Historical Cartography, the Laboratory of Classification and Illustration of Archaeological Material and the Laboratory of Latin Epigraphy. Didactic Structures: 2 Lecture halls within the Department, Greek Gipsoteca, Storage area of archaeological finds. Perugia – Palazzo Meoni via del Verzaro, 49 (tel. 075 5854632). SSIS (Specialisation School for Teaching) Secretariat, of the Centre for Compostela Studies, the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Literature (Section of Foreign Romance and Slavonic Languages and Literature), the Department of Man and Territory (Section of Geography) and Geo-cartographic Laboratory. Didactic Structures: Classrooms A, B, C, D, E. Perugia – Palazzo San Bernardo via degli Offici, 14 (tel. 075.5854828). Department of Ancient, Modern and Comparative Languages and Literature (Section of Italian Studies, and Linguistic and philological-literary Sciences within the Anglo-Germanic ambit) and the Laboratory of Town-planning and Surveying. Didactic Structures: Classrooms A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H. Perugia – Palazzo ex Salesiani via Armonica, 3. Department of Man and Territory (Section of Comparative Studies on ancient societies) and the Laboratory for the study of images of antiquity. Didactic Structures: Department classroom. Perugia – Palazzo Silvi via del Verzaro, 61 (tel. 075.5854907). Department of Ancient, Modern and Comparative Languages and Literature (Section of Philology and Greek and Latin Tradition) and the LIFU (Computer Lab for the Humanities Faculties) (075.5854984). Perugia – Palazzo Stocchi. P.zza Morlacchi, 30. Department of Man and Territory (Section of Anthropology), the Audio-visual Lab and Laboratory for the Archives of Umbrian oral traditions. Didactic Structures: Department classrooms. |
| Services available to students | Didactics – Student Orientation Office Sabrina Campetella, Patrizia Migni, Fiorella Degli Esposti Tel.: 075.5853009, Fax: 075.5853067, E-mail: orilet@unipg.it
Stages and conventions with public and private organizations for placements Giuliana Steri Tel.: 075.5853017, Fax: 075.5853067, E-mail: seglet@unipg.it
Coordination with the Interfaculty Council of Communication Sciences and procedures related to contracts M.Gloria Nucci Tel.: 075.5853095, Fax: 075.5853065, E-mail: mgloria.nucci@unipg.it
Porter Lodge Fabio Finetti, Maria Rachele Marcantonini, Rosella Morbidelli, Tel.: 075.5853074 Offre tre punti di servizio al pubblico:
Humanistic Library Coordinator: Gaetana Maria Domenica Boccafresca Address: Piazza Morlacchi, 11; Tel.: 075.5853611, Fax: 075.5853614, E-mail: Gaetana.boccafresca@unipg.it Person responsible: Sabrina Boldrini, Tel.: 075.5853000, E-mail: sabrina.boldrini@unipg.it The Humanistic Library has recently reorganized and restructured its services available and located at: - Piazza Morlacchi - This branch, once the “Palazzo Aureli-Manzoni” stables then the “Officine Gelsomini”, has been completely renovated applying a functional recuperation and re-qualification project. It is home to the monographs and the current-year periodicals of the 4 Classical Studies libraries (Languages, Italian Studies, Linguistics and Romance Philology, Art History). It also hosts the monographs of the History Library of the Faculty of Education. - Via Aquilone, 7 - Available in this branch are the monographs and journals of Anthropology and Pedagogy plus the journals of the previous years for the 4 sectors in Piazza Morlacchi. - Via Aquilone, 8 - Hosts the collection of the Philosophy Library.
Philosophy and Psycho-pedagogical Library Coordinator: Gaetana Boccafresca, via dell'Aquilone, 8, tel.: 075.5853611 Responsabile: Mauro Paggi, tel.: 075.5854718, E-mail mauro.paggi@unipg.it
Anthropology and Pedagogy Library: Coordinatrice: Gaetana Boccafresca, via dell'Aquilone, 7 tel.: 075.5853144/45
LIFU – Computer lab. for the Humanities Faculty Person in charge: Prof. Franco Lorenzi, via del Verzaro, 61, tel.: 075.5856830 Technician: Massimo Cimichella, tel.: 075.5854984, E-mail: massimo.cimichella@unipg.it
CLA-Centro linguistico di Ateneo Director: Prof. Claudio Vinti, tel.: 075.5856830 Vice Director: Prof. Brunello De Cusatis Administration: via Enrico dal Pozzo, 06126 – Perugia, tel.: 075.5856806-6840-6807, Fax: 075.5856808, E-mail: clateneo@unipg.it Didactic Secretary: tel.: 075.5856838-6809, Fax: 075.5856837
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