Medieval Latin Language and Literature – Field of study catalogue MU
Medieval Latin Language and Literature“Instrue praeceptis animum, nec discere cessa.” Distichs of Cato, Book III,1 |
The doctoral degree study programme in medieval Latin language and literature can take a full-time study mode or a combined form. It is appropriate for graduates of the Master’s degree programme of Latin language and literature or its medieval specialization and for graduates of the Master’s degree programmes of connected fields, especially Bohemian studies, Romance languages and literatures, history, auxiliary sciences, philosophy, history of religions, and theology.
Candidates for study who are graduates of connected branches have to demonstrate during the entrance examination a knowledge of Latin language and literature and ancient culture at the level of the Bachelor’s degree study programme examination of Latin language and literature. The students choose the topic by agreement with the incoming supervisor.
During the study, the student acquires sufficient knowledge in these subjects: medieval Latin language and medieval Bohemian literature written in Latin, Latin literature of medieval Europe, Latin literature of ancient times and patristics, older Bohemian literature, the basis of the history of the Middle Ages, the basis of palaeography, and modern editing work. The concrete student profile and publishing work is specified by the topic of the thesis and the aims. The research and publications of the medieval part at the Department of Classical Studies deals with texts from medieval Bohemian and European sources. There is a team of editors editing texts of the Bohemian reformation (e.g. Enarratio Psalmorum (Ps. 109-118). Ed. J. Nechutová et al., Corpus Christianorum Continuatio Mediaevalis 253. Brepols: Turnhout, 2013). Students can address topics connected with this concrete medievalist work. The Department of Classical Studies also organizes doctoral conferences: e.g. Laetae segetes - the international conference 2005, Laetae segetes iterum - the international conference 2007, 2012, and 2016. Students in full-time study mode attend study abroad for at least 3 months; the Department of Classical Studies enables this type of study especially with the help of the Erasmus programme in Germany, Poland, and Italy.
After successfully completing his/her studies the graduate is able to:
- know medieval Bohemian and European literature written in Latin and describe its connection to ancient and patristic literature
- work with Latin medieval texts as an expert in the fields of interpreting, translating, and editing
- know medieval literature written in the Czech language and the cultural and historical connections of medieval Europe
- according to their profile, describe and use the basic actual findings of the methods of interpretation, translation, and textual criticism
- concretely account for and use modern findings of other connected medievalist disciplines (history, theology, philosophy, musicology, etc.)
- closely know both Czech and foreign secondary literature and editions which are connected with the thesis
- write a study in foreign language
- read medieval Latin manuscripts and participate in preparing their modern critical editions
- compose and present a lecture
The student has to earn 24 ECTS credits for the type A/required courses that are compulsory for the whole faculty, i.e. Philosophy for Doctoral Studies I and II (if study is in English, the student must pass General Methodology instead of Philosophy for Doctoral Studies II) and a foreign language; an examination in the Language Centre can be bypassed by making and presenting (at scholarly conference or another scholarly context) a supervisor-evaluated paper in a foreign language.
The student obtains 190 ECTS credits for courses closely connected with the thesis writing. These are regular individual consultations with the supervisor (Colloquium I) and an examination which includes interpreting selected medieval texts and the knowledge of medieval Bohemian and European Latin literature (Colloquium II). The student also has to work continually during the studies with sources (Research and Study I-IV) and demonstrate to the supervisor at least once a semester the working development of the thesis (Writing Seminar I-V). The student presents a scholarly lecture on the topic of the thesis (in the range of the selected seminar, conference, or symposium - Conference Paper) and publishes in a scholarly journal (Journal Article). The student submits the thesis with theses with an English summary. For the submitted thesis, which has at least 180,000 characters, the student obtains 25 ECTS credits. The thesis is submitted in two copies in a hardcover binding, usually during the eighth semester.
The student has to earn the rest of the ECTS credits for type B/selective courses. Special Lecture I-IV courses are lectures chosen by the student after consultation with the supervisor of all the courses taught at the faculty or university (usually at the departments of philosophy, history, history of religion, history of art, Bohemian studies, auxiliary sciences etc.). One recommended possible conclusion is the Medieval Interpretative Seminar, which includes an interpretation of some selected Latin works of some Bohemian or European medieval author; the text is changed every year.
Students in full-time study mode attend study abroad for at least 3 months; the Department of Classical Studies enables this type of study especially with the help of the Erasmus programme in Germany, Poland, and Italy. Students must also teach some seminar at the Department of Classical Studies for 2-4 hours per week.
The requirements concerning the doctoral thesis are available on the department website (http://www.phil.muni.cz/wuks/home/Documents/doktorske-studium-latinskemedievistiky).
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