Master of Arts in Comparative History - Track: Late Antique, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies
Vienna, Austria
DURATION
2 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
Request application deadline *
EARLIEST START DATE
Sep 2024
TUITION FEES
EUR 12,000 / per year **
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* application deadline for applicants for master’s programs students form all other countries and if they seek financial aid
** payable in one or two installments, non-refundable initial tuition fee installment (€500 EUR) is paid to confirm your acceptance of our offer of admission and is credited towards the 1st tuition fee installment in year 1
Introduction
A two-year MA degree in Comparative History was introduced at CEU in 2008 as a joint initiative of the Department of Medieval Studies and the History Department. It consists of two tracks: Late Antique, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies and Comparative History from 1500 till the present time.
By joining forces, the departments of Medieval Studies and History can offer a multifaceted degree program, strongly underpinned by a systematic introduction to theories, methods and research skills in history and related disciplines, focusing on Central, Eastern, Southeastern, and Western Europe and the Eastern Mediterranean from late antiquity to contemporary times, aimed at the understanding of persistent themes in the experience of these regions in a longue durée (historical) perspective. The two-year option does not affect the integrity of the accredited one-year MA programs currently offered by both departments separately, and it extensively relies on their curricula.
Program Accreditation/Registration
- The program was approved and registered by the New York State Education Department
- Program accredited by the Agency for Quality Assurance and Accreditation Austria (AQ-Austria)
Ideal Students
The two-year MA program is as demanding as its one-year alternative, but its pace and substance are designed to meet the interests of students who may need more work on the basics of historical scholarship. It is specifically intended for applicants with a three-year BA (“Bologna type”) degree in history, archaeology, literary history, Classical languages, art history or other related disciplines; or students who may have completed four or even five years of undergraduate education, but in a social science or humanities discipline other than history. Holders of four- or five-year undergraduate degrees in history are advised to apply to the one-year program (although they may be directed to the two-year program upon the examination of their individual backgrounds).
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
To master’s candidates, we award financial aid based on academic merit. You can apply for financial support for master’s studies in the Funding section of the Online Application Form.
Curriculum
By the CEU academic calendar, the program offerings are divided into a Pre-Session and Zero Week (3 weeks in September), the Fall term (12 weeks from late September to December), the Winter term (12 weeks from January to the end of March) and a Spring Session (10 weeks in April and June).
The first year of the two-year program is integrated to a considerable extent between the Departments of History and Medieval Studies. It is intended to ensure good training in methods and theoretical basics as well as languages and other skills.
The Pre-Session and Zero Week are designed to accommodate students in the CEU environment. The program includes an excursion, introductory sessions for students about resources within CEU, course introductions, and getting acquainted with the archival and library resources in Vienna.
The first term comprises several mandatory courses, while other courses are selected from a set number of mandatory fields (“elective” or “topical survey” courses). Some courses are separate electives for medievalists and modernists.
In the second term the number of common courses decreases and the choice of electives increases (but they are still open for both Medieval Studies and History students). The number of special courses for each group is larger and preparations begin for the second year. A thesis prospectus is submitted and defended at the end of the academic year. Students start to work on the prospectus under the guidance of a supervisor in the MA thesis planning seminar during the winter term, to be continued in the thesis workshops offered in May. The three-week research break in April serves for students to explore possible archival and other sources at home or elsewhere. The university provides modest grants to assist students in conducting their research. Information is made available about the application procedure for these grants in early February.
The year ends with a spring session starting in the last week of April. Medievalists have a one-week field trip (prepared for during the Winter Term by a field trip seminar) to sites and areas offering insights into the medieval civilization of the region, and "modernists" go on an educational trip either in the Spring term or in September in the first year of their studies. This is followed by the Spring Session which provides further guidance towards authoring the MA prospectus.
At the History Department, students present and discuss the results of their research done in April with their peers and faculty members in the above-mentioned thesis workshops. At the Medieval Studies Department, the Spring Session primarily consists of a 3-week seminar period when elective courses provide further guidance towards writing the MA theses. Two single-credit seminars have to be selected from 4 offered options.
In June, the prospectus defenses of the first-year students take place in the same period as the MA Thesis defenses of the second-year students. Approval of the prospectus by a committee of the relevant department is a condition for continuing studies. Specific research tasks for the summer break are also planned.
In the third term (the fall term of the second year) students take specialized seminars and advanced research methods courses. The fourth term and the spring session of the second year are almost fully devoted to thesis-related tasks (writing the thesis, attending thesis-writing workshops, and supplementing research results when needed).