Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Yenching scholars are also offered a wide range of courses from most other schools and departments at Peking University, including Guanghua School of Management, National School of Development, as well as joint programs like the LSE-PKU Master in International Affairs. For scholars with a Chinese proficiency of HSK6, this also extends to ...
The program, started in 2015, will provide Yenching Scholars, selected annually from around the world, with full scholarships for a two-years master's degree from Peking University. The program hosts in its own purpose-built residential college and is designed to cultivate leaders who will advocate for global progress and cultural understanding.
The Institute continued and expanded the activities of Brown’s former Center for Old World Archaeology and Art (COWAA), which Sharp Joukowsky directed until her retirement in 2004. [5] COWAA was founded in 1978 by R. Ross Holloway , professor of classics and Rudolf Winkes, historian of ancient Roman art. [ 6 ]
Archaeological research institutes in the United States (13 P) Pages in category "Archaeological organizations based in the United States" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
Veritas International University was established by Norman Geisler and Joseph Holden in Early 2008 as Veritas Evangelical Seminary in Santa Ana, California. The founders envisioned a school which would become like Southern Evangelical Seminary for the western U.S. [1] Beginning with the objective to introduce Christian leaders into classical Christian apologetics, the seminary expanded degree ...
The American Journal of Archaeology (AJA) is the AIA's peer-reviewed academic journal, and Archaeology is the popular magazine issued by the institute. The American Journal of Archaeology was founded in 1885; the second series began in 1897.
Nearly 200 dissertations in Old World Archaeology and Art have been produced at Penn in the course of the last century. The eminent archaeologist Rodney Young, the director of the Penn Museum's excavations at Gordion [2] that uncovered the royal tomb of King Midas, strengthened the graduate program during the 1960s and 1970s.
Since 1967, the scope of the school's activities has embraced a global perspective through programs to encourage advanced scholarship in anthropology and related social science disciplines and the humanities, and to facilitate the work of Native American scholars and artists. SAR offers residential fellowships for artists and scholars, and it ...