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The Baltic University in Exile was established in the displaced persons camps in Germany to educate refugees from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania in the aftermath of the Second World War. The University was established at Hamburg in the British Zone of Occupation in March 1946, with aid from UNRRA , the Lutheran World Federation , and other groups.
The Baltic University Programme (BUP) is one of the largest university cooperatives in the world with over 110 participating universities (as of September 2024) and other institutes of higher education in the Baltic Sea Region. It has its coordinating secretariat at Uppsala University, in Sweden. The programme strives since its foundation in ...
Epoka University: 12 March 2008 7 European University of Tirana: 20 September 2006 8 Ivodent Academy: 19 February 2009 9 Logos University College 29 July 2009 10 Luarasi University: 11 September 2003 11 Marin Barleti University: 12 August 2005 12 Marubi Academy of Film and Multimedia: 30 September 2004 13 Mediterranean University of Albania 19 ...
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The Immanuel Kant Baltic Federal University of today is an educational, scientific, cultural and enlightenment centre of the westernmost region of Russia. The university implements more than 300 educational programmes in the fields of secondary, vocational and higher education as well as continuing and post-university education.
Latvian Maritime Academy (merged into Riga Technical University in 2022) National Defence Academy of Latvia; Rēzekne Academy of Technology; Riga Teacher Training and Educational Management Academy (merged into University of Latvia from 2017) Ventspils University of Applied Sciences; Vidzeme University of Applied Sciences
The Baltic: A new history of the region and its people (New York: Overlook Press, 2006; published in London with the title Northern shores: a history of the Baltic Sea and its peoples (John Murray, 2006)) Šleivyte, Janina (2010). Russia's European Agenda and the Baltic States. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-55400-8. Vilkauskaite, Dovile O.
Baltistics by its subject splits into Lithuanistics, Latvistics, Prussistics, etc. Special attention is paid to the language studies, especially to the reconstruction of the Proto-Baltic language, which some linguists have argued is the same as the Proto-Balto-Slavic language, while others (V. Toporov, V. Ivanov, V. Mažiulis etc) have believed ...