The Faculty of Humanities of the
Eötvös Loránd University was founded by
Péter Pázmány,
Archbishop of Esztergom, on May 12, 1635. The university was operated by the
Society of Jesus and it consisted of two faculties: The Faculty of Humanities and the Faculty of Theology. At that time, students could obtain three academic titles:
Bachelor's degree, Master's degree, and Doctor of Philosophy. In 1770, the Faculty of Humanities adopted the reforms introduced at the
University of Vienna. The university then became state-owned, and a
dean and a director of the Faculty were appointed to monitor its functioning. In 1777, the Faculty of Humanities was moved to
Buda, the western part of today's
Budapest, along with the faculty of Theology and the Faculty of Law. However, the faculties were moved back seven years later. The late 18th century also saw changes in the university. The changes closely followed the pattern employed at the University of Vienna, but the language of teaching remained
Latin until 1844. The
Hungarian Revolution of 1848 leading to a university reform program designed by
József Eötvös in 1850, being implemented. The Faculty of Primary and Pre-school Education was established in 2000. The Faculty of Psychology and Education and the Faculty of Sociology were created in 2003. In 2018,
Viktor Orbán's chief of staff announced that government would no longer finance any university programmes on
gender studies. In 2018, many institutes of the Faculty expressed their solidarity with the
George Soros-founded
Central European University. On August 12, 2019, the Faculty's former student and professor,
Agnes Heller, died. On September 5, 2022, the Dean of the Faculty announced that the autumn break would be postponed to December and the exams would be held online due to the energy crisis caused by the Russo-Ukrainian war. ==Institutes==