Medieval Institute Home Page

715 Hesburgh Library, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556-5629, Telephone: (574) 631-6603, Facsimile: (574) 631-8644, Email: medinst@nd.edu
 

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Graduate Program

The Medieval Institute prepares its graduates with the professional profile they need for eventual departmental employment while giving them the benefit of interdisciplinary methods, knowledge, and perspectives that traditional departmental programs do not provide. Generous fellowship support and minimal service demands permit students to pursue their studies attentively. Students have study carrels in the Institute as well as day-and-night access to its reading rooms.

Degree Programs

Potential applicants please note: Both an offical application and official general information about the Graduate School and its admission requirements must be requested from the Graduate School itself. The easiest way to do so is on-line at http://graduateschool.nd.edu.

Master of Medieval Studies (non-terminal)
Ph.D. in Medieval Studies

Graduate Studies Curriculum

The Graduate Studies Curriculum combines programmatic interdisciplinary coursework, training in the technical skills of medieval studies, and linguistic preparation. At the same time, students enjoy the freedom to do extensive work within a single discipline and outside the period of the Middle Ages. The Institute has traditional strengths in philosophy, theology, religious and intellectual history, the history of universities, and manuscript studies. Recently, the Institute has enlarged its focus to include literature in the vernaculars, especially Old and Middle English, Latin literature, Dante studies, musicology, liturgy, medieval Judaism and Islam, Byzantine studies, and art history. In all of these fields we host lectures, conferences and workshops, publish books, and in a variety of other ways support an active community of scholars at all levels -- a community that is in turn well connected with other medievalists and medieval studies programs both nationally and internationally.

Admission to the Institute for graduate study is, accordingly, highly competitive. Successful applicants generally have very strong GRE scores (usually a combined score of 1200 or more), a solid background in the medieval world (as evidenced by their transcripts of previous course work), and sound facility with medieval Latin and relevant vernacular languages. We expect that our graduate students will have taken introductory and intermediate Latin and moved into advanced Latin courses during their undergraduate careers. We strongly encourage prospective applicants to do everything that they can to enhance their Latin skills. Prospective applicants whose language training is deficient are therefore encouraged to pursue a year of Latin and modern language study in preparation for application to the graduate program.

The Medieval Institute does not accept candidates for a terminal Master’s degree but does require the Master of Medieval Studies of all students whom it admits. The programs of the Medieval Institute are rigorous and interdisciplinary, and make high demands in terms of language skills. Accordingly, the Master of Medieval Studies (hereafter M.M.S.) degree requires two years of full-time study and the Doctor of Philosophy in Medieval Studies (Ph.D.) requires a further year of full-time study plus a dissertation. Each degree requires a specified number of credit hours, language exams, oral and/or written exams, proficiency in paleography, and research projects. The Graduate School requires that students maintain a 3.0 Grade Point Average in order to be in good standing. Students must also be continuously enrolled on a full-time basis (the number of courses/credit hours necessary to maintain full-time status varies depending on a student’s year in the program).

In addition to the courses offered during the fall and spring semesters, the Medieval Institute provides summer courses in areas essential to the study of medieval culture. These courses are conducted by leading scholars from Notre Dame and elsewhere, and are open to students from any institution. They provide an ideal opportunity for graduate students to acquire language and technical skills necessary for scholarly research. The Graduate School provides tuition scholarships for Notre Dame graduate students to take up to three credit hours in summer session courses.

Requests for further information about the Institute's Graduate Program should be directed to:

Roberta Baranowski
Assistant Director
The Medieval Institute
715 Hesburgh Library
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
Email: Roberta.Baranowski.7@nd.edu

Information about application procedures, however, must be requested from the Graduate School itself. The easiest way to do so is online via the Graduate School web page. Please note that the Medieval Institute's deadline for applications is January 15, 2009, and in addition to the standard Graduate School material, Institute applicants are requested to submit a scholarly writing sample of not more than 15 pages. When submitting GRE scores to the Graduate School, please use 5199 as the GRE Department and Major Field Code.

Advising

Students will choose their courses each semester in consultation with the director. During their third year of study students will choose a faculty adviser, ordinarily the person who will direct their dissertation, and that professor will help choose the course of study.

Financial Aid

Students admitted to the graduate program in the Medieval Institute can count on generous financial support. Nearly all graduate students at Notre Dame are funded by the University or outside organizations. Graduate funding is divided between fellowships (no service) and stipends (service is owed). Graduate students entering at the Masters' level usually receive a four-year commitment: two years of fellowships (first and fourth years) and two of service (second and third years). Service may be teaching (assistantships or composition courses), research assistantships or other assignments. Students are expected to apply for outside sources of funding or special University fellowships to finance the year devoted to dissertation research and that devoted to writing and have been notably successful in such competitions. Regardless, the Institute does all that it can to see that advanced graduate students are provided with the support they need in order to complete the dissertation.

Graduate Handbook

Detailed information about administrative policies and procedures is contained in the Graduate Handbook of the Medieval Institute. Click here to see a copy.


 
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