Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor: občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | Slovenian German English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Ljubljana
Univerza
2008
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Abstract |
Beschreibung: | PT: Theologische Fakultät der Universität Ljubljana durch Zeit und Raum. - Text slowen., dt. und engl. |
Beschreibung: | 94 S. Ill. |
ISBN: | 9789619044360 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Kazalo
Andreja Kocijančič
Predgovor
5
Jože Ciperle Uvod
7
Teološka fakulteta Univerze
v
Ljubljani skozi čas
in
prostor
Jože Ciperle Teološki studij
v
Ljubljani pred ustanovitvijo
univerze
11
Tatjana
Dekleva Teološka fakulteta ljubljanske univerze
30
Jože Ciperle,
Tatjana
Dekleva
Seznam razstavlj
enega
gradiva
45
Theologische Fakultät der Universität
Ljubljana
durch Zeit und Raum 49
Jože
Ciperle Theologiestudium in
Ljubljana
vor der
Gründung der Universität 51
Tatjana Dekleva Theologische Fakultät der Universität
Ljubljana
63
The Faculty of Theology of the University of Ljubljana through time and space
73
Jože
Ciperle The Study of Theology in Ljubljana prior to the
Establishment of the University
75
Tatjana
Dekleva The Faculty of Theology of the University of
Ljubljana
86
The Faculty of Theology of the
University of Ljubljana
Tatjana Dekleva
The Establishment of the Faculty of Theology in Ljubljana
The claim for the establishment of a Slovenian University was made in
the revolutionary year of
1848
as part of the Slovenian national
programme. Since that time, endeavours for its creation were evident,
growing in strength towards the end of the 19th century. In
1898,
the
Carniolan Provincial Assembly made a clear demand for the
establishment of a University with a Faculty of Philosophy, Faculty of
Law and a Faculty of Theology. The University however, was not set
up until new political circumstances emerged after the First World War
and the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy.
A meeting, convened by the Mayor Ivan
Tavčar
and Professor
Mihaj
lo
Rostohar of the Czech University in Prague, at which the University
Commission was founded, is regarded as the beginning of the first
Slovenian University. Among others, the Commission included
theologians: Janez
Zore
as vice-chairman,
Aleš
and Franc
Ušeničnik
and Janez
Janežič,
soon replaced by
Josip
Srebrnie,
as members. The
University Commission was entrusted to lead all preparations in the
establishment of the University, in cooperation with the National
Government, and began its work on
5
December
1918.
Without delay,
on
8
December, the professors of the Ljubljana Theological College
sent the Commission a memorandum on establishing the Faculty of
Theology in Ljubljana. The Commission unanimously adopted the
proposal at its fifth meeting held on
14
January, under the condition
that all the lectures were made public and held in the Slovenian
language, not in Latin. The Commission at the same time issued a
proposal for the National Government to immediately elevate the
Ljubljana Theological College, which had been operating as a form of
higher education study for future priests in Ljubljana since
1791,
to the
status of a faculty, thus allocating it the corresponding financial funds.
As Professor
Mikuž
believes, it was the theologians who showed the
University Commission the right course of action; if qualified teachers
are available, solutions for the issue of the Ljubljana University should
be sought at home. During this time, the University Commission
strived to set up parallel chairs in Zagreb, where the lectures would be
held in the Slovenian language, until a university was set up in
Ljubljana. On
6
March, Ljubljana received information that the
Belgrade government had allowed the university to be opened in
Ljubljana as early as autumn
1919.
The Commission was facing a
difficult challenge
-
to organise the newly founded university within
six months. Sub-commissions were set up with the task of making
proposals for the organisation of the faculties and suggesting the first
professors. The theological sub-commission had an advantage over
the others as it was able to draw from the Theological College. The
College was not reorganised into a faculty as initially proposed, rather
the Faculty was founded anew. With the exception of four retired
theology professors, all others were appointed as faculty teachers. The
theologians were the first to receive a scientific classification for its
first three professors,
Aleš Ušeničnik,
Franc
Ušeničnik, PhD,
and
Janez
Zore, PhD,
on
21
March. On
31
August, together with the
registrars of other faculties, these professors were appointed full
professors of the University of Ljubljana. They were appointed
registrars of the Faculty of Theology and acted as a temporary Faculty
Council leading all subsequent preparations for the beginning of the
Faculty s operation.
The Faculty of Theology of the University of Ljubljana
1919-1945
Following the model of the faculties in Germany and Austria at the
time, the Ljubljana Faculty of Theology was set up within the
framework of the state University. In addition to being aware that
theological science is part of other sciences, the church circles were
persuaded in their decision by the idea that its existence would be
better provided for in such a manner. In its early years, the Faculty was
able to draw upon almost two hundred years of the rich tradition of the
Ljubljana Seminary and the Seminaries in
Maribor
and
Gorica.
For the
final regulation of the Faculty, a legal basis that would be followed by
the Faculty was needed.
The founding act for the University of Ljubljana determined that until
a special act for the University was issued, the University shall be
managed according to the act and decrees at the University of
Belgrade. Aj
oint
decree with the Orthodox faculty in Belgrade was not
possible, so the Faculty Council of the Faculty of Theology elaborated
a detailed Faculty Decree and submitted it to the University Council.
In expectation of a forthcoming University Act and a general
University Decree which would result in the rearrangement of the
Faculty Decrees, the University Council proposed a postponement
until new regulations will have been adopted. While waiting for the
new act, the Faculty Council addressed the Ministry of Education with
the request that the Faculty followed the decrees of the Zagreb Faculty
of Theology until the new University Act was adopted. In June
1920,
the University Council adopted the provisions for certification
examinations for the Ljubljana Faculty as those applied in Zagreb.
Following a decree issued by the Ministry of Education, the Zagreb
viva voce
examination order began to be applied as from
24
December
1920.
The special founding act for the University of Ljubljana, which had
been promised upon its foundation, was never issued. They began
preparing a University Act for the entire country. With its own
representative, the Faculty of Theology participated in the
Commission for the New University Act and in the Commission for a
New Joint Regulation of the Faculties of Theology. In preparing the
University Act, professor Grivec had been active from the very
beginning and after the act had been adopted, the Commission for the
Preparation of the Faculty Decree included
Aleš Ušeničnik,
Lambert
Ehrlich,
Josip Ujčič and Alojzij Odar.
The professors of the Faculty of
Theology had a clear mission of how to finally guarantee not only the
image of the Faculty itself but also its embedding in both canon and
public law by a legal statute . In addition to regulations applying to
state universities into which they had been included, the faculties of
theology also had to consider the Roman regulations. The University
Actwas issued as late as
28
June
1930
and on
24
May
1931,
Pope Pius
XI issued the Constitution on Universities and Faculties of
Ecclesiastical Schools
(Deus
Scientiarum Domuinus). This highest
church document brought clear guidelines and obligatory regulations
which the faculties of theology operating within the state universities
had to follow as well. Individual articles were in agreement with the
regulations of the state Act on Universities and the general University
Decree, but due to the special character of the Faculty as a church
school, there were many particularities which needed to be considered.
The Faculty s tasks and the regulations regarding the students, classes,
diploma and doctoral examinations were covered by the Decree on the
Catholic Theological Faculty in Zagreb and Ljubljana, which the
Minister of Education signed on
17
May
1935
and which was in force
for more than a decade and a half.
86
From the Faculty of the University of Ljubljana to an
ecclesiastical institution
1945-1952
The circumstances in the new state, in which after the First World War
the Slovenians received their first University, were not regulated and
problems also occurred due to political and economic centralism
preventing the Ljubljana University from developing smoothly. It
often faced closure or the reduction in the number of some faculties,
which concerned other faculties more than the Faculty of Theology,
especially the Faculty of Medicine and the Faculty of Technology, with
the Faculty of Theology, however, not being immune to these
aspirations either. Its professors and students were always expressing
their solidarity and participated in campaigns for the integrity and
completion of the Slovenian University. The year
1945
marked a new
era in the development of the Slovenian University. On one hand, its
existence was no longer threatened and the possibilities of its
expansion emerged, while on the other hand, the aspirations of the
authorities to meddle with University life began to become evident.
The ideology of the governing class was in contradiction to the
principles of the Church and the Faculty of Theology and the entire
system of religious education became redundant and undesirable. The
Constitution of the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia (FPRY)
issued in the beginning of
1946
regarded religious schools as private
schools which it could not control and therefore attempted to abolish
them. In March
1946,
the government of the FPRY founded the
Committee for Schools and Science which attended to the
management of the country s entire educational system. In the
beginning of November, the same Committee sent the Ministers of
Education of individual republics its directions on solving the
problems of schools which were not controlled by the state. On the
basis of this direction, the Slovenian Minister of Education on
15
November
1946
signed the Decree on the Exclusion of the Faculty of
Theology from the University on the grounds of it being a specific
religious school. The Faculty of Theology was thus from a legal point
of view excluded from the University of Ljubljana, while the actual
exclusion did not take place until
1949.
Aleš Gabrič
explains the
persistence of the Faculty of Theology within the University with the
deficiency and lawlessness of the system at the time in which a decree
could be only a lifeless letter on apiece of paper.
At the University, the question of excluding the Faculty of Theology
was first raised by the University Senate on
18
March
1947
but in
expectation of federal instructions which were to regulate also the
question of the faculties in Zagreb and Belgrade, the issue was
postponed. As the preparation of a new federal University Act had
come to a standstill and the question of regulating the University could
not be left to wait indefinitely, the People s Assembly of the People s
Republic of Slovenia on
21
October
1949
adopted the Regulation of
Higher Education in the People s Republic of Slovenia Act, which
intervened with the organisation of the University of Ljubljana and
which brought about the final exclusion of the Faculty of Theology
from the University of Ljubljana. On the basis of this Act, the Decrees
adopted on
27
December
1949
newly regulated the structure of the
higher education institutions of Ljubljana. The University was
reduced to four faculties and the Higher School of Medicine and the
Higher School of Technology with several faculties. The Faculty of
Agriculture and Forestry was given the status of an independent
faculty the same as the Faculty of Theology, which was not mentioned
in these Decrees and was regulated on the basis of Article
7
which
stipulated: The Faculty of Theology of the University of Ljubljana
shall be excluded from the structure of the University of Ljubljana and
shall become an independent faculty. The same rales applied to it as to
all other higher education institutions
-
it was a legal entity under
Иге
management and control of the Ministry of Science and Culture. The
innovations were implemented with the summer semester of the
1949/50
academic year and at the end of January, the University
Senate under in the old composition. At the meeting, the
implementation of the new provisions was discussed. The Dean of the
Faculty of Theology, Anton
Trstenjak, PhD.,
mentioned that the
Faculty of Theology would be able to become independent as soon as
the agricultural lecture hall moved out. On
23
March
1950,
the
Faculty Council of the independent Faculty of Theology was
constituted with the Dean s Office being moved from the Provincial
Mansion to the former student s hostel
Alojzijevišče.
Despite the
separation, the connections between the Faculty and the University
remained. The changes did not influence the manner of the study and
the rights enjoyed by the professors and students. They were equals
with the professors and students of other higher education institutions,
as the Faculty of Theology was still part of the public educational
system and financed from the budget funds.
In the beginning of the
1
950s, the relations between Yugoslavia and the
Holy See became strained, and the relations between the state and the
Roman Catholic Church in Yugoslavia deteriorated. The relation
towards the catholic intelligentsia sharpened, religious education in
schools was abolished and the Commission for Religious Issues was
formed to manage the state s policy on the Church. The Dean of the
Ljubljana Faculty of Theology at the time,
Stanko Canjkar,
PhD, sent
the country s president
Josip
Broz Tito a special memorandum stating
the desire that the Faculty remains a state institution, which however
did not help as decisions had already been made. The Council of
Science and Culture sent a letter to the Faculty on
4
March
1952
stating
that with regard to the constitutional provisions on the separation of the
Church from the State, the Faculty of Theology as of
31
June ceases to
be a state institution. The issue regarding the continued existence will
henceforth be regulated by the Ministry of Internal Affairs through the
Commission for Religious Issues with the Presidency of the
Government. A state subsidy for the Faculty s maintenance was
promised. On
14
June, the Ljubljana Ordinary Anton Vovk, a great
chancellor of the ecclesiastic Faculty of Theology, awarded Dean
Cajnkar the mandate to arrange all the necessary matters for the
Faculty to be transferred to the ecclesiastical sphere. The Dean s
Office thereupon informed the Ministry of Internal Affairs that an
ecclesiastical Faculty of Theology had been organised in Ljubljana.
The state authorities wished to maintain and intensify the control of the
Faculty even after it had become a private ecclesiastical institution.
Subsequent financing had been conditioned with measures which
would enable it to interfere with its internal operation. The Faculty of
Theology had to prepare a Statute which met the requirements of the
state authorities and which was condition for its subsequent operation.
Soon after the war had ended, the Faculty had already began to
consider a new Statute, which would in more detail consider all the
canonical regulations regarding independent ecclesiastical higher
education schools and the changed conditions in the socialist reality in
which it had found itself. The new Statute prepared by
Vinko Močnik,
PhD, professor of canon law, was adopted by the Faculty Council on
1
August
1952.
The state authorities were also pleased with the Statute.
From mid-
1952,
the Commission for Religious Issues regulating the
matters of the Faculty of Theology regularly paid the Faculty a
subsidy, which was initially comparable to the share which the Faculty
had previously received from the University budget but with the
upward movement of the inflation, the amount was realistically being
decreased.
87
Faculty management
Pursuant to the University Act from
1905
which also applied to the
University of Ljubljana, each faculty was lead by a Dean chosen by the
faculty from among its full professors. He was replaced by the Vice-
Dean, and the Vice-Dean position was then filled by the most senior
professor of the faculty according to the length of service. The job of
the Dean was to manage the faculty and to see to the classes and exams.
At the meeting of the University Council on
12
November
1919,
faculty members elected their Deans. The first Dean of the Faculty of
Theology was Franc
Ušeničnik.
By
1945,
all full professors held this
position in various terms. In elections, the Faculty Council observed a
regular cycle. Most often
-
as much as five times, the position was held
by Franc Ksaver Lukman. Franc
Ušeničnik
was succeeded in his
function of Dean by his brother
Aleš Ušeničnik,
who performed this
function three times. Professors Matija Slavic, France Grivec and
Lambert
Ehrlich
were also elected Dean three times,
Andrej
Snoj and
Josip Ujčič
twice and
Josip
Srebrnie,
Janez Fabijan,
Josip
Turk and
Alojzij Odar
once. The Dean performed his function for a year and
upon the end of his term had to report on the faculty s work to the
University Council. The Faculty Council was comprised of all
professors and assistant professors, with the chairman being the Dean
and the manager of the Faculty Council the youngest professor with
regard to the length of service. The Faculty Council elaborated the
programme and the list of lectures for each semester, took care of the
occupancy of the chairs, proposed to the Minister of Education new
chairs to be opened, their merger and separation, it chose and together
with an explanatory statement proposed new full, associate and other
professors to the Minister, it decided on extraordinary lectures, it
decided on and gave reasons for the awarding of honorary doctor titles,
it decided on various student applications, the exam plan, the
composition of the examination board, it communicated its opinion on
the absence of lecturers which lasted for more than a month to the
Minister, etc. In the years following the Second World War, the Faculty
Council lead by the Deans Janez Fabijan
(1945-1947),
Vinko Močnik
(1947-1948)
and Anton
Trstenjak
(1948-1950)
strived for the
existence of the Faculty of Theology within the framework of the
University of Ljubljana. After the separation from the University,
Stanko Cajnkar
was elected Dean and he remained in this position until
1966,
representing the independent Faculty in relation to the
authorities. He performed the function of a Rector even though he did
not have that title, as he himself wrote. The fact that someone had
been Dean for sixteen years even though elections were held every
year, might lead future generations of theologians to false
assumptions, adding that he was not chosen due to some exceptional
capabilities on his part but due to the hope that under his management
the Faculty might enjoy peace thus serving its purpose. Through all
those years, the administrative affairs were led by
Vilko
Fajdiga
as
Vice-Dean.
Even before the separation from the University, the Faculty was
considered a church institution and its
Ordinarius
loci was the Great
Chancellor. According to church ordinance on faculties of theology,
this function appertained to the Ljubljana Bishop but the church
authorities never directly interfered with the Faculty s operation due to
its connection with the state University . The Faculty s affairs were
regulated by the Faculty management and the graduation ceremonies
were held by the University Rector. It was only in
1942
that the
Ljubljana Bishop first communicated with the Faculty as its Great
Chancellor. After the separation, it had become evident that the Great
Chancellor would have more influence on the Faculty management
but nevertheless almost all Faculty matters were in the hands of the
Faculty bodies under the management of the Dean. The Great
Chancellor attended only the final doctoral examinations, signed
doctoral theses and communicated the directives from Rome. Until
1952,
the function of Great Chancellor was performed by three
bishops: Anton
Bonaventura
Jeglič,
Gregory
Rožman
and Anton
Vovk.
All full professors of the University constituted the University Council
and all Deans were members of the University Management Board. All
full professors of the Faculty of Theology were members of the
University Council and had the right to vote for the Rector and to be
elected into this position. In the years between the two wars, three of
the Faculty s professors were elected Rector of the University of
Ljubljana:
Aleš Ušeničnik
1922-1923,
Franc Ksaver Lukman
1926-
1927
and Matija Slavic
1932-1934 ^(11939-1941.
Study management
The theological sector of the University Commission prepared the
basic study plan with the number of departments and chairs. In this
plan it followed the aspirations for the modernisation of theological
studies which were to be found already in Austria and Germany from
the beginning of the century and which some faculties (the Zagreb and
Vienna Faculty) had already considered. It was above all essential to
prolong the study from four to five or six years and to increase the
number of chairs. When the Faculty of Theology was set up, a special
Statue had not been adopted and the Faculty was managed according to
the orders applying to the Zagreb Faculty.
In the first year of the University study of theology in Ljubljana, the
study did not essentially differ from the School of Theology. By
appointing the first three full professors, the Chairs of Philosophy,
Pastoral Theology and Church History had been taken. During the
winter semester, the new appointments brought lectures in Early
Christian Literature and Church History, Biblical Science of the Old
Testament, Biblical Science of the New Testament and lectures on
Doctrinal History. By the end of the first academic year, lectures were
also held on Canon Law, Moral Theology, Systematic Dogmatics and
Fundamental Theology. In the
1922/23
academic year, following the
appointment for the Chair of Religious Studies, the Faculty had
systemised
11
chairs. In
193 9,
the Chair ofPhilosophy and Psychology
brought this number to
12
and after the Second World War, the setting
up of the thirteenth chair was being prepared
-
Biblical Theology. The
Ministry of Education appointed
Stanko
Cajnkar
to this position but
the Faculty never set up this chair. Cajnkar nevertheless remained with
the biblical group.
With regard to the organisation, the principal subjects in the second
academic year were divided into four groups: the philosophy and
dogmatics group encompassed the Chairs of Christian Philosophy,
Theology, Fundamental Theology, Systematic Dogmatics and
Historic Dogmatics; the biblical group encompassed the Chairs of
Biblical Science of the Old Testament with Semitic Languages and the
Biblical Science of the New Testament; church history encompassed
above all the lectures on General Church History and Patrology, the
History of Greek and Slavic Churches and the Theology of the Eastern
Church; the moral, legal and pastoral group encompassed Moral
Theology, Canon Law and Pastoral Theology. Within the framework
of the fifth group for church art, part-time professors lectured on
Church Art and Church Singing as secondary compulsory activities.
The principal subjects were complemented by other auxiliary subjects:
Sociology, Rhetoric and Pedagogy, and Catechetics which were part of
the moral, legal and pastoral group. In the
1922/23
academic year, Old
Church Slavonic was introduced as a secondary auxiliary subject.
With the
1933/34
academic year, a special group for auxiliary subjects
was introduced bringing together: Homiletics, Pedagogy and
Catechetics, Church Art, Church Music, Sociology, Pastoral
Medicine, Biblical Greek and Old Church Slavonic. The summer
semester of the
1940/41
academic year divided the philosophy and
dogmatics group with the subjects of Apologetics (Religious Studies)
and Fundamental Theology being classified in the independent
dogmatic group. The Chairs of Canon Law and Church History
merged with the legal and historic group. In the
1950/51
academic
year, the groups were renamed into chairs, and moral theology was
united with the Chair of Canon Law. In addition to regular lectures,
there were also seminars introducing students to scientific work. Each
student had to participate in at least one seminar and prepare at least
one seminar paper.
Despite the Faculty operating in accordance with the old decree in its
first two decades, it tried to realise the aspirations for the development
and progress of theological science. Already in its second academic
year, it requested a five-year study and began implementing it in the
first two years in the
1922/23
academic year. It strived to direct the
scientific theological study eastwards. In
1921,
professor Franc Grivec
implemented the so-called eastern theology on the Ljubljana
Faculty of Theology and in the
1925/26
academic year, a special study
plan was prepared for the subject which was supposed to help the
students get acquainted with the history and theology of eastern
Churches, especially the Orthodox Church. Following a Faculty
Decree in
1935,
the study became a six-year study. It was gradually
implemented in the
1936/37
academic year. After the war, the lectures
were for some time organised so as to last only
5
years. It was only in
1952
that the 6-year study was again implemented as foreseen by the
Faculty Decree.
At the end of the lectures, the students had to pass a diploma
examination from all of the principle subjects and a diploma
colloquium from the auxiliary subjects. Only after passing all these
exams were the students able to take their diploma examination. The
number of graduates differed with the biggest number of graduates
being in the year
1942
when the University was closed but exams were
allowed to be executed. In thirty years (until
1949), 450
students
graduated from the Faculty of Theology.
In order to obtain the academic degree of a doctor in theology, twelve
semesters of study had to be followed by two semesters of special
lectures and seminars. Prior to the Faculty Decree from
1935,
a
doctor s degree included three
viva voce
examinations and a
dissertation from a subject for which
a viva voce
examination was not
conducted. This was a characteristic of the Austrian type of the doctor s
degree in which the candidate prepared the dissertation from the
subject for which he was afraid to undergo
a viva voce
examination. In
this way, the doctor s degree which paid special attention to oral
examinations, was not an expression of specialisation and did not
foster independent scientific and research work. The
1935
Decree
abolished the three
viva voce
examinations and introduced one
examination from general theology (dogmatics and principles of
moral philosophy) and one
viva voce
examination from the group
from which the candidate prepared the dissertation. This was the focus
of the doctoral degree so the dissertation had to be the result of
independent work which the candidate had to defend in front of a five-
member committee and at least partially print. In thirty years,
41
candidates were conferred a doctorate. From these, only
4
after
1945,
as the conferrals at the University had been adjourned due to the
anticipated new Doctorate Act.
Academic teachers
The long tradition and the expert staff of the Ljubljana Theological
College provided the newly-founded Faculty a good personnel basis.
The registrars
-
the first three full professors were chosen among the
professors of this institution. The expert opinions for their elections
were contributed by the Zagreb Faculty of Theology.
Aleš Ušeničnik,
PhD., professor of Dogmatics, was appointed full professor of
Philosophy; Franc
Ušeničnik, PhD.,
professor of Ethics in Pastoral
Care, was appointed full professor of Pastoral Theology; Ivan
Zore,
PhD., professor of Church History and Canon Law, was appointed full
professor of the Faculty of Theology of the same field. After the
dissolution of the University Commission, their task as registrars was
also to choose the staff for the completion of the Faculty. At the third
meeting of the University Council,
Aleš Ušeničnik
proposed new
appointments in the name of the academic staff of the Faculty of
Theology. In choosing the candidates, regional or diocesan borders
were neglected, as the Faculty stressed an all-Slovenian character.
During the winter semester of the first academic year,
Josip
Srebrnie,
PhD., professor of Church History at the Central Seminary in
Gorica,
was appointed full professor for Old Christian Literature and Church
History. Franc Ksaver Lukman, PhD., professor of Moral Theology at
the
Maribor
Theological College became associate professor of
Dogmatics and Doctrinal History
(1921 -
full professor). In
1920,
the
Chair of Biblical Science of the Old Testament, with associate
professor Matija Slavic, PhD., who joined the Ljubljana Faculty from
the
Maribor
Theological College and was appointed full professor a
year later, and the Chair of Biblical Science of the New Testament,
with assistant professor
Andrej Snoj,
PhD.,
(1923
associate professor
and
1937
full professor) had been taken. In the summer semester,
lectures were held by part-time professors:
Gregor Rožman, PhD.,
(1920
assistant professor,
1924
associate professor) who was up till
then professor of Moral Theology and Canon Law with the
Klagenfurt
Theological Institute and who held lectures on Canon Law,
Josip
Ujčič, PhD.,
(1921
associate professor,
1927
full professor) who was
previously the principal of the Augustineum Theological Institute,
who held lectures on Moral Theology and Janez Fabijan, PhD.,
( 1921
assistant professor,
1927
associate professor,
1937
full professor) who
held lectures on Systematic Dogmatics. At the end of the summer
semester, Franc Grivec, PhD., was appointed full professor for
Fundamental Theology, previously holding a professorship at the
Ljubljana Theological Seminary and in
1919
working as full professor
of Eastern Theology in Zagreb. By the end of the first academic year,
the Faculty had occupied most of its teaching chairs and obligatory
subjects. There were a total of
15
teachers appointed:
5
full professors,
2
associate professors,
1
assistant professor,
2
part-time professors and
5
part-time teachers. After the promotion of two associate professors to
full professors
(1921
Lukman, Slavic) and the appointment of
Lambert
Ehrlich
to the Chair of Religious Studies in the summer
semester of the
1922/23
academic year, the number of full professors
increased to
8.
Josip
Srebrnie
held lectures on Old Christian Literature
and Church History until September
1923,
when he was appointed
Bishop of
Krk.
After he left, the lectures on Patrology were conducted
by Franc Ksaver Lukman, PhD. After professor
Zore
retired in
1926,
Josip
Turk, PhD., took his position as a part-time professor
(1927
assistant professor,
1934
associate professor,
1937
full professor).
When
Gregor
Rožman, PhD.,
was appointed Bishop of Ljubljana in
1930,
he stopped lecturing at the Faculty. His chair was succeeded by
Alojzij Odar, PhD.,
as assistant professor
(1937
associate professor,
1940
full professor). In
1937,
Franc
Ušeničnik
retired but remained as
a part-time substitute teacher for Liturgies while his chair was
succeeded in the summer semester of the
1936/37
academic year bv
89
assistant
professor
Ciril
Potočnik, PhD.
(1939
associate professor,
1946
full professor). In the same year, Janez
Ujčič
left the Faculty as he
was appointed the Archbishop of Belgrade. In the winter semester of
1937/38,
part-time teacher
Ignacij Lenček, PhD.,
was appointed his
successor
(1938
assistant professor). From the
1937/38
academic year,
Alojzij Zupan, PhD., temporarily (five semesters) held lectures on
Ethics instead of
Ujčič.
In
1938,
Aleš Ušeničnik
retired and so the
lectureship in Philosophy was published and in the autumn of the same
year Janez
Janžekovič
was appointed assistant professor
(1946
associate professor,
1967
full professor). In the winter semester of the
1940/41
academic year, Anton
Trstenjak, PhD.,
was appointed
assistant professor for Philosophy, Pedagogy and Methodology
(1946
associate professor,
1947
full professor).
Vilko
Fajdiga, PhD.,
assistant professor for Christian and Comparative Religion, succeeded
Lambert
Ehrlich
who was executed in
1942.
This was the last
personnel change at the Faculty of Theology until May
1945.
At that
time, six professors and a substantial number of students left Ljubljana
together with other refugees and because of this were relieved of their
jobs and functions by a decree of the Ministry of Education issued on
lOAugust
1945.
Vice-Dean,Alojzij
Odar,
PhD.,
LudvikČepon,PhD.,
Alojzij
Košmerlj, PhD.,
Ignacij
Lenček, PhD.,
Matija Slavic, PhD.,
and
Josip
Turk, PhD., continued their work as refugees where
professor
Odar
in
1945
had already managed to obtain the status of a
faculty with the right to confer academic titles. In
1947,
the institution
relocated to Argentina where it operated until
1959.
The remaining teachers at the Faculty of Theology were reappointed
by a decree issued on
27
August
1945.
Due to the empty chairs, the
work of the Faculty was threatened and so the other professors had to
temporarily hold lectures from related departments, while in the long-
run, such a condition might have jeopardised the quality of the lectures
and the scientific work of the professors. In the
1945/46
academic
year, the Faculty of Theology had
9
lecturers of principle subjects
(6
full and
3
assistant professors) and
5
lecturers of auxiliary subjects. In
1946,
the Minister of Education was still favourably disposed towards
the Faculty enabling the academic staff to be completed by professors
from the
Maribor
Theological College. Two new full professors were
appointed:
Vinko Močnik,
Phd., for Canon Law and
Josip
Jeraj, PhD.,
for Moral Theology. Maksimiljan
Držečnik, PhD.,
was appointed
assistant professor for the Old Testament. Following his appointment
as the Auxiliary Bishop of
Maribor,
he was next year succeeded by
Jakob
Aleksič, PhD.,
as part-time lecturer. In the summer semester of
1946,
professor Turk s lectures on Church History were taken over by
Maks
Miklavčič, PhD.,
professor from the Diocesan Grammar School
and the diocesan archivist. In
1947,
Stanko
Cajnkar, PhD., was
appointed associate professor of Biblical Theology and Rhetoric as an
auxiliary subject. Two promotions from assistant professor to
associate professor were made
(Janžekovič, Trstenjak).
In the
1948/49
academic year, professor Slavic again began to hold lectures. After the
death of Ciril
Potočnik,
Liturgies was for a year lectured by
Vinko
Močnik
as substitute teacher who was in
1951
replaced by part-time
lecturer Janez
Oražem, PhD.
According to the study plan, the principle subjects were supplemented
by auxiliary subjects. In the summer semester of the first academic
year,
Josip Demšar, PhD,
-
Pedagogy and Catechetics
-
and
Stanko
Premrl
-
Church Music
-
began lecturing auxiliary subjects as part-
time teachers. In the second academic year, Mihael
Opeka, PhD.,
held
lectures on Homiletics (Rhetoric) and Franc Kimovec, PhD. on
Church Art. Following his resignation, in the winter semester of
1921
the lectures on art were taken over by
Josip
Dostal
who held these
lectures until
1936.
Another part-time lecturer was Gregory
Žeriav,
who held lectures on Oriental Languages in two academic years
(1920/21
Syriac,
1921/22
Arabic). In the
1922/23
academic year, full
professor of the Faculty of Philosophy,
Rajko Nahtigal,
PhD., as part-
time teacher began holding lectures on Old Church Slavonic, holding
these lectures until the
1931/32
academic year. Following a year s
break, the lectures on Old Church Slavonic continued for theology
students in the
1933/34
academic year, when professor Nahtigal was
succeeded by professor Anton Breznik, PhD.,
a Slavist
from
Šentvid.
That year, the List of Lectures at the Faculty of Theology was
expanded by two new auxiliary subjects: Pastoral Medicine taken on
by part-time teacher Anton Brecelj, MD, and Sociology lectured by
Aleš Ušeničnik
until
1933,
first within the framework of the pastoral
and later philosophical group. In
1933,
the subject was characterised
as an auxiliary subject lectured by part-time teacher Ivan
Ančin, PhD.
From the summer semester of
1936/37,
Viktor Steska worked as part-
time teacher of Christian Art History from the Byzantine Era Onwards.
Following the death of Mihael
Opeka,
Church Rhetoric was from the
summer semester of
1938/39
lectured by part-time teacher
Alojz
Košmerlj.
In
1939,
Stanko
Premrl was succeeded by
Venčeslav Snoj
(Solemn Divine Office and Ordinary of the Mass). At the time of the
Italian occupation, optional lectures of Italian were organised for
students of all semesters and held in the
1941/42
academic year by
Aldo Franchi.
From the
1942/43
academic year, Oriental Languages
were lectured part-time by
Ludvik Čepon.
After the war, Pastoral
Medicine was taken over by Franc Debevec and in the years
1945
to
1949,
Church Art was lectured by Janez Veider, From the summer
semester of
1948/49,
the subject of Pre-Military Instruction became a
highly compulsory subject for all male and female students who had
not yet served in the military service. Instead of the lectures on
Marxism and Leninism which had previously been compulsory for all
students, the Faculty again introduced Sociology which was planned
to be lectured by
Jože
Lampret
but was taken over by
Stanko
Cajnkar.
Students
Enrolment of students into the first semester of the University of
Ljubljana took place ftom
15
November to
1
December
1919.
Each
candidate had to enrol personally at the
Rectorate.
The student
obtained the status of a student after being entered into the general
ledger (register) and receiving the student certificate (student
identity document) and transcript.
94
students enrolled in the first
semester of the Faculty of Theology. In the first decade, approximately
100
students were enrolled each year. In the second decade, the
number of enrolled students increased and in the
1938/39
academic
year, the Faculty had achieved the highest number of enrolled students
-195.
Even before the Faculty had been set up, the Cyril Association of
Theologians of Ljubljana had operated among the seminarians with
the intent of fostering and uniformly managing all theological,
scientific and artistic work among the theologians of Ljubljana and to
represent them externally. Following the model of other faculties, the
obligatory professional Association of Students of the Faculty of
Theology had been set up. The aim of the Association was to represent
the professional expert interests of its members with the University
Council, especially in matters relating to the Faculty and seminary
libraries, to form relations with expert associations of other faculties
and to foster the expert and general education of its members.
The first academic year after the war began without most of its
previous students, who had already gone abroad together with some of
their professors in May of
1945
and continued their theological studies
there. Enrolment into the Faculty had drastically decreased. By
24
October, only
8
students enrolled. The number slowly increased, so
90
that by the end of the winter semester
52
students enrolled. In the next
three years, enrolment slightly increased until it stabilised in the
1949/50
academic year with something over one hundred enrolled
students reaching the level from the end of the first decade of the
Faculty of Theology.
Despite the benefits appertaining to theology students (regulated
social and health insurance, discounts on tickets, possibility of
postponing military service, representatives at meetings of the Faculty
Council), they were dissuaded from enrolling in the Faculty of
Theology by the general distrust of the authorities towards the Church.
Upon enrolling in the Faculty of Theology, many faced interrogations
or even prison. The students were unable to trust each other. The
interrogations were a good opportunity to assert pressure on
theologians which they had tried to dissuade from the study of
theology in all possible ways. When the Faculty had ceased being a
state institution, its students automatically lost all the benefits. As
Matej Kobal
wrote, they had most strongly felt the loss of the
possibility of postponing military service, which was followed by the
call-up of about one half of the young theologians. In order to protect
the interests of theology students, the Cyril Association of Theologians
of Ljubljana had again been awakened through the initiative of Bishop
Vovk and which in the sense of its rales stood up for the social and
health benefits which appertained to students of other faculties.
Until
1945,
the majority of students of the Ljubljana Faculty of
Theology had come from the Ljubljana Diocese while following the
closure of the
Maribor
Theological College
(1941),
students from the
Maribor
Diocese had come to study in Ljubljana along with students
from the liberated parts of the
Primorska
region who were part of the
Gorica
and Trieste Diocese and who joined after the war. It was only
when students from other parts of Slovenia joined that the Faculty of
Theology became an all-Slovenian Faculty.
The faculty building
In its work for the setting up of a University in Ljubljana, the
University Commission had all the time tried to set up the entire
University in one appropriate building. It had set up a special Sub-
Commission for Searching for Temporary Facilities, which had seen
the possibility of setting up the University in the Ljubljana Home
Guard Barracks. After the University had been set up and the first full
professors appointed, the University Commission was dissolved and
its affairs were taken on by the University Council which
unsuccessfully put pressure on the army with regard to the Home
Guard barracks. Once it had become evident that the University would
not get the Barracks, the Ljubljana authorities gave the University
Council the Provincial Mansion. This facility was too small for the
needs of the University while in addition it was also initially occupied
by other institutions, which slowly left the building to the University,
so that in the next decades, the
Rectorate
and all the Dean s Offices, the
Faculty of Law, the Faculty of Philosophy and parts of the Faculty of
Technology were able to operate within its walls. Until the planned
construction of an earmarked University building, the other faculties
found temporary premises across Ljubljana. The theological
department proposed that the Faculty of Theology be located in the
former student s hostel
Alojzijevišče
at
4
Poljanska
cesta.
Following
the commission inspection organised on
14
April by the Commission
for Education and Religious Affairs, the facility was found appropriate
and that for the first academic year two lecture halls and one staff room
might be prepared. On
14
November, the University signed the
Tenancy Agreement with the bishop s ordinary office. By the time the
lectures began, the two lecture halls were prepared, while the other
rooms for the Faculty s first academic year were located in the
Bishop s Seminary together with the Dean s Office. With the
exception of the Dean s Office, which had moved from the Seminary
to the main University building in the
1927/28
academic year, the
Faculty of Theology had all of its facilities located in
Alojzijevišče
by
the autumn of
1920.
The annual reports of the Deans for the University Rector indicate that
the Faculty was pleased with the lecture halls, which were thought to
be appropriate, while the rented equipment was unsatisfactory but the
Faculty did not receive budget funds for its own equipment. The
Faculty only received its own equipment for the lecture halls in the
1942/42
academic year. Each year, the Deans reported on the lack of
space for seminaries which were organised in the lecture halls when
these were not occupied. There was also no room for the magazines
and a library.
Due to the increasing number of students and the noise of the growing
traffic on Poljanska
cesta,
the lecture halls as well became less
appropriate. The Faculty favoured the construction of the new Baraga
Seminary behind
Bežigrad,
which would mean six new lecture halls, a
staff room and five rooms for seminaries and a library. The
construction was stopped by the Second World War, while after the
war, the unfinished building was nationalised.
During the war, the German Army occupied three lecture halls which
the Yugoslav army continued to use even after the war had ended. For
this reason, the lectures in the winter semester of
1945/46
began only
in a limited extent. At the request of the
Rectorate
in the beginning of
1946,
the military command vacated two lecture halls and by June
1947
the remaining rooms which the University Management Board
had renovated and rearranged during the holidays. In addition to the
rooms which it had before the war, the Faculty was able to rent some
other facilities which it used to expand its library. The Faculty was
satisfied with the number of lecture halls and library premises but it
needed additional smaller rooms for seminaries. In autumn of the same
year, it nevertheless surrendered first one and the next year another
lecture hall to the newly founded Faculty of Agriculture which was
located in
Alojzijevišče
until
1951.
After the Regulation of Higher
Education in the People s Republic of Slovenia Act had been
implemented, the Dean s Office at the Faculty of Theology moved to
Alojzijevišče
which was an external sign of the Faculty s separation
from the University.
Library of the Faculty of Theology
The Faculty s library was set up in the beginning of the second
academic year at the Faculty s premises in
Alojzijevišče.
It
encompassed two modest rooms with windows facing the hallway.
Some collections of books from the Seminary s library were moved to
this library. The Seminaries had their own libraries as well. The books
were marked separately for the central Faculty library and for
individual Seminaries and were also kept separately. They were
entered into the purchase record book, while an inventory record book
and an alphabetical catalogue were kept as well. As evident from the
notes of the Faculty Council, the setting up of the library was initially
the endeavour of professor Grivec and later also professor
Ehrlich,
while in
1927,
the care for the central library was bestowed on
professor
Josip
Turk. The Seminary s libraries were in the domain of
the Seminary Superiors.
Josip
Turk managed the library until
1945
when this task was taken over by Franc Ksaver Lukman, who managed
it with the help of professor
FranČišek Jere
whom the Ministry of
Education had appointed as
part-time
librarian. In the years between
the two wars, the library was only able to complete the ordered
91
magazines
and the collections that had started. By the beginning of
1939,
there were
3,146
works in
4,753
volumes in all library
departments. After the war, the library substantially increased in size
due to the books it received from the Assembly Centre of Slovenia
(3,784
volumes) which it arranged in the newly obtained premises.
The Faculty also received some of the books from the collection
donated to the University by the British Council. The Faculty also
purchased modern Slovenian and Russian works relating to
theological science or works needed for the study and understanding
of new circumstances. The main care was concentrated on the
possibility to purchase new volumes of encyclopaedias published in
Paris before the war and the publication of which continued after the
war had ended.
From
1921,
the Faculty has been publishing the scientific magazine
Bogoslovni vestnik
initially published by the Academy of Theology
set up in
1920
with the intent of fostering theological science and the
Bogoslovni vestnik
was to contribute to the generation of independent
theological literature.
Until the war began, the magazine was published regularly, four issues
a year. In the period from
1941
to
1944,
the
Bogoslovni
vestnik was
published once a year to a greater extent and then publications ceased
completely until
1965.
In
1951,
the
Zbornik teološke fakultete
[Journal of the Faculty of Theology] began to be published but only in
a few typed copies as the Faculty was unable to obtain the paper it
needed to print the Journal. By
1960,
ten Journals were published
containing theological dissertations and book reports. At the same
time, the magazine Nova pot was being published since its beginning
in
1949
under the management of
Stanko
Cajnkar.
The professors prepared textbooks and lecture notes for their students.
Already in
1919,
the manual
Pastoralno bogoslovje
[Pastoral
Theology] by Franc
Ušeničnik
was published as (probably) the first
textbook of the new University. There were two more editions to be
published in
1932
and in
1940
in which the author gave up part of the
liturgical content. This was dealt with separately in
Katoliška
liturgika
[Catholic Liturgies] published in
1933.
Ušeničnik
lectured following
this book which he finally completed. When he had retired, a new
edition was prepared and put to publication during the war but it was
not published until
1945.
It was used for many years by his successors.
Aleš Ušeničnik
prepared the lecture notes
Spoznavnokritični
in
metafizični
del for his lectures. In
1924,
France Grivec wrote the first
Slovenian ecclesiological manual entitled Cerkev [Church]. This was
the first catholic textbook extensively considering the Orthodox
comprehension of the Church. Both professors of the Chair of Biblical
Sciences prepared excellent textbooks: Matija Slavic the lecture notes
Uvod
v
Sveto pismo
Stare
zaveze
[Introduction to the Bible of the Old
Testament] in
1940
which was ready to be printed but the publication
of which was hindered by the war and
Andrej
Snoj, the book
Uvod
v
Sveto pismo nove
zaveze
[Introduction to the Bible of the New
Testament] in
1940.
Matija Slavic began translating the Old Testament
according to the Hebrew original and published the Five Books of
Moses and the Book of Joshua
(1939)
Janez Fabijan, an excellent
lecturer of dogmatics and the leader of the higher education youth was
seen as giving somewhat complicated lectures but he prepared
excellent lecture notes:
De Deo
Creatore, De
Deo
Creatore et
Elevante,
Traktat
o Bogu
[Tract on God],
De Deo
Uno et Trino, De
Novissimís,
Eshatologija [Eschatology], De
Gratia,
De Fide,
Uvod
v
bogoslovje
[Introduction to Theology].
The Faculty of Theology: from an ecclesiastical institution to a
rejoined member of the University of Ljubljana
(1952-1992)
Despite the difficult situation which it was faced with after
1952,
the
eagerness of the teaching staff of the Faculty of Theology enabled its
operation and expansion. In the
mid-1960s,
the number of students
from the
Maribor
Diocese increased, so in
1968
a department of the
Faculty of Theology for students of higher academic years was opened
in
Maribor.
Since
1995,
a complete study of theology has been possible
in
Maribor.
The shortage ofpremises
inAlojzijevišče
was solved with
the extension designed by the architect
Jože Kregar
and which was
moved into in
1972.
The independent Faculty of Theology worked and
cooperated with the Zagreb and Belgrade Faculties, it was in contact
with the Faculty of Theology in
Graz
and in
1980,
following years of
informal scientific contacts with the Faculty of Theology in
Regensburg,
a protocol between the University of
Regensburg
and the
Ljubljana Faculty of Theology was signed. In
1980,
the Dean, Rafko
Valenič,
PhD., signed the
Magna
Charta
in Bologna.
Even though the Faculty of Theology was no longer a member of the
University of Ljubljana, personal cooperation between professors and
also semi-official cooperation did take place. A great step forward was
the Protocol on the Cooperation of the Faculty of Philosophy and the
Faculty ofTheology signed on
12
June 1989by the Dean oftheFaculty
of Philosophy, professor
Dušan Nećak, PhD.,
and the Dean of the
Faculty ofTheology, professor Rafko
Valencie, PhD.,
in the presence
of the Great Chancellor
Alojzij Šuštar, PhD.,
and the University Rector
academic professor Janez Peklenik, PhD. The aspirations for the
democratisation of Slovenian society also brought about progress
considering the regulation of the situation of the Faculty ofTheology.
In
1991,
the Legal Status of Religious Communities in the Socialist
Republic of Slovenia Act was adopted turning the Faculty ofTheology
into a state recognised faculty. Following its registration as an
institution, the Executive Council of the Republic of Slovenia
provided for the Faculty s financial funds in the
1991/92
academic
year. Negotiations on the Faculty s
reintegration
with the University of
Ljubljanabegan. On
20
May
1992,
Archbishop Alojzij
Šuštar, PhD.,
as
Great Chancellor of the Faculty ofTheology and
Mihá Tišler, PhD.,
as
Rector of the University of Ljubljana signed the Contract on the
Cooperation between the University of Ljubljana and the Faculty of
Theology and its Department in
Maribor.
On
18
November of the
same year, the University Council adopted the decision on the
réintégration
of the Faculty of Theology with the University of
Ljubljana signed by the Rector, professor
Miha Tišler, PhD.,
and
chairman of the University Council, professor
Marjan
Senjur, PhD.
92
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bvnumber | BV035249062 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)300158006 (DE-599)BVBBV035249062 |
era | Geschichte gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035249062 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:29:36Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789619044360 |
language | Slovenian German English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017054732 |
oclc_num | 300158006 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-M333 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-M333 |
physical | 94 S. Ill. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Univerza |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 Univ. v Ljubljani, (Zgodovinski Arhiv in Muzej Univ.). [Zasnova razstave in kataloga: Jože Ciperle ; Tatjana Dekleva. ] Theologische Fakultät der Universität Ljubljana durch Zeit und Raum Ljubljana Univerza 2008 94 S. Ill. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier PT: Theologische Fakultät der Universität Ljubljana durch Zeit und Raum. - Text slowen., dt. und engl. Univerza v Ljubljani Teološka fakulteta (DE-588)16048427-3 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Univerza v Ljubljani Teološka fakulteta (DE-588)16048427-3 b Geschichte z DE-604 Ciperle, Jože Sonstige oth Dekleva, Tatjana Sonstige oth Digitalisierung BSBMuenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017054732&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017054732&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Abstract |
spellingShingle | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 Univerza v Ljubljani Teološka fakulteta (DE-588)16048427-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)16048427-3 |
title | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 |
title_alt | Theologische Fakultät der Universität Ljubljana durch Zeit und Raum |
title_auth | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 |
title_exact_search | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 |
title_full | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 Univ. v Ljubljani, (Zgodovinski Arhiv in Muzej Univ.). [Zasnova razstave in kataloga: Jože Ciperle ; Tatjana Dekleva. ] |
title_fullStr | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 Univ. v Ljubljani, (Zgodovinski Arhiv in Muzej Univ.). [Zasnova razstave in kataloga: Jože Ciperle ; Tatjana Dekleva. ] |
title_full_unstemmed | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 Univ. v Ljubljani, (Zgodovinski Arhiv in Muzej Univ.). [Zasnova razstave in kataloga: Jože Ciperle ; Tatjana Dekleva. ] |
title_short | Teološka Fakulteta Univerze v Ljubljani skozi čas in prostor |
title_sort | teoloska fakulteta univerze v ljubljani skozi cas in prostor obcasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 |
title_sub | občasna razstava od decembra 2008 do februarja 2009 |
topic | Univerza v Ljubljani Teološka fakulteta (DE-588)16048427-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Univerza v Ljubljani Teološka fakulteta |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017054732&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017054732&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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