Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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The Hungarian Academy of Sciences (in short: HAS, in Hungarian: Magyar Tudományos Akadémia) was founded in 1825, when Count István Széchenyi offered one year's income of his estate for the purposes of a Learned Society at a district session of the Diet in Bratislava (seat of the Hungarian Parliament at the time), and his example was followed by other delegates. Its task was specified as the development of the Hungarian language and the study and propagation of the sciences and the arts in Hungarian. It received its current name in 1845. Its central building was inaugurated in 1865, in neo-Renaissance style.
Today it has eleven main sections:
- I. Linguistics and Literary Studies Section
- (a part of it is the Research Institute for Linguistics),
- II. Philosophy and Historical Studies Section,
- III. Mathematical Sciences Section,
- IV. Agricultural Sciences Section,
- V. Medical Sciences Section,
- VI. Technical Sciences Section,
- VII. Chemical Sciences Section,
- VIII. Biological Sciences Section,
- IX. Economics and Law Section,
- X. Earth Sciences Section,
- XI. Physical Sciences Section.
See also
- Brief history of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (in English) (http://www2.mta.hu/english/mta/tortenet/main.html)
- Hungarian Academy of Sciences (in Hungarian and in English) (http://www.mta.hu/)
- Picture of its central building (http://www.sk-szeged.hu/kiallitas/tudomany/akadem1.jpg) – alternative resource (http://www.gwu.edu/~vertes/Resources/akadem1.jpg)