Ecole française de Rome

The Ecole française de Rome is a public institution under the Ministry for Higher Education and Research. Originally the Roman branch of the École française d'Athènes (1873), and then briefly operated as a School of Archaeology (1874), it was founded under its present name in 1875 and installed in the Palais Farnèse, which it now shares with the French Embassy in Italy. A centre for French scholarship in Italy and the Central Mediterranean in the fields of history, archaeology and the social sciences, the School operates within the framework of research programmes and initiatives conducted in collaboration with French and Italian partners as well as institutions in North Africa and countries bordering the Adriatic (Albania, Croatia, Serbia and Slovenia). These initiatives give rise to academic exchanges within the framework of workshops, seminars, and conferences, PhD programmes, and the organisation of exhibitions. The school welcomes members, post-doctoral and visiting scholars, and scholarship students.
Monday 26th March François Lagirarde (EFEO) speaks on "Épigraphie et religion: le bouddhisme du Nord de la Thaïlande dans les inscriptions anciennes (XIIIe-XVIIe siècle)”
11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. (Free admission)
Maison de l'Asie, First floor salon, 22 avenue du Président Wilson, 75116 Paris
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On 19th March, the EFEO Centre of Peking has celebrated the 20th anniversary of its creation. The event has taken place at first at the Institute of History of Natural Sciences, a partner of the Centre since its opening, with a two-person lecture by Marianne Bujard (EPHE), former head of the Centre, and Ju Xi, anthropologist at Beijing Normal University, after a talk by the head of the Centre, Guillaume Dutournier. The listeners have been then bidden to a reception in the Centre, in the presence of the Director of the EFEO, of Chinese colleagues, of representatives of the Max Weber Foundation and of the French Ambassador.
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999 photographs taken by Luc Mogenet at Laos especially at Luang Prabang between 1968 and 1973 are now on line on the photo library website.
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