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The Milltown Institute of Theology and Philosophy is a Jesuit institution of higher education and research, located in Dublin, Ireland. Milltown is located in Ranelagh, County Dublin. Since 1997 it has been a recognised college of the National University of Ireland, under the 1997 Universities Act, the Irish government removed the ban on the NUI awarding degrees in Theology which had stood since its foundation and its predecessor the Royal University of Ireland. The Ecclesiastical Faculty at Milltown is also a Pontifical Athenaeum. The Irish School of Ecumenics is located at the Milltown Park site. Since November 1989, when it was granted designated status under the National Council for Educational Awards Act 1979, it has developed and offered civil programmes leading to Bachelor, Masters and Doctoral awards. The NCEA became HETAC in 2001. Since the Spring of 2011, the future of the Milltown Institute became uncertain and it is currently understood that it will be closed permanently and a new institute, the ''Loyola Institute'', will take its place as part of Trinity College Dublin. The college entered into negotiations about a possible alliance with University College Dublin in 2008. These talks were unsuccessful and an alliance with the traditionally Protestant Trinity College Dublin was due to take effect in 2012.〔(Catholic Milltown Allies with Trinity ) by Siobhán Tanner, The Irish Catholic, 11 Sep 2008〕 ==Origins== Milltown Institute was established as a Pontifical Athenaeum with Faculties of Theology and Philosophy, by a group of religious institutes in 1968. The origins of the institute however can be traced back to the 1880s when the Jesuits established a School of Philosophy and a School of Theology at Milltown. The School of Theology has had an unbroken history at Milltown since 1889, and became a Jesuit Pontifical Faculty in 1932. The School of Philosophy moved from Milltown in 1930 and became a Jesuit Pontifical Faculty in 1948, and returned to Milltown in 1966. 1979 saw the Bachelor of Divinity (BD) programme approved by the Teaching Council of Ireland. In 1993, the BA programme joined the CAO system for applications to third level courses, from 1994 degree students could apply for Higher Education Grants, and in 1995 students of NCEA courses became eligible for the government free fees initiative.〔(Study Theology at the Milltown Institute of Theology and Philosophy ) www.irelandeducationguide.com〕 In 1996, the BA was recognised by the Teaching Council of Ireland for the teaching of religion in post-primary/secondary schools.〔(List of Recognised Degree/Teacher Education Programmes ) Teaching Council of Ireland, Updated January 2012.〕 An undergraduate Bachelor of Theology programme, in conjunction with the University of Wales, Lampeter,〔 was launched in September 2003, the institute also developed a number of post-graduate initiatives with Lampeter. In 2003 the Kimmage Manor Institute (KMI) Institute of Theology and Cultures moved from Kimmage Manor to Milltown becoming part of the Dept. of Mission Theology and Culture, and from 2006 the alliance was made permanent.〔(KMI Institute of Theology and Cultures website )〕 The KMI Bachelor of Arts in Theology and Anthropology degree is also recognised for teaching religion in post-primary schools.〔 From September 1, 2005 the Miltown Institute was officially designated a recognised college of the National University of Ireland (NUI).〔(History of the NUI - Milltown Institute )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Milltown Institute of Theology and Philosophy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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