Central Council for Historical Studies
The Central Council for Historical Studies (Giunta Centrale per gli Studi Storici) is an Italian state body based in Rome, founded in 1934 under the Ministry of Education to coordinate and promote historical research across Italy. It oversees a network of specialised historical institutes, supports scholarly publications, and organises the principal congresses of historical sciences held in Italy.
At a glance
- Type
- National historical research coordinating body
- Founded
- 1934
- Style
- Institutional; operates within the Italian Ministry of Education and Research
- Location
- Rome, Lazio, Italy
- Coordinates
- 41.8940° N, 12.4784° E
Overview
The Giunta Centrale per gli Studi Storici acts as the coordinating apex of Italy’s publicly funded historical research infrastructure. It connects more than thirty affiliated institutes covering every major field of Italian and world history — from medieval studies to the history of the Risorgimento, from Byzantine studies to the history of science. The Council also liaises with international bodies, including the Comité International des Sciences Historiques (CISH), representing Italian historical scholarship on the global stage.
History
The institution was established by royal decree in 1934 during the Fascist period as part of a broader centralisation of Italian cultural and academic life, though its mandate to coordinate historical scholarship gave it an enduring scientific mission that outlasted the political circumstances of its founding. After the Second World War, the Council was reformed and integrated into the democratic Republic’s institutional framework, continuing its role of supporting peer-reviewed historical research and connecting Italy’s scattered network of specialist institutes. Its longevity reflects the Italian state’s sustained investment in humanistic scholarship as a public good.
What you see
The Council’s offices are housed in institutional premises in Rome’s academic district, near the concentration of ministries, universities, and research bodies that characterise the city’s scholarly infrastructure. The premises are working administrative offices rather than a public museum, though the Council periodically organises open lectures and congresses at venues across the capital. Its library and archive holdings support researchers engaged in Italian historical studies.
Cultural significance
The Giunta Centrale has shaped the institutional landscape of Italian historiography for nearly a century, providing continuity of funding and coordination across periods of political change. Its affiliated institutes collectively represent one of Europe’s largest state-supported networks of historical research infrastructure, sustaining disciplines — palaeography, numismatics, diplomatic history, regional history — that might otherwise lack institutional homes.
Practical information
- Address
- Rome, Lazio (check official website for current premises)
- Access
- Administrative office; not a public visitor site. Congresses and lectures open to the public are announced via the official website
- Website
- Check official Italian Ministry of Education and Research channels
Getting there
Rome is served by two international airports: Fiumicino (Leonardo da Vinci) and Ciampino. Within the city, the metro, trams, and an extensive bus network connect all central districts. The Council’s Roman offices are accessible via public transport; consult the official website for the current address and nearest transport links.
