Akadimía Euranikón Klironomiás
Ακαδημία Ευρανικής Κληρονομιάς Âkâdemi-ye Mirâs-e Eurâni Academia Hereditatis Euranae | |
| Motto |
Mnēmē kai Anabiōsis (Memory and Revival) |
|---|---|
| Type | Public research academy |
| Established | 1670 AN |
| Affiliation | Ministry for Education |
| Endowment | 620 million Imperial Staters |
| Budget | 54 million Imperial Staters (1748 AN) |
| Chancellor | Basileus (ex officio) |
| Rector | Archon Scholarchis Dariush Farrokhi |
Academic staff |
187 |
Administrative staff |
342 |
| Students | 890 (1748 AN) |
| Undergraduates | 420 |
| Postgraduates | 340 |
| 130 | |
| Location | , |
| Campus |
Urban, 8 hectares (main campus) Field stations throughout Eura |
| Language | Constancian, Babkhi, Classical Eurani, Old Babkhan |
| Colors | Amber and Obsidian |
| Maintains field stations at major archaeological sites; coordinates with State Protection Authority for access to contaminated zones | |
The Akadimía Euranikón Klironomiás (Constancian: Ακαδημία Ευρανικής Κληρονομιάς; Babkhi: Âkâdemi-ye Mirâs-e Eurâni; lit. "Academy of Eurani Heritage") is a specialized research and educational institution located in Astérapolis, Imperial State of Constancia. Founded in 1670 AN under the patronage of Basileus Petros III, the academy is dedicated to the study, preservation, and recovery of Eurani cultural heritage, with particular emphasis on the civilizations destroyed or diminished by the Babkhan Holocaust of 1598 AN and the subsequent conflicts that ravaged the continent.
The institution operates as a sister academy to the Akadimía Anthropistikón Epistimón, sharing facilities in the cultural quarter of Astérapolis while maintaining a distinct mission and organizational structure. Where its sister institution pursues universal humanistic inquiry, the Akadimía Euranikón Klironomiás focuses specifically on the material and intellectual remnants of pre-Holocaust Eura, training archaeologists, philologists, conservators, and cultural historians in the specialized skills required to work with fragmentary and often contaminated evidence from a lost world.
The academy includes a notable Department of Industrial Archaeology, which studies the technological achievements of vanished Euran civilizations and their relevance to contemporary reconstruction efforts. This practical orientation distinguishes the institution from purely antiquarian scholarship, connecting the recovery of the past to the needs of the present.