Faculty of Archaeology, University of Warsaw (WAUW) is a faculty of the University of Warsaw, established on 1 September 2020, through the transformation of the Institute of Archaeology, which operated as part of the now-defunct Faculty of History. The Faculty is based in the Szkoà Âa Gà Âówna Warszawska building. It is the largest archaeological institution in Poland, comprises 17 departments and 7 laboratories with a staff of about 100. The Faculty provides education in various branches of modern archaeology and related sciences to over 1500 students from various fields of study: Ancient Egypt, Ancient America, Classical Archaeology, and Ancient Near East. The Archaeology program at the University of Warsaw is placed between 51st and 100th worldwide in Quacquarelli Symonds World University Ranking (QS)
Archaeologists from Faculty of Archaeology University of Warsaw have conducted archaeological works at numerous sites in Poland, Egypt, Sudan, Syria, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Denmark, Sicily, Greece, Libya, Sultanate of Oman, Kuwait, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Armenia, Georgia, Peru, and El Salvador
The most outstanding discoveries:
The beginning of the archaeological investigations at University of Warsaw is related to establishing the Numismatic Cabinet (Gabinet Numizmatyczny) at 1816 and Cabinet of Ancient Curiosities (Gabinet Staroà ¼ytnych Osobliwoà Âci)(1926) at former Royal University of Warsaw (1816âÂÂ1831). The collections have been merged in 1877.
Although there was no formal archaeological institute, a number of archaeologists and antiquarians who were important in the formation of Polish archaeology, were active in Warsaw or worked at the university: Erazm Majewski, Kazimierz Stoà Âyhwo, Stefan Krukowski, Leon Kozà Âowski, Ludwik Sawicki or Marian Hinner.
The first section, the Department of Prehistoric Archaeology, was created in 1919 in Staszic Palace, and was headed by Erazm Majewski. After E. Majewski's death in 1920, his successor was Wà Âodzimierz Antoniewicz â the dean of the Faculty of History in 1934/35 and Rector of the University of Warsaw in 1936/37. In 1931, the Section of Classical Archaeology was created, led by the Polish egyptologist Kazimierz Michaà Âowski. Over the years, new chairs and departments were established, such as the Department of Slavic Archaeology, the Department of Archaeology of Antiquity, the Department of Ancient Archaeology (later transformed into the Department of Prehistoric and Early Medieval Archaeology), and a Department of Anthropology. One of the largest ones was the Department of Prehistoric and Early Medieval Archaeology as it had 70 students in 1967/1968.
After Wà Âodzimierz Antoniewicz, the department was headed by Zofia Wartoà Âowska and Witold Hensel. At the beginning of the 1960s, Kazimierz Michaà Âowski, Zofia Podkowià Âska, Zbigniew Sochacki, Bronisà Âawa Chomentowska, Maria Mià Âkiewicz, Andrzej Kempisty, Jerzy Gàssowski, Andrzej Wiercià Âski, Stefan Karol Kozà Âowski and Janina Rosen-Przeworska were among the most prominent members of the staff.
Archaeology at University of Warsaw has been famous of existence of "warsaw school" in Slavic archaeology (Witold Hensel, Wà Âodziemirz Antoniewicz), and Mediterranean Archaeology (Kazimierz Michaà Âowski)
In 1975 the Departments of Prehistoric and Early Medieval Archaeology, Papyrology and Mediterranean Archaeology were merged to form the Institute of Archaeology, as a part of Faculty of History at the University of Warsaw, with Waldemar Chmielewski as its first director. The institute was appointed from three departments: Prehistoric and Early Medieval Archaeology, Papyrology, and Mediterranean Archaeology, and then divided into seven sections. Afterwards, former Anthropological Laboratory at the Chair of the Prehistorical Archaeology (1960âÂÂ1976) was changed to Department of Historical Anthropology The institute contained the following structure: Department of Prehistoric Archaeology (headed by Stefan Karol Kozà Âowski), Department of Archaeology of Ancient Europe (Jerzy Okulicz), Department of Early Medieval Archaeology (Zofia Wartoà Âowska), Department of Archaeology of Ancient Greece and Rome (Anna Sadurska), Department of Near Eastern Archaeology (Michaà  Gawlikowski), Department of Papyrology (Anna à Âwiderkówna) and Department of Historical Anthropology (Andrzej Wiercià Âski). Alongside to the institute a Department of Archaeological Research on Polish Medieval times of Warsaw University of Technology and University of Warsaw, which was headed by Zofia Wartoà Âowska. Later this entity was changed into Department of Archaeological Excavations of Institute of Archaeology headed by Ryszard Mazurowski.
By the end of the 1980s the University of Warsaw had trained more than 500 students in archaeology, which was the largest in Poland at that time, most of them studied in Institute of Archaeology. The huge majority of students were specialized in Stone Age, Neolithic, La Tene, and Roman Period, Medieval archaeology, Mediterranean Archaeology: Archaeology of Greece, Roman Archaeology, Egyptology In the early 1990s, Aleksander Bursche and Tomasz Mikocki contributed to further energetic development of the Institute by expanding the didactic programme and improving the management of the institute.
At the beginning of the 2000s, the Institute enrolled about 150 students for the first year of the Bachelor's programme and 240 for the first year of the Master's programme in archaeology. Despite the observed decrease in the next decade, the Institute remains the leading institution teaching archaeology in Poland. In 2019, every year 101 students applied for the Bachelor's degree in archaeology at the institute, 43 for the Master's degree
In the early 2010s, the didactics included Underwater Archaeology, and since 2012 a full introductory course Geographic Information System for Archaeologists, which was then further expanded to advanced level
In 2020, the Institute of Archaeology was reshaped into Faculty of Archaeology, and headed by Bartosz Kontny.