The centre was established in 1998 thanks to the efforts of František Šmahel and Petr Sommer. The Centre for Medieval Studies is technically a specialized departement of the Institute of Philosophy of the CzechAcademy of Sciences. The Institute provides the Centre with its basic budget, though most of CMS’s funding comes from grants and project financing. The remainder of its budget, covering the costs of doctoral students, is contributed by Charles University’s Faculty of Arts. The main objective of the Centre for Medieval Studies as laid down by its statute is to provide highly-qualified support to doctoral and post-graduate students in all disciplines of the Medieval Studies, from general history to medieval archaeology, the auxiliary historical sciences, legal history, the history of philosophy, theology, literary history, and the art history, as well as in specialist philological and other disciplines. A no less serious responsibility of the Centre is represented by research and publication projects of an interdisciplinary nature, necessitating the pulling together of top professionals, specialised equipment and financial resources. It organises internal meetings and workshops with guests from Czechia and abroad, and meetings for young scholars with an interdisciplinary orientation towards unconventional projects and approaches to research, namely the Annual Meeting of Doctoral Students and the Summer School of Medieval Studies. The Centre also offers two annual, two-week-long research fellowships in cooperation with the Hus Museum Association, and the University of Constance. The Centre for Medieval Studies owns a highly-specialized and constantly-expanding library equipped with editions of sources and scholarly literature, amounting to some 9,000 volumes. The library is open to all interested students and researchers. The Centre runs the Czech Medieval Sources online project which makes available editions of primary sources important for Czech medieval history for internet users. Since 2009, it publishes Studia Mediaevalia Bohemica, a biannual journal open to scholarly contributions in all fields related to the Middle Ages in Central Europe written in Czech, Slovak, English, German, Polish, or French.