Croatian studies (Croatian: Kroatistika; German: Kroatistik; Latin: Croatistica; Polish: Kroatystyka) is an academic discipline within Slavic studies which is concerned with the study of Croatian language, literature, history and culture.
Beside Croatia, Croatian studies is taught at universities in Hungary, Ukraine, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, India, Canada, Australia and China.
Croatian philological studies have been organized in various framework and extents since the founding of the University of Zagreb and its Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.
[1] The establishment of the Croatian studies unit at the University of Zagreb was closely intertwined with the studies of Slavic philology which were ongoing since the establishment of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in 1874.
[1] Former assistant professor at the Charles University in Prague Leopold (Lavoslav) Geitler became the first full time professor of Slavic studies in Zagreb and two out of his twenty-one courses (namely the "Forms of the Croatian Language from the Perspective of Comparison" and "Old Bulgarian and Croatian Vocabulary") introduced Croatian studies as the university level discipline for the first time ever.