University of Trier
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latin: S. Almi Studii Treverensis |
|
Established | 1970, historical: 1473-1798 |
---|---|
Type | Public |
Rector | Peter Schwenkmezger |
Faculty | 7 |
Staff | 470 |
Students | 12,000 |
Location | Trier, Germany |
Website | www.uni-trier.de/ |
The modern University of Trier (German: Universität Trier), in the German city of Trier, was founded in the year 1970. The first 360 students were matriculated on the 15 October 1970. The new University campus is located on top of the Tarforst, an urban district on the outskirts of the town. The University has seven faculties with around 470 members. In the year 2002 around 12,000 students had been matriculated, 43.5% male and 56.5% female students. The percentage of foreign students was approximately 15.5%.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Historical university
In 1455, Pope Nicholas V granted the archbishop of Trier, Jakob von Sierck to establish a university in his town. The University of Trier was founded March 16, 1473. Battling with financial problems for decades, the university was acquired by the Jesuits in 1560. They emphasized the philosophical and theological faculties, while neglecting medicine and law. In the 1580s Peter Binsfeld was president of the university. In the 1730s Johann Nikolaus von Hontheim also was a faculty member. After the french occupation of the rhineland, the French administration ordered the Universities of Cologne, Mainz and Bonn closed. The historical University of Trier was closed on April 6, 1798.
[edit] Modern university
In 1970 the university was refounded as part of the twin-University Trier / Kaiserslautern, but in 1975 the partners separated and formed independent institutions. In 1977 the new university campus in Tarforst was opened. During the 1990s a former hospital complex was added, and dubbed Campus II.
[edit] University seal
The modern university still uses the seal of the historical university in its corporate design. It contains the Latin motto "Treveris ex urbe deus complet dona sophiae" (God completes the favors of wisdom from the city of Trier). In 2000 an alternative logo was introduced, but this met with resistance.
[edit] Faculties
The university is subdivided into 6 faculties, called "Fachbereiche".
- FB I - Pedagogy, Philosophy, Psychology (ca. 2100 students)
- FB II - Linguistics, Literature, Media (ca. 2700 students)
- FB III - Egyptology, Papyrology, History, Archeology, Art history, Politics (ca. 1600 students)
- FB IV - Economics, Sociology, Mathematics, IT (ca. 3200 students)
- FB V - Law (ca. 1700 students)
- FB VI - Geography, Geology (ca. 1600 students)
There is also a Faculty of Theology, but it is independent from the university itself. It was founded in 1950, and currently counts about 60 students.
[edit] Student demographics
Foreign Students at the university (WS 2004/05) | ||
---|---|---|
Country | Students | Percentage |
Luxembourg | 424 | 22.2% |
China | 290 | 15.2% |
Bulgaria | 133 | 7.0% |
Poland | 86 | 4.5% |
Romania | 70 | 3.7% |
Turkey | 56 | 2.9% |
France | 52 | 2.7% |
Italy | 50 | 2.6% |
Russia | 48 | 2.5% |
Ukraine | 43 | 2.3% |
- WS 2001/02: 11,867 students
- WS 2002/03: 12,660 students
- WS 2003/04: 13,082 students
- WS 2004/05: 14,630 students
- WS 2005/06: 14,837 students
While there are many foreign students in Trier, a large majority of students hails from Rhineland-Palatinate and the adjacent states of Saarland and Northrhine-Westphalia.
[edit] Karl-Marx-University Trier
The AStA proposed changing the name of the University to Karl-Marx-Universität Trier, honoring the city's most famous son. Although the proposal was finally rejected, the AStA still refers to the university as "Karl-Marx-Universität Trier"[1].
[edit] References
[edit] External link
- University of Trier Website (German) (English) (French) (Spanish)