Jagiellonian University
Jagiellonian University |
Uniwersytet Jagielloński |
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Latin: Universitas Jagellonica Cracoviensis
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Motto: |
Plus ratio quam vis
(Let reason prevail over force) |
Established: |
1364 |
Type: |
Public |
Rector: |
Professor Karol Musioł |
Students: |
52,445 (2008) |
Undergraduates: |
12,249 |
Postgraduates: |
38,087 |
Doctoral students: |
2,109 |
Location: |
Kraków, Poland |
Campus: |
urban |
Affiliations: |
EUA, Coimbra Group, Europaeum, NAFSA, Utrecht Network, EAIE, IRUN |
Website: |
http://www.uj.edu.pl/ |
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- For several academies alternatively called "Krakow Academy", see Education in Kraków
The Jagiellonian University (Polish: Uniwersytet Jagielloński, often shortened to UJ) is located in Kraków, Poland. Originally founded as Akademia Krakowska (English: Cracow Academy) in 1364 by Casimir III the Great, it is the second oldest university in Central Europe after the Charles University in Prague, and one of the oldest universities in Europe. It was renamed as the Jagiellonian University in 1817 to commemorate the Jagiellonian dynasty of Polish kings.[1] The Times Higher Education Supplement ranked Jagiellonian University as the best Polish university in 2006.[2]
History
Casimir III realized that the nation needed a class of educated people, especially lawyers, who could codify the laws and administer the courts and offices. His efforts to found an institution of higher learning in Poland were rewarded when Pope Urban V granted him permission to open the Cracow Academy. The Royal Charter of Foundation was issued on 12 May, 1364. The King provided funding for one chair in liberal arts, two in Medicine, three in Canon Law and five in Roman Law, funded by a quarterly payment taken from the proceeds of the royal monopoly on the salt mines at Wieliczka.[3] Its development was stalled by the death of the king, and later the academy was re-established (1400) by King Wladislaus Jagiełło and his wife Jadwiga. The queen donated all of her personal jewelry to the academy, allowing it to enroll 203 students. The faculties of astronomy, law and theology attracted eminent scholars: for example, Stanisław of Skalbmierz, Paweł Włodkowic, Jan of Głogów, and Albert Brudzewski, who from 1491 to 1495 was one of Nicolaus Copernicus's teachers.
Throughout the history of the University, thousands of students from all over Poland, from Lithuania, Russia, Hungary, Bohemia, Germany and Spain have studied there. In the second half of the 15th century, over 40% of students came from the countries other than the Kingdom of Poland. For several centuries, virtually the entire intellectual elite of Poland was educated at the University.
The first chancellor of the academy was Piotr Wysz and the first professors were Czechs, Germans and Poles, many of them trained at the Charles University in Prague in Bohemia. Of the students attending about one third were Poles.
By 1520 Greek philology was introduced by Constanzo Claretti and Wenzel von Hirschberg; Hebrew was also taught.
Jagiellonian University in Krakow Old Town District
The Golden era of the Cracow Academy took place during the Polish Renaissance, between 1500 and 1535, when it was attended by 3215 students in the first decade of the 16th century. As the popularity declined, this record was not surpassed until the late 18th century.
In 1846, after the Kraków Uprising,[4] the city and its university became part of the Austrian Empire. The threat of a closure of the University was dissipated in 1847 by the Austrian Emperor's decree to maintain it. Buildings, like the Collegium Novum opened in 1887, were added.
On November 6, 1939, 184 professors were arrested and deported to Sachsenhausen concentration camp. The university, along with the rest of Poland's higher and secondary education was shut down for the remainder of World War II.[5]
The faculty was suppressed by the Communists in 1954.[5]
In 2007, the administrative offices including those of the Rector and Deans were located at the historic Collegium Novum.
Since 2000 a new complex of university buildings, the so-called Third Campus, is under construction, due for completion in 2009[6].
Notable people connected with the university
Damage to Jagiellonian University during WWII.
Monument to
Nicolaus Copernicus next to the Jagiellonian University's
Collegium Novum (New College)
Collegium Novum, Aula
Przegorzały Castle, Institute of European Studies
The Campus of the 600th Anniversary of the Jagiellonian University Revival (The Third Campus)
- Saint John Cantius 1390-1473. Scholastic; theologian
- Jan Długosz 1415-1480; historian
- Laurentius Corvinus 1465-1527; humanist; lecturer at the Academy
- Nicolaus Copernicus 1473-1543; astronomer; promoter of heliocentrism
- Francysk Skaryna 1485?-1540?; pioneer of the Belorussian language;first to print a book in an Eastern Slavic language (1517 in Prague)
- Andrzej Frycz Modrzewski 1503?-1572; diplomat; political thinker; religious thinker
- Marcin Kromer 1512-1589; historian; Prince-Bishop of Warmia
- Jan Kochanowski 1530-1584; one of the best Polish poets
- Bartosz Paprockic.1543 - 1614; writer; historiographer; translator; poet; genealogist
- Stanisław Koniecpolski 1590?-1646; military commander; military politician; Grand Hetman of the Crown
- John III Sobieski 1629-1696; military leader; monarch of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth; victor of the Battle of Vienna
- Wincenty Pol 1807-1872; poet; geographer
- Ignacy Łukasiewicz 1822 - 1882; pharmacist; deviser of the first method of distilling kerosene from seep oil
- Carl Menger 1840-1921; economist; lawyer; founder of the Austrian School of economics
- Wacław Sierpiński 1882-1969; mathematician
- Bronisław Malinowski 1884-1942; anthropologist
- Ivo Andric - Nobel laureate
- Henryk Sławik 1894-1944; diplomat; designater of a Righteous Among the Nations for the rescue of Jews in World War II Hungary
- Tadeusz Pankiewicz 1908-1993; pharmacist; Righteous Among the Nations who aided Jews in the Kraków Ghetto
- Józef Cyrankiewicz 1911-1989; communist politician; prime minister of Poland 1947-1970
- George Zarnecki 1915-2008; art historian specializing in English Romanesque art
- Antoni Kępiński 1918-1972; psychiatrist
- Pope John Paul II (Karol Wojtyła) 1920-2005
- Zbigniew Czajkowski ("Father of the Polish School of fencing") b. 1921
- Stanisław Lem 1921-2006; writer
- Bohdan Lepky; writer
- Wisława Szymborska b. 1923; poet; 1996 Nobel laureate in Literature
- Norman Davies b. 1939; British historian
- Krzysztof Zanussi b. 1939; film director
- Leo Sternbach 1908-2005; chemist; inventor of the benzodiazepine
- Paulo Szot born c. 1970; opera singer; Broadway musical theatre actor
Outstanding professors
Courtyard of the Collegium Maius.
- Stanisław of Skarbimierz (1360-1431), rector, theologian, lawyer
- Paweł Włodkowic (1370-1435), lawyer, diplomat and politician, representative of Poland on the Council of Constance
- Albert Brudzewski (1445-1497), astronomer and mathematician
- Maciej Miechowita (1457-1523), historian, chronicler, geographer, medic
- Jan Brożek (1585-1652), mathematician, physician and astronomer
- Henryk Jordan (1842-1907), professor of obstetrics
- Walery Jaworski (1849–1924), gastroenterologist
- Władysław Natanson (1864–1937), physicist
- Stanisław Estreicher (1869-1939), founder of the Jagiellonian University Museum
- Tadeusz Estreicher (1871-1952), pioneer in cryogenics
- Marian Smoluchowski (1872-1917), pioneer of statistical physics
- Stanisław Kutrzeba (1876-1946), rector, General Secretary of the Polish Academy of Learning
- Andrzej Gawroński (1885-1927), founder of the Polish Oriental Society, master of Sanskrit
- Stanisław Kot (1885-1975), historian and politician
- Tadeusz Sulimirski (1898-1983), historian and archaeologist, experts on the ancient Sarmatians
- Stanislaw Smreczynskis(1899-1975) zoologist.
- Henryk Niewodniczański (1900-1968), physicist
- Bohdan Lepky, literature
Enrollment
The university has 52,445 students (including 1,612 degree students from abroad) and 3,657 academic staff (2008). About 1130 international non-degree students were enrolled in the year 2007. Programmes of study in 48 disciplines and 93 specialisations are offered[7]. The school has an exchange program with The Catholic University of America and its Columbus School of Law.[8]
Library
The university's Jagiellonian Library (Biblioteka Jagiellońska) is one of the largest in the country, with almost 6.5 million volumes. [9] It has a large collection of medieval manuscripts [4], for example Copernicus' De Revolutionibus or Balthasar Behem Codex.
It also gathered the underground literature (so called drugi obieg or samizdat) from the period of communist rule (1945-1989).
Organization
The university is divided into 15 faculties:
- Law and Administration
- Medicine
- Pharmacy and Medical Analysis
- Health Care
- Philosophy
- History
- Philology
- Polish Language and Literature
- Physics, Astronomy and Applied Computer Science
- Mathematics and Computer Science
- Chemistry
- Biology and Earth Sciences
- Management and Social Communication
- International and Political Studies
- Biochemistry, Biophysics and Biotechnology
Student Life
In 1851 first Student Scientific Association was founded. Now, over 70 Student Scientific Associations exist at the Jagiellonian University. Usually, their purpose is to promote student's scientific achievements by organizing lecture sessions, science exursions, even international conferences for students like the International Workshop for Young Mathematicians organized by the Zaremba Association of Mathematicians.
See also
- Nawojka The legendary first female student from the 15th century
- Sonderaktion Krakau A German operation against professors and academics from the University of Kraków
Note
External links
Europaeum |
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Bologna · Bonn · HEI Geneva · Helsinki · Kraków (Jagiellonian) · Leiden · Madrid (Complutense) · Oxford · Paris I: Panthéon-Sorbonne · Prague
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Coimbra Group of European research universities |
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International Research Universities Network |
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Barcelona • Budapest (Peter Pazmany) • Duisburg-Essen • Glasgow • Kraków (Jagiellonian) • Münster • Nijmegen (Radboud) • Poitiers • Siena
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Utrecht Network of European inter-university cooperations |
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Austria: University of Graz · Belgium: University of Antwerp · Czech Republic: Masaryk University · Denmark: University of Aarhus · Estonia: University of Tartu · Finland: University of Helsinki · France: Université Lille Nord de France · University of Strasbourg · Germany: University of Bochum · Leipzig University · Greece: Aristotle University of Thessaloniki · Hungary: Eötvös Loránd University · Iceland: University of Iceland · Ireland: University College Cork · Italy: University of Bologna · Latvia: University of Latvia · Lithuania: Vilnius University · Malta: University of Malta · Netherlands: Utrecht School of the Arts · Utrecht University · Norway: University of Bergen · Poland: Jagiellonian University · Portugal: University of Coimbra · Romania: Alexandru Ioan Cuza University · Slovakia: Comenius University in Bratislava · Slovenia: University of Ljubljana · Spain: Complutense University of Madrid · Switzerland: University of Basel · United Kingdom: Queen's University Belfast · University of Hull ·
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European University Association · Networks of European universities · ERASMUS programme |
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Kraków |
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Districts |
Stare Miasto · Grzegórzki · Prądnik Czerwony · Prądnik Biały · Krowodrza · Bronowice · Bieńczyce · Zwierzyniec · Dębniki · Łagiewniki-Borek Fałęcki · Swoszowice · Podgórze Duchackie · Bieżanów-Prokocim · Podgórze · Czyżyny · Mistrzejowice · Wzgórza Krzesławickie · Nowa Huta
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Attractions |
Wawel · Kazimierz · National Museum · Sigismund Bell · Sukiennice · St. Mary's Basilica
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