Dokkyo University

Dokkyo University
獨協大学
Motto A University is an institution where character is developed through learning
Established 1883
Type Private
President Tadashi Inui
Academic staff
161
Administrative staff
153
Undergraduates 8892
Postgraduates 143
15
Location Soka, Saitama, Japan
Campus Suburb
Colors Blue     
Website http://www.dokkyo.ac.jp/english/index_e.html

Dokkyo University (獨協大学 Dokkyō Daigaku) is a private university in Sōka, Saitama, Japan, which is a fairly liberal, mixed (co-educational) institution noted for its language education programmes and international exchanges.

History

The name "Dokkyo" is the Japanese-style dual kanji-based abbreviation of Verein für deutsche Wissenschaften, or German Studies Society (獨逸學協會 Doitsu-gaku Kyōkai). What was to become today's Dokkyo University was founded on 18 September 1881 by those scholars such as Nishi Amane (西周 Nishi Amane) and Katō Hiroyuki (加藤弘之 Katō Hiroyuki), diplomats such as Inoue Kaoru (井上毅 Inoue Kaoru) and Viscount Aoki Shūzo (青木周藏 Aoki Shūzō) and statesmen such as Shinagawa Yajiroh (品川彌二郎 Shinagawa Yajirō) and Katsura Tarō (桂太郎 Katsura Tarō) as Verein für deutsche Wissenschaften, or German Studies Society (獨逸學協會 Doitsu-gaku Kyōkai), with its first chancellor being Prince Kitashirakawa Yoshihisa (北白川宮能久親王 Kitashirakawa-no-miya Yoshihisa-shinnō). It developed into Schule des Vereins für deutsche Wissenschaften, or German Studies Society School (獨逸學協會學校 Doitsu-gaku Kyōkai Gakkō) in 1883, which opened its doors exclusively to boys in line with the custom at the time. They also founded a highly prestigious law school to study Japan's first constitution (The Constitution of the Great Empire of Japan (大日本帝國憲法 Dai Nippon Teikoku Kempō), modeled after the Prussian one with criminal codes also modeled after the German ones, but the elite law division was absorbed by the Imperial University of Tokyo (東京帝國大學 Tōkyō Teikoku Daigaku) Faculty of Law in 1895.

The school went through a minor negative campaign during the war against the German Empire (Deutsches Reich) from August 1914 to November 1918, but the majority of the Japanese public was either pro-German or neutral despite Japan's role on the British side. The 1920s saw its heyday when the school sent the highest number of boys into the nation's top Daiichi Kōtō Gakkō (第一高等学校 Daiichi Kōtō Gakkō) ("High School No.1") in Tokyo, or popularly known as "Ichikō", which is today's Liberal Arts campus of the University of Tokyo (東京大学 Tōkyō Daigaku). The collapse of the two great empires of Germany and Japan in 1945, however, rendered the elite school into a mere boys' high school of middle rank. During the early 1960s Dokkyo School's graduate and former Education Minister Amano Teiyū (天野貞祐 Amano Teiyū) was invited to "found" the University with money from the school and local governments. They started their first lectures on a higher education level in April 1964.

Schools

Undergraduate

Postgraduate

International exchanges

Academic exchange agreements

Exchange agreements

Alumni

External links

Coordinates: 35°50′24″N 139°47′38″E / 35.8399°N 139.794°E

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