University of Graz
Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz | |
Latin: Carolo Franciscea Graecensis | |
Motto | Numquam retro[1] |
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Motto in English | Never back! (Latin) |
Type | Public |
Established | 1585 |
Affiliation | non-denominational |
Endowment | €189.3 million |
Rector | Christa Neuper |
Academic staff | 2,676[2] |
Administrative staff | 1,240[2] |
Students | 31,580[2] |
Location | Graz, Styria, Austria |
Campus | Urban |
Nobel Laureates | 6 |
Affiliations | Coimbra Group, Utrecht Network |
Website | uni-graz.at/en |
The University of Graz (German: Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz), located in Graz, Austria, is the largest and oldest university in Styria, as well as the second-largest and second-oldest university in Austria.
Karl-Franzens-Universität, also referred to as the University of Graz, is the city's oldest university, founded in 1585 by Archduke Charles II of Austria. For most of its existence it was controlled by the Catholic Church, and was closed in 1782 by Emperor Joseph II in an attempt to gain state control over educational institutions. Joseph II transformed it into a lyceum where civil servants and medical personnel were trained. In 1827 it was re-instituted as a university by Emperor Francis I, thus gaining the name Karl-Franzens-Universität, meaning Charles Francis University. Over 30,000 students are currently enrolled at this university.
The university is sub-divided into six different faculties, the two largest ones being the Faculty of Arts and Humanities and Faculty of Natural Sciences. The other faculties are the faculties of Law; Social and Economic Sciences; Environmental, Regional Sciences and Education; and Catholic Theology. The Faculty of Medicine has been separated from the university by state legislation in 2004 and has since become an independent university in the form of the Medical University of Graz. These six distinct faculties offer a wide range of undergraduate (BA, BSc), graduate (MA, MSc), and doctoral degree (PhD) programmes, as well as special teaching degrees in their specific areas of expertise.
Since its re-installation the university has been home to many internationally renowned scientists and thinkers even though its position in international rankings has been in steady decline due to a lack of sufficient funding of educational institutions by the Austrian government. Ludwig Boltzmann was professor at the University of Graz twice, once from 1869 to 1873 and once from 1876 to 1890, while he was developing his statistical theory of heat. Nobel Laureate Otto Loewi taught at the university from 1909 until 1938 and Victor Franz Hess (Nobel prize 1936) graduated in Graz and taught here from 1920 to 1931 and 1937 to 1938. Furthermore, the physicist Erwin Schrödinger was briefly chancellor of the University of Graz in 1936.
The University of Graz does not have a distinct faculty of engineering, however, the Graz University of Technology which is focused on engineering and technology offers so-called inter-university undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in cooperation with the university's Faculty of Natural Sciences under the name "NAWI Graz". The main intention behind the cooperation was to avoid duplication of efforts and infrastructure, especially in cost-intensive subjects such as chemistry, industrial chemistry, physics, and geosciences, as both universities are located in close proximity to each other. Student's enrolled in one of these programmes attend lectures and seminars at both universities and are awarded a combined degree at the end of their studies.
Because of the university's geographical location close to the Slovenian border and the two major Slovenian cities, Maribor and Ljubljana, it has traditionally attracted many students from Slovenia and served as a gateway to South-East Europe for Austrian scholars, scientists and businesses. The establishment of the Department for Slovene Language and Literature at the University of Graz, for example, set the foundation for scholarly studies of Slovenian culture, literature, and language bundled in the so-called Slovene studies.[3]
International acclaim
World university rankings | |
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Leiden Ranking | 150 |
Academic Ranking of World Universities | 401–500 |
Times Higher Education World University Rankings | 301–350 |
QS World University Rankings | 373 |
In almost all international rankings the position of the University of Graz has been in decline in the last decades, especially in all so-called cost-intensive subjects such as the natural sciences, mostly due to a lack of sufficient funding by the Austrian government. Consequently, the university ranks highest in the Arts and Humanities, coming 175th in the 2012 QS World University Rankings, whereas all other subjects areas are lag far behind with the Faculty of Social Sciences ranking 335th and the Faculty of Natural Sciences ranking 284th.[4] This tendency holds true for all state-funded universities in Austria, even including the three times as large University of Vienna. However, in the recently published Leiden Ranking which only asserts the volume and impact of publications, the University of Graz ranked 150th as the only Austrian university being listed in the top 200.[5]
Religious affiliation
Historically speaking, for most of its existence the University of Graz was controlled by the Catholic Church. Even after its re-installation in 1827 it took until 1848 for the university's basic principles to be readjusted in accordance with the ideals of Wilhelm von Humboldt and the Enlightenment, meaning that the university became autonomous from the state as well as the church and their influence as far as possible.[6] The Faculty of Catholic Theology has been retained as a part of the university ever since its it has been established, however, the its importance in terms of students numbers and influence in the board of the university has been diminishing ever since leaving the faculty as "just one of six" within the University of Graz. Evidently, relations between the Catholic Church, especially the local bishop, and the university's Faculty of Theology remain strong yet general policy is not influenced by these connections. Interestingly, to demonstrate the university's independence and its shift of focus the Christogram IHS on the very top of the university's seal has been replaced with the sun, symbolising the Enlightenment and von Humboldt's ideas.[1]
Nobel prize laureates
- Walther Nernst, 1920 in chemistry – studied in Graz in 1886
- Fritz Pregl, 1923 in chemistry – in Graz 1913 to 1930
- Julius Wagner von Jauregg, 1927 in medicine – in Graz 1889 to 1893
- Erwin Schrödinger, 1933 in physics – in Graz 1936 to 1938
- Otto Loewi, 1936 in medicine – in Graz 1909 to 1938
- Victor Franz Hess, 1936 in physics – studied in Graz 1893–1906 and taught 1919 to 1931 as well as 1937 to 1938
- Gerty Cori, 1947 in medicine – in Graz before 1922
- Ivo Andrić, 1961 in literature – received his doctorate in Graz in 1924
- Karl von Frisch, 1973 in medicine – in Graz 1946 to 1950
Other well-known professors
- Hermann Beitzke, pathologist, professor at Graz from 1922 to 1941
- Leopold Biwald, professor of Physics, late 18th century
- Ludwig Boltzmann, professor of Mathematical Physics 1869 to 1873 and Physics 1876 to 1890
- Ludwig Gumplowicz, taught administration 1897–1909
- Rudolf von Jaksch, taught pediatrics 1887–1899
- Ernst Mach, taught mathematics and physics 1864–67
- Ernst Mally, philosopher, founder of Deontic logic 1925–1942
- Alexius Meinong (1853–1920), philosopher, founder of the Graz School of phenomenological psychology after 1894
- Gustav Meyer, linguist and considered to be one of the founders of Albanology, as a discipline of study, professor since 1881
- Rudolf von Scherer, religious law professor 1875–1899
- Ludwig Karl Schmarda, founder of the school's Zoological Museum (circa 1851)
- Roland Scholl, chemist, professor at the university for some time between 1907–1914
- Joseph Schumpeter, economist, later teaching at Harvard University, in Graz 1912 to 1914
- Anton Wassmuth, professor of theoretical physics from 1893 to 1914
- Alfred Wegener, the father of the continental drift theory, professor of Geophysics from 1924 to 1930
- Gustava Aigner (1906–1987, married: Gustava Kahler), an Austrian geologist and palaeontologist
Famous alumni
- Ivo Andrić, Yugoslav writer and Nobel Prize laureate
- Gabriel Anton, Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist
- Count Anton Alexander von Auersperg, Austrian poet and politician
- Milko Brezigar, Yugoslav economist
- Safet Butka, Albanian politician
- Izidor Cankar, Slovenian art historian and Yugoslav diplomat
- Etbin Henrik Costa, Slovenian politician
- Monika Fludernik, Austrian literary scholar
- Karl Gurakuqi, Albanian linguist and folklorist
- Juraj Habdelić, Croatian writer
- Emil Johann Lambert Heinricher, Austrian botanist
- Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens, Archbishop of Athens
- Ernst Kaltenbrunner, prominent Austrian Nazi official
- Janko Kersnik, Slovenian writer
- Ferdinand Konščak, Jesuit missionary and cartographer
- Karel Lavrič, Slovenian politician
- Franc Miklošič, Austrian-Slovenian linguist
- Heinz Oberhummer, Austrian physicist
- Vladimir Šubic, Slovenian architect
- Nikola Tesla, Serbian inventor, physicist, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, and futurist (did not receive a degree and did not continue beyond the first semester of his third year, during which he stopped attending lectures)
- Lovro Toman, Slovenian politician
- Franz Unger, Austrian paleontologist
- Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, Austro-Ukrainian journalist and writer of Masochism
- Gregory Weeks, jurist and historian
- Milan Zver, Slovenian sociologist and politician
See also
- University Library of Graz
- List of colleges and universities
- List of early modern universities in Europe
- Utrecht Network
References
- 1 2 "The university's symbols: Coat of arms and hymn". University of Graz. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
- 1 2 3 "University of Graz: Facts & Figures". University of Graz. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
- ↑ (Slovene)http://london.veleposlanistvo.si/index.php?id=3162
- ↑ http://www.topuniversities.com/institution/karl-franzens-universitaet-graz
- ↑ http://derstandard.at/1397522602909/Leiden-Ranking-Uni-Graz-auf-Platz-150
- ↑ History of the University of Graz
Further studies
- Höflechner, Walter; Wagner, Ingrid Maria (2006). Geschichte der Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz: von den Anfängen bis in das Jahr 2005 (in German). Grazer Universitätsverlag. ISBN 3-7011-0058-6.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Graz. |
- University of Graz Website (German) (English)
- Video portrait of University of Graz
- Institute of Geography and Regional Science – Karl-Franzens University Graz
- Centre for Southeast European Studies- Karl-Franzens University Graz
- University of Graz – History from the Catholic Encyclopedia
- Pictures from Graz
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Coordinates: 47°04′41″N 15°26′57″E / 47.07806°N 15.44917°E