- Source: University of Bucharest
The University of Bucharest (UB) (Romanian: Universitatea din București) is a public research university in Bucharest, Romania. It was founded in its current form on 4 July 1864 (1864-07-04) by a decree of Prince Alexandru Ioan Cuza to convert the former Princely Academy into the current University of Bucharest, making it one of the oldest Romanian universities. It is one of the five members of the Universitaria Consortium (a group of elite Romanian universities).
The University of Bucharest offers study programmes in Romanian and English and is classified as an advanced research and education university by the Ministry of Education.
History
The University of Bucharest was founded by the Decree no. 765 of 4 July 1864 by Alexandru Ioan Cuza and is a leading academic centre and a significant point of reference in society.
The University of Bucharest is rich in history and has been actively contributing to the development and modernization of Romanian education, science, and culture since 1694. In 1694 Constantin Brâncoveanu, ruler of Wallachia, had founded the Princely Academy in Bucharest with lectures delivered in Greek. In 1776, Alexander Ypsilantis, ruler of Wallachia, reformed the curriculum of the Princely Academy, where courses of French, Italian, and Latin were now taught. After 1821, the Princely Academy was continued by the Saint Sava College. In 1857, Carol Davila and Nicolae Crețulescu created the National School of Medicine and Pharmacy. In 1859, the Faculty of Law was created.
In 1857, the foundation stone of the University Palace in Bucharest was laid.
On 4/16 July 1864, Prince Alexandru Ioan Cuza established the University of Bucharest, bringing together the Faculties of Law, Sciences and Letters as one single body. In 1869, the Faculty of Medicine is created through the transformation of the National School of Medicine and Pharmacy. In the following years, new faculties were created: 1884 – the Faculty of Theology; 1906 – the Institute of Geology; 1913 – the Academic Institute for Electrotechnology; 1921 – the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine; 1923 – the Faculty of Pharmacy, 1924 – the Mina Minovici Institute of Forensic Medicine.
In 1956, student leaders, mainly from this university, planned a peaceful protest against Romania's Communist regime but were forcibly prevented from carrying it out. (See Bucharest student movement of 1956).
For a while (in the 1950s and early 1960s), it was called the "C. I. Parhon University", after Constantin Ion Parhon.
Most of the building is still intact, however during the bombardments of Bucharest in 1944, the central corpus of the building was heavily damaged and demolished due to Luftwaffe bombs, and was only re-constructed in 1969–1971. Other sections were also completed by 1980.
The area around the old University building (the University Square), adjacent to the C. A. Rosetti, Roman, Kogălniceanu, and Union squares was the scene of many riots, protests and clashes with the security forces during the Romanian Revolution of 1989. During the months of April–June 1990, the University of Bucharest was the centre of anti-communist protests.
In 1996, Emil Constantinescu, the then rector of the University of Bucharest, was elected President of Romania, after defeating Ion Iliescu in the 1996 Romanian presidential election.
Organisation
= Faculties
=The University of Bucharest has 19 faculties, covering various fields such as natural sciences, humanities, social sciences, and theology:
The Faculty of Business and Administration
The Faculty of Biology
The Faculty of Chemistry
The Faculty of Law
The Faculty of Philosophy
The Faculty of Physics
The Faculty of Geography
The Faculty of Geology and Geophysics
The Faculty of History
The Faculty of Journalism and Communication Studies
The Faculty of Foreign Languages and Literatures
The Faculty of Letters
The Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
The Faculty of Psychology and Education Sciences
The Faculty of Sociology and Social Work
The Faculty of Political Science
The Faculty of Orthodox Theology
The Faculty of Roman Catholic Theology
The Faculty of Baptist Theology
= Academic & Research Units
=The university has the following five interdisciplinary departments:
Technology Department
Distance Learning Department
UNESCO Department for intercultural and interreligious exchanges
Department of Education Pedagogy
Francophone Doctoral School of Social Sciences (French: École Doctorale Francophone de l'Europe Centrale et de Sud-Est)
The university also has a publishing house, different research institutes and research groups (such as the Institute for Political Research, the Institute for Mathematics,
the Center for Byzantine Studies, the Vasile Pârvan Archeology Seminary, the Center for Nuclear Research, etc.), master and doctorate programmes, and a number of lifelong learning facilities and programmes. It has partnership agreements with over 50 universities in 40 countries, and participates in European programmes such as ERASMUS, Lingua, Naric, Leonardo da Vinci, UNICA, AMOS, TEMPUS, TEMPRA. It is an accredited Cisco Academy, has Microsoft curriculum, and is accredited by Red Hat for its academic programme.
Campus
The University of Bucharest has a number of buildings throughout Bucharest, so in that respect it does not have a single campus. Its two main buildings are:
The Old Building, in the University Square (practically right in the center of the city), housing the Faculties of Mathematics and Computer Science, History, Chemistry, Geography, Letters and the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures.
The Kogălniceanu Building, near the Opera House, housing the Administrative section and the Faculty of Law.
Other faculties have their own buildings and research facilities, scattered throughout the city, such as:
The Departments of Germanic, Slavic and Oriental Languages and Literatures, on Pitar Moș Street.
The Faculty of Physics, in the small town of Măgurele, situated 16 km (9.9 mi) south of Bucharest.
The Faculty of Biology, on Splaiul Independenței.
The Faculty of Philosophy, on Splaiul Independenței.
The Faculty of Psychology, on Șoseaua Panduri.
The Faculty of Political Science, on Sfântu Ștefan Street.
The Faculty of Orthodox Theology, on Bibescu Voda Street, near Unirii Square.
The Faculty of Roman Catholic Theology, on General Berthelot Street.
The Faculty of Baptist Theology, on Berzei Street.
The university prints an annual guide for freshmen.
Rankings
In the 2012 QS World University Rankings, the University of Bucharest was included in the Top 601-701 universities of the world, together with three other Romanian universities, including Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca, and Alexandru Ioan Cuza University in Iași.
The University of Bucharest has been awarded the 2000 National Academic Excellence Diploma, and the 2004 National Academic Excellence Medal. All of the degrees and diplomas awarded by the university are internationally recognised.
Affiliations
The University of Bucharest is a member of numerous international organisations and partnerships, including:
As part of the on-going ERASMUS programme, the University of Bucharest has approximately 225 Erasmus agreements with European partner universities.
Academic staff, alumni, and rectors
= Past and present faculty
=Ion Barbu, also known as Dan Barbilian – mathematician and poet
Grigore Brâncuș - linguist
Silviu Brucan – political analyst and author
Matilda Caragiu Marioțeanu – linguist
George Călinescu – writer and literary critic
Mircea Cărtărescu – Postmodern writer
Emil Constantinescu – 3rd President of Romania
Petru Creția – philologist
Neagu Djuvara – historian
Alexandru Graur – linguist
Aristide Halanay – mathematician
Spiru Haret – mathematician, astronomer and politician
Eugène Ionesco – Romanian-French playwright widely considered the most important of the 20th century
Iorgu Iordan – linguist
Nicolae Iorga – historian, literary critic, and politician
Traian Lalescu – mathematician
Gabriel Liiceanu – philosopher
Titu Maiorescu – literary critic
Nicolae Manolescu – author and literary critic
Solomon Marcus – mathematician
Adrian Năstase – politician
Miron Nicolescu – mathematician
Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu – writer and philologist
Dimitrie Pompeiu – mathematician
Alexandru Rosetti – linguist
Ion Th. Simionescu – geologist
Simion Stoilow – mathematician
Nicolae Titulescu – politician
Tudor Vianu – literary critic, philosopher
Dan-Virgil Voiculescu – mathematician
Gheorghe Vrânceanu – mathematician
= Alumni
=Zicu Araia – poet, schoolteacher and Aromanian separatist (did not graduate)
Albert-László Barabási – physicist
Nineta Barbulescu – career diplomat, ambassador
Ismat Beg – mathematician
Leon Boga – writer, schoolteacher and archivist
Gheorghe I. Cantacuzino – archeologist
Matilda Caragiu Marioțeanu – linguist
Hristu Cândroveanu – editor, literary critic and writer
Mircea Cărtărescu – postmodern writer
George Ceara – poet and prose writer (did not graduate)
Zoia Ceaușescu – mathematician, daughter of Nicolae Ceaușescu
Alexandrina Cernov – academic, literary historian and philologist
Emil Cioran – essayist and philosopher
George Ciucu – mathematician
Daniel Dines - billionaire entrepreneur, and the co-founder and CEO of UiPath
Iosif Constantin Drăgan – businessman, writer, and historian
Mircea Eliade – historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago
Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen – economist
Viviana Gradinaru – Professor of Neuroscience at Caltech
Eugen Filotti – diplomat
Horia Hulubei – physicist
Grigore Iunian – politician
Traian Lalescu – mathematician
Stoica Lascu – historian
Gheorghe Mihoc – mathematician
Grigore Moisil – mathematician and computer scientist
Miron Nicolescu – mathematician
Constantin Noe – editor and professor
Ștefan Odobleja – scientist, one of the precursors of cybernetics
Octav Onicescu – mathematician
George Emil Palade – cell biologist, 1974 Nobel Prize laureate
Nicolae Paulescu – Romanian physiologist, professor of medicine, missed the Nobel Prize 1923 for discovering insulin
Eleni Papadopulos-Eleopulos – nuclear physicist and AIDS denialist
Andrei Pleșu – philosopher, essayist, journalist, literary and art critic, and politician
Dorin N. Poenaru – nuclear physicist
Valentin Poénaru – mathematician
Victor Ponta – former Prime Minister of Romania
Constantin Rădulescu-Motru – psychologist and sociologist
Mihail Sadoveanu – writer
Ahmad Maher Abul Samen – Jordanian Minister of Public Works and Housing and Minister of Transport
Nicolae Saramandu – linguist and philologist
George Simion – politician and activist
Horia Sima – leader of the Iron Guard and co-leader of the National Legionary State
Ruxandra Sireteanu – neuroscientist
Bogdan Suceavă – mathematician and writer
Nicolae Șerban Tanașoca – historian and philologist
Gheorghe Tașcă – economist
Nicolas Trifon – academic, editor and linguist
Șerban Țițeica – physicist
Radu Vasile – politician and poet
Dan-Virgil Voiculescu – mathematician
Ioanna Andreesco, writer and anthropologist
= Rectors
=Gheorghe Costaforu (1864–1871)
Vasile Boerescu (1871)
Ioan Zalomit (1871–1885)
Alexandru Orăscu (1885–1892)
Titu Maiorescu (1892–1897)
Grigoriu Ștefănescu (1897–1898)
Constantin Dimitrescu-Iași (1898–1911)
Ermil Pangrati (1911–1912)
Ioan Bogdan (1912)
Thoma Ionescu (1912–1915)
Ioan Athanasiu (1915–1920)
Mihail Vlădescu (1920–1923)
Ermil Pangrati (1923–1929)
Nicolae Iorga (1929–1932)
Nicolae Gheorghiu (1932–1936)
Constantin C. Stoicescu (1936–1940)
Petre P. Panaitescu (1940–1941)
Alexandru Otetelișanu (1941)
Horia Hulubei (1941–1944)
Daniel Danielopolu (1944)
Simion Stoilow (1944–1946)
Alexandru Rosetti (1946–1949)
Ilie G. Murgulescu (1949–1950)
Constantin Balmuș (1950–1952)
Avram Bunaciu (1952–1954)
Nicolae Sălăgeanu (1954–1957)
Iorgu Iordan (1957–1958)
Jean Livescu (1959–1963)
Gheorghe Mihoc (1963–1968)
Jean Livescu (1968–1972)
George Ciucu (1972–1981)
Ioan-Ioviț Popescu (1981–1988)
Ion Dodu Bălan (1989)
Nicolaie D. Cristescu (1990–1992)
Emil Constantinescu (1992–1996)
Ioan Mihăilescu (1996–2005)
Ioan Pânzaru (2005–2012)
Mircea Dumitru (2012–2019)
Marian Preda (2019–Present)
See also
List of modern universities in Europe (1801–1945)
References
External links
Official website (in English)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Universitas Bukares
- Lalu Muhamad Iqbal
- Bukares
- Philip Kotler
- Faltonia Betitia Proba
- Liviu Librescu
- Athena (kota)
- Rumania
- Moldova
- Gellu Naum
- University of Bucharest
- Politehnica University of Bucharest
- University Square, Bucharest
- Bucharest
- Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy
- Central University Library, Bucharest
- List of buildings in Bucharest
- Technical University of Civil Engineering of Bucharest
- Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies
- List of universities in Romania