- Source: University of Warsaw
The University of Warsaw (Polish: Uniwersytet Warszawski, Latin: Universitas Varsoviensis) is a public research university in Warsaw, Poland. Established on November 19, 1816, it is the largest institution of higher learning in the country, offering 37 different fields of study as well as 100 specializations in humanities, technical, and natural sciences.
The University of Warsaw consists of 126 buildings and educational complexes with over 18 faculties: biology, chemistry, medicine, journalism, political science, philosophy, sociology, physics, geography, regional studies, geology, history, applied linguistics, philology, Polish language, pedagogy, economics, law, public administration, psychology, applied social sciences, management, mathematics, computer science, and mechanics.
Among the university's notable alumni are heads of state, prime ministers, Nobel Prize laureates, including Sir Joseph Rotblat and Olga Tokarczuk, as well as several historically important individuals in their respective fields, such as Frédéric Chopin, Hilary Koprowski, Bohdan Paczyński, Bolesław Prus, Wacław Sierpiński, Alfred Tarski, L. L. Zamenhof and Florian Znaniecki.
History
= Beginnings under Alexander I (1816–1918)
=In 1795, the partitions of Poland left Warsaw with access only to the Academy of Vilnius when the oldest and most influential Polish academic center, the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, became part of the Austrian Habsburg monarchy. In 1815, the newly established semi-autonomous polity of Congress Poland found itself without a university at all, as Vilnius was incorporated into the Russian Empire. In 1816, Alexander I permitted the Polish authorities to create a university, comprising five departments: Law and Administration, Medicine, Philosophy, Theology, and Art and Humanities. The university soon grew to 800 students and 50 professors. After most of the students and professors took part in the November 1830 Uprising the university was closed down; it was again closed after the failed January Uprising of 1863. As a consequence, all Polish-language schools were prohibited by the Imperial Russian government which controlled Congress Poland. During its short existence, the university educated thousands of students, many of whom became part of the backbone of the Polish intelligentsia.
In 1915, during the First World War, Warsaw was seized by German Empire and the occupying German authorities allowed a certain degree of liberalization to gain military support from the Poles. In accordance with the concept of Mitteleuropa, the Germans permitted several Polish social and educational societies to be recreated, including the University of Warsaw. The Polish language was reintroduced, but, in order to maintain Polish patriotic movement in control, the number of lecturers was kept low. No limits on the number of students; between 1915 and 1918 the number of alumni rose from a mere 1,000 to over 4,500.
= Second Polish Republic (1918–1939)
=After Poland regained its independence in 1918, the University of Warsaw began to grow very quickly. It was reformed; all the important posts (the rector, senate, deans and councils) became democratically elected, and the state spent considerable amounts of money to modernize and equip it. Many professors returned from exile and cooperated in the effort. By the late 1920s the level of education in Warsaw had reached that of western Europe.
By the beginning of the 1930s the University of Warsaw had become the largest university in Poland, with over 250 lecturers and 10,000 students. However, the financial problems of the newly reborn state did not allow for free education, and students had to pay a tuition fee for their studies (an average monthly salary, for a year). Also, the number of scholarships was very limited, and only approximately 3% of students were able to get one. Despite these economic problems, the University of Warsaw grew rapidly. New departments were opened, and the main campus was expanded. After the death of Józef Piłsudski the Senate of the University of Warsaw changed its name to "Józef Piłsudski University of Warsaw" (Uniwersytet Warszawski im. Józefa Piłsudskiego). The Sanacja government proceeded to limit the autonomy of the universities. Professors and students remained divided for the rest of the 1930s as the system of segregated seating for Jewish students, known as ghetto benches, was introduced.
= World War II (1939–1945)
=After the Polish Defensive War of 1939 the German authorities of the General Government closed all the institutions of higher education in Poland. The equipment and most of the laboratories were taken to Germany and divided amongst the German universities while the main campus of the University of Warsaw was turned into military barracks.
German racial theories assumed that no education of Poles was needed and the whole nation was to be turned into uneducated serfs of the German race. Education in Polish was banned and punished with death. However, many professors organized the so-called "Secret University of Warsaw" (Tajny Uniwersytet Warszawski). The lectures were held in small groups in private apartments and the attendants were constantly risking discovery and death. However, the net of underground faculties spread rapidly and by 1944 there were more than 300 lecturers and 3,500 students at various courses.
Many students took part in the Warsaw Uprising as soldiers of the Armia Krajowa and Szare Szeregi. The German-held campus of the university was turned into a fortified area with bunkers and machine gun nests. It was located close to the buildings occupied by the German garrison of Warsaw. Heavy fights for the campus started on the first day of the Uprising, but the partisans were not able to break through the gates. Several assaults were bloodily repelled and the campus remained in German hands until the end of the fights. During the uprising and the occupation 63 professors were killed, either during fights or as an effect of German policy of extermination of Polish intelligentsia. The university lost 60% of its buildings during the fighting in 1944. A large part of the collection of priceless works of art and books donated to the university was either destroyed or transported to Germany, never to return.
= Post-war and the People's Republic (1945–1989)
=After World War II it was not clear whether the university would be restored or whether Warsaw itself would be rebuilt. However, many professors who had survived the war returned, and began organizing the university from scratch. In December 1945, lectures resumed for almost 4,000 students in the ruins of the campus, and the buildings were gradually rebuilt. Until the late 1940s the university remained relatively independent. However, soon the communist authorities started to impose political controls, and the period of Stalinism started. Many professors were arrested by the Urząd Bezpieczeństwa (Secret Police), the books were censored and ideological criteria in employment of new lecturers and admission of students were introduced. On the other hand, education in Poland became free of charge and the number of young people to receive the state scholarships reached 60% of all the students. After Władysław Gomułka's rise to power in 1956, a brief period of liberalization ensued, though communist ideology still played a major role in most faculties (especially in such faculties as history, law, economics, and political science). International cooperation was resumed and the level of education rose.
By the mid-1960s the government started to suppress freedom of thought, which led to increasing unrest among the students. A political struggle within the communist party prompted Zenon Kliszko to ban the production of Dziady by Mickiewicz at the Teatr Narodowy, leading to 1968 Polish political crisis coupled with anti-Zionist and anti-democratic campaign and the outbreak of student demonstrations in Warsaw, which were brutally crushed – not by police, but by the ORMO reserve militia squads of plain-clothed workers. As a result, a large number of students and professors were expelled from the university. Nonetheless, the university remained the centre of free thought and education. What professors could not say during lectures, they expressed during informal meetings with their students. Many of them became leaders and prominent members of the Solidarity movement and other societies of the democratic opposition which led to the collapse of communism. The scientists working at the University of Warsaw were also among the most prominent printers of books forbidden by censorship.
= Third Polish Republic (1989–present)
=In 1999, a new University of Warsaw Library building was opened in Powiśle.: 43 After Poland joined the European Union in 2004, the university obtained additional funds from the European Structural and Investment Funds for the construction of additional buildings including the Biological and Chemical Research Centre, Centre of New Technologies, and a new building for the Faculty of Physics.: 5
In recent years, the University of Warsaw has been ranked among best Polish universities. It was ranked by Perspektywy magazine as the best Polish university in 2010, 2011, 2014, 2016, 2019, and 2022. ARWU ranked the university as the best Polish higher level institution in 2012, 2017, 2018, and 2020. The university is especially well-regarded in science. ARWU ranked the mathematics and physics branches of the institution in the global top 150 and top 75, respectively, in 2022.
Campus
University of Warsaw owns a total of 126 buildings. Further construction and a vigorous renovation program are underway at the main campus. The university is spread out over the city, though most of the buildings are concentrated in two areas.
= Main campus
=The main campus of the University of Warsaw is in the city center, adjacent to the Krakowskie Przedmieście street. It comprises several historic palaces, most of which had been nationalized in the 19th century. The chief buildings include:
Casimir Palace (Pałac Kazimierzowski) – the seat of the rector and the Senate;
Uruski Palace (Pałac Uruskich) – left side of main gate entrance, houses the Department of Geography and Regional Studies
the Old Library (Stary BUW) – since recent refurbishment, a secondary lecture building;
the Main School (Szkoła Główna) – former seat of the Main School until the January 1863 Uprising, later the faculty of biology; now, since its refurbishment, the seat of the Institute of archaeology;
Auditorium Maximum – the main lecture hall, with seats for several hundred students.
The Warsaw University Library building is a short walk downhill from the main campus, in the Powiśle neighborhood.
= Natural sciences campus
=The second important campus is located near Banacha and Pasteura streets. It is home to the departments of chemistry, physics, biology, mathematics, computer science, and geology, and contains several other university buildings such as the Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling, the Environmental Heavy Ion Laboratory that houses a cyclotron and a facility for the production of PET radiopharmaceuticals, and a sports facility. Several new buildings have been constructed within this campus in recent years, and the Department of Physics moved here from its previous location at Hoża Street.
Together with buildings of other institutions, such as the Institute of Experimental Biology, Radium Institute and the Medical University of Warsaw, the campus is part of an almost contiguous area of scientific and educational facilities covering approximately 43 hectares (110 acres).
Organization
= Faculties
=There are 25 following faculties:
Faculty of Applied Linguistics
Faculty of Applied Social Sciences and Resocialisation
Faculty of Archaeology
Faculty of “Artes Liberales”
Faculty of Biology
Faculty of Chemistry
Faculty of Culture and Arts
Faculty of Economic Sciences
Faculty of Education
Faculty of Geography and Regional Studies
Faculty of Geology
Faculty of History
Faculty of Journalism, Information and Book Studies
Faculty of Law and Administration
Faculty of Management
Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Mechanics
Faculty of Medicine
Faculty of Modern Languages
Faculty of Oriental Studies
Faculty of Sociology
Faculty of Philosophy
Faculty of Physics
Faculty of Polish Studies
Faculty of Political Science and International Studies
Faculty of Psychology
= Doctoral schools
=Doctoral School of Humanities
Doctoral School of Social Sciences
Doctoral School of Exact and Natural Sciences
Interdisciplinary Doctoral School
= Other academic units
=Antiquity of Southeastern Europe Research Center
Biological and Chemical Research Centre
Center for Forensic Science
Centre for French Culture and Francophone Studies (French: Centre de Civilisation Francaise et d’Etudes Francophones)
University Centre for Environmental Studies and Sustainable Development
Centre for Europe
Centre for Foreign Language Teacher Training and European Education
Centre for Foreign Language Teaching
Digital Competence Centre
Centre of Migration Research
Centre of New Technologies
Centre for Political Analysis
UNESCO Chair Of Sustainable Development (French: Chaire UNESCO du Developpement Durable de l`Universite de Varsovie)
College of Inter-faculty Individual Studies in the Humanities
College of Inter-faculty Individual Studies in Mathematics and Natural Sciences
Digital Economy Lab
Erasmus of Rotterdam Chair
Heavy Ion Laboratory
Institute of Americas and Europe
Centre for European Regional and Local Studies
American Studies Centre
Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modelling
Robert Zajonc Institute for Social Studies
Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology
Tadeusz Mazowiecki Chair
= Other institutions
="Kampus" Radio
University of Warsaw Archives
University of Warsaw Library
Center for Dialogue and Cooperation
University of Warsaw Choir
University of Warsaw Incubator
University of Warsaw Museum
"Hybrydy" Theatre
Dance Theatre, run by the University of Warsaw Song and Dance Ensemble "Warszawianka"
Friends of the University of Warsaw Association
Volunteer Centre of the University of Warsaw
University of Warsaw Press
In popular culture
In Ian Fleming's 1961 novel Thunderball, the ninth book in the James Bond series, one of the main characters, Ernst Stavro Blofeld who is the head of the global criminal organisation SPECTRE, is said to be a graduate of the University of Warsaw.
In 2016, the Polish Post issued commemorative stamps on the 200th anniversary of the founding of the university depicting the Column Hall of the building of the Faculty of History.
Notable people
= Alumni
=Franciszek Adamczak (1927–2000), paleontologist
Jerzy Andrzejewski (1909–1983), author
Szymon Askenazy (1865-1935), Polish jurist, historian, educator, first Polish representative to the League of Nations
Krzysztof Kamil Baczyński (1921–1944), poet, Home Army soldier killed in the Warsaw Uprising
Joachim Bartoszewicz (1867-1938), nationalist, politician
Menachem Begin (1913–1992), 6th Prime Minister of Israel (1977–1983), Nobel Peace Prize winner (1978)
Małgosia Bela (born 1977), fashion model and actress
Marek Bieńczyk (born 1956), writer, historian of literature, essayist and translator, Nike Award winner (2012)
Adam Bodnar (born 1977), lawyer, human rights activist, Polish Ombudsman, Minister of Justice
Tadeusz Borowski (1922–1951), poet, writer
Karol Borsuk (1905–1982), mathematician
Kazimierz Brandys (1916–2000), writer
Jan Brzechwa (1898–1966), poet, author
Andrzej Buras (born 1946), Danish physicist, recipient of 2020 Max Planck Medal
Frédéric Chopin (1810–1849), pianist, composer
Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz (born 1950), politician, Prime Minister of Poland (1996–1997), Marshal of the Sejm (2005)
Tomasz Dietl (born 1950), physicist
Roman Dmowski (1864–1939), politician, statesman
Adam Dziewonski (1936–2016), geophysicist
Samuel Eilenberg (1913–1998), mathematician, computer scientist, art collector
Barbara Engelking (born 1962), sociologist
Joseph Epstein (1911–1944), communist leader of French resistance
Lech Gardocki (born 1944) lawyer, judge, former First President of the Supreme Court of Poland
Krzysztof Gawędzki (1947–2022), mathematical physicist
Marek Gazdzicki (born 1956), nuclear physicist
Bronisław Geremek (1932–2008), historian, politician
Małgorzata Gersdorf (born 1952), lawyer, first President of the Supreme Court of Poland
Maciej Gliwicz (born 1939), biologist
Witold Gombrowicz (1904–1969), writer
Jan Grabowski (born 1962), Polish-Canadian professor of history
Hanna Gronkiewicz-Waltz (born 1952), politician, President of the National Bank of Poland (1992–2001), Mayor of Warsaw (2006–2018)
Jan T. Gross (born 1947), historian, writer, Princeton University professor
Jarek Gryz, computer scientist, data analyst
Taco Hemingway (born 1990), rapper, songwriter, and musician
Gustaw Herling-Grudziński (1919–2000), journalist, writer, Gulag survivor
Richard B. Hetnarski (born 1928), Polish-American engineer
Leonid Hurwicz (1917–2008), economist, mathematician, Nobel Prize in Economics (2007)
Maria Janion (1926–2020), literary critic
Monika Jaruzelska (born 1963) fashion designer, journalist, daughter of former Polish President Wojciech Jaruzelski
Jerzy Jedlicki (1930–2018), historian of ideas, anti-communist activist
Jarosław Kaczyński (born 1949), politician, Prime Minister of Poland (2006–2007)
Lech Kaczyński (1949–2010), politician, Mayor of Warsaw (2002–2005), President of Poland (2005–2010)
Andrzej Kalwas (born 1936), lawyer, businessman, and former Polish Minister of Justice
Aleksander Kamiński (1903–1978), writer, leader of Polish Scouting and Guiding Association
Ryszard Kapuściński (1932–2007), writer and journalist
Mieczysław Karłowicz (1876–1909), composer and conductor
Jan Karski (1914–2000), Polish resistance fighter
Małgorzata Kidawa-Błońska (born 1957), politician, lawyer, and sociologist, 14th Marshal of the Sejm
Ryszard Kole, pharmacologist, 2019 Massry Prize winner
Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska (1925–2015), paleobiologist
Leszek Kołakowski (1927–2009), philosopher, historian of philosophy
Bronisław Komorowski (born 1952), politician, Marshal of the Sejm (2007–2010), 5th President of Poland (2010–2015)
Alpha Oumar Konaré, (born 1946), 3rd President of Mali (1992–2002)
Hilary Koprowski (1916–2013), virologist and immunologist
Janusz Korwin-Mikke (born 1942), conservative-liberal politician and journalist
Marek Kotański (1942–2002), psychologist and streetworker
Jacek Kuroń (1934–2004), historian, author, social worker, and politician
Irena Lasiecka (born 1948), mathematician
Jacek Leociak (born 1957), literary scholar and historian
Aleksander Lesser (1814–1884), painter, illustrator and art critic
Maciej Lewenstein (born 1955), theoretical physicist
Jan Józef Lipski (1926–1991), literature historian, politician
Michał Lityński (1906-1989), Righteous Among the Nations
Ewa Łętowska (born 1940), lawyer, first Polish Ombudsman for Citizen Rights
Olga Malinkiewicz (born 1982), physicist
Tadeusz Mazowiecki (1927–2013), author, social worker, journalist, Prime Minister of Poland (1989–1991)
Adam Michnik (born 1946), journalist, historian, public intellectual
Wladek Minor (born 1946), Polish-American biophysicist
Karol Modzelewski (1937–2019), historian, politician
Jerzy Neyman (1894–1981), mathematician, statistician, University of California professor
Jan Olszewski (1930-2019), lawyer, politician, Prime Minister of Poland (1991–1992)
Janusz Onyszkiewicz (born 1937), politician
Maria Ossowska (1896–1974), sociologist
Bohdan Paczyński (1940–2007), astronomer
Rafał Pankowski (born 1976), sociologist and political scientist
Longin Pastusiak (born 1935), politician, Marshal of the Senate of the Republic of Poland (2001–2005)
Bolesław Piasecki (1915–1979), politician
Krzysztof Piesiewicz (born 1945), lawyer, screenwriter
Marian Pilot (born 1936), writer, journalist and screenwriter, Nike Award winner (2011)
Jerzy Pniewski (1913–1989), physicist
Moshe Prywes (1914–1998), Israeli physician and educator; first President of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
Adam Przeworski (born 1940), political scientist, New York University professor
Bolesław Prus (1847–1912), writer
Mikhail Reisner (1868-1928), Russian and Soviet jurist, historian and academic.
Emanuel Ringelblum (1900–1944), historian, founder Emanuel Ringelblum Archives of Warsaw Ghetto
Ireneusz Roszkowski (1910–1996), precursor of prenatal medicine
Józef Rotblat (1908–2005), physicist, Nobel Peace Prize (1995)
Agata Różańska (born 1968), astronomer and astrophysicist
Yitzhak Shamir (1915–2012), 7th Prime Minister of Israel (1983–1984 and 1986–1992)
Wacław Sierpiński (1882–1969), mathematician
Andrzej Sobolewski (born 1951), physicist
Alexander Soloviev (1890-1971) Russian émigré jurist, historian, academic
Dmitry Strelnikoff (born 1969), Russian writer, biologist, journalist for the media
Kazimiera Szczuka (born 1966), literary critic, feminist, LGBT rights activist, television personality
Adam Szymczyk (born 1970), art critic and curator
Magdalena Środa (born 1957), philosopher and feminist
Alfred Tarski (1902–1982), logician, mathematician, member of the Lwów-Warsaw school of logic
Władysław Tatarkiewicz (1886–1980), philosopher, historian of esthetics
Olga Tokarczuk (born 1962), writer, essayist, psychologist, Nobel Prize in Literature (2018)
Izabela Tomaszewska (1955–2010) governmental protocol official and archaeologist
Rafał Trzaskowski (born 1972), politician, academic teacher, Mayor of Warsaw
Julian Tuwim (1894–1953), poet and writer
Andrzej Udalski (born 1957), astronomer and astrophysicist
Kostiantyn Voblyi (1876-1947), Ukrainian economist, academic, active in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union.
Andrzej Kajetan Wróblewski (born 1933), experimental physicist
Janusz A. Zajdel (1938–1985), physicist and science-fiction writer
L. L. Zamenhof (1859–1917), physician, inventor of Esperanto
Paweł Zarzeczny (1961–2017), sports journalist, columnist and TV personality
Maciej Zembaty (1944–2011), poet, writer, translator of Leonard Cohen's works
Wojciech Zaremba (born 1988), computer scientist, co-founder of OpenAI
Rafał A. Ziemkiewicz (born 1964), writer
Florian Znaniecki (1882–1958), philosopher and sociologist
Anna N. Żytkow (born 1947), astrophysicist
= Academic staff
=Osman Achmatowicz (1899–1988), chemist, rector of the Technical University of Łódź (1946–1953)
Vladimir Prokhorovich Amalitskii (1860–1917), paleontologist
Szymon Askenazy (1866–1935), historian
Aleksandr Nikolaevich Bartenev (1882-1946), zoologist
Maria Ludwika Bernhard (1908–1998), archaeologist
Karol Borsuk (1905–1982), mathematician
Franciszek Bujak (1919–1921) historian
Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay (1845–1929), linguist, introduced the concept of a phoneme
Zygmunt Bauman (1925–2017), sociologist
Tomasz Dietl (born 1950), physisct, Laureate of Agilient Technologies Europhysics Prize of The European Physical Society (2005)
Samuel Dickstein (1851-1939), mathematician, proponent of Jewish assimilation in Poland
Benedykt Dybowski (1833–1930), biologist and explorer of Siberia and Baikal area
Aleksandr Mikhailovich Evlakhov (1880-1966), literary critic
Michel Foucault (1926–1984), French philosopher, at the university dean-faculty of the French Centre 1958–1959
Stanisław Grabski (1871–1949), economist
Dmitri Iosifovich Ivanovsky (1864-1920), botanist, pioneer in the discovery and study of viruses
Henryk Jabłoński (1909–2003), historian, nominal head of state of Poland (1972–1985)
Feliks Pawel Jarocki (1790–1865), zoologist
Barbara Jaruzelska (1931–2017), philologist and German studies professor, First Lady of Poland (1985–1990)
Nikolai Ivanovich Kareev (1850-1931), philosopher, historian
Yefim Fyodorovich Karsky (1861-1931) linguist, ethnographer, paleographer
Jerzy Kolendo (1955-1983), classical archaeologist and historian
Leszek Kołakowski (1927–2009), philosopher
Kazimierz Kuratowski (1896–1980), mathematician
Joachim Lelewel (1786–1861), historian, politician and freedom fighter
Aleksandra Leliwa-Kopystyńska (1937–2023) Polish physicist
Antoni Leśniowski (1867–1940), surgeon and medic, one of the discoverers of Crohn's disease
Edward Lipiński (1888–1986), economist, founder of the Main Statistical Office
Jan Łukasiewicz (1878–1956), mathematician and logician
Mieczysław Maneli (1922–1994), jurist
Leszek Marks (born 1951), geologist
Kazimierz Michałowski (1901–1981), archaeologist, explorer of Deir el Bahari and Faras
Andrzej Mostowski (1913–1975), mathematician
Nikolai Viktorovich Nasonov (1855-1939), zoologist
Maria Ossowska (1896–1974), sociologist
Stanisław Ossowski (1897–1963), sociologist
Vladimir Ivanovich Palladin (1859-1922), biochemist, botanist
Grigol Peradze (1899–1942), Orthodox theologian
Leon Petrażycki (1867–1931), jurist, philosopher and logician, one of the founders of sociology of law
Ladislaus Pilars de Pilar (1874–1952), literature professor, poet and entrepreneur
Adam Podgórecki (1925–1998), sociologist of law
Dmitry Yakovlevich Samokvasov (1843-1911), archaeologist, legal historian
Henryk Samsonowicz (1930–2021), historian, rector (1980–1982)
Wacław Sierpiński (1882–1969), mathematician
Alfred Sokołowski (1849–1924), physician and a pioneer in tuberculosis treatment
Hélène Sparrow (1891–1970), bacteriologist and public health pioneer, especially typhus
Nikolay Yakovlevich Sonin (1849–1915), mathematician
Jan Strelau (born 1931), psychologist
Jerzy Szacki (1929–2016), sociologist and historian
Andrzej K. Tarkowski (born 1933), zoologist, laureate of Japan Prize (2002)
Stanisław Thugutt (1873–1941), politician, rector (1919–1920)
Georgy Feodosevich Voronoy (1868-1908), mathematician
Tadeusz Wałek-Czarnecki (1889–1949), professor of Ancient History
Ewa Wipszycka (born 1933), historian and papyrologist
Władysław Witwicki (1878–1948), psychologist, philosopher, translator and artist
Georgy Viktorovich Wulff (1863-1925), crystallographer
Włodzimierz Zonn (1905–1985), astronomer
= Staff
=Czesław Miłosz – janitor at Warsaw University Library during World War II; recipient of 1980 Nobel Prize in Literature
= Rectors
=See also
List of modern universities in Europe (1801–1945)
Open access in Poland
Warsaw School of History (Askenazy school)
Warsaw School of Mathematics
Main building of Warsaw University (Rostov-on-Don)
Notes
External links
Official website
The WU Students Association
Website of The University New Library
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pakta Warsawa
- The Japanese School in Warsaw
- Berenice Troglodytica
- Universitas Warsawa
- Wojciech Brzozowski (ahli hukum)
- Kebudayaan Yaz
- Tembok-tembok kota Tadmur
- Piramida triadik
- Mitteleuropa
- Islam di Slovenia
- University of Warsaw
- Warsaw University of Technology
- National Defence University of Warsaw
- Warsaw
- Medical University of Warsaw
- Warsaw University of Life Sciences
- University of Warsaw Library
- Destruction of Warsaw
- Rectors of the University of Warsaw
- Warsaw Uprising