Difference between revisions of "Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Education]]
 
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[[Category:Universities and Colleges]]
 
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{{Infobox University|
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{{Infobox University-Jen|
 
name=Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg|
 
name=Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg|
 
native_name=Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg|
 
native_name=Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg|
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motto=''Die Weisheit hat sich ein Haus erbaut''
 
motto=''Die Weisheit hat sich ein Haus erbaut''
 
("Wisdom has built itself a house")|
 
("Wisdom has built itself a house")|
established=[[1457]]|
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established=1457|
 
type=Public university|
 
type=Public university|
 
rector=Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Jäger |
 
rector=Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Jäger |
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affiliations=[[European University Association|EUA]], [[LERU]]|
 
affiliations=[[European University Association|EUA]], [[LERU]]|
 
website=[http://www.uni-freiburg.de www.uni-freiburg.de] |
 
website=[http://www.uni-freiburg.de www.uni-freiburg.de] |
image=|
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image=[[Image:Universität Freiburg Epitaph.jpg|200 px]]|
 
data_from=2004
 
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[[Image:Map Freiburg in Germany.png|frame|right|Location of [[Freiburg]] in [[Germany]].]]
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'''Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg''' ([[German language|German]] '''''Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg''''') was founded 1457 in [[Freiburg]] by the [[Habsburg]]s. One of the oldest [[university|universities]] in [[Germany]], it has a long tradition of teaching the [[humanities]], [[social science]]s, and natural [[science]]s. The university is one of Germany's most prestigious, and is a leading research as well as teaching institution in [[Europe]]. While it suffered many challenges in its long history, having to relocate on several occasions due to [[war]]s and changing political as well as religious situations, it finally settled permanently in the historic and beautiful city of Freiburg.  
'''Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg''' ([[German language|German]] '''''Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg''''' ) was founded [[1457]] in [[Freiburg]] by the [[Habsburgs]]. One of the oldest [[university|universities]] in [[Germany]], it has a long tradition of teaching the humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. The university is one of Germany's most prestigious and a leading research as well as teaching institution in Europe.
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{{toc}}
[[Image:Universität Freiburg Kollegiengebäude I (Altbau).jpg|thumb|250px|''Kollegiengebäude I'', erected in 1913 as main building of the university.|left]]
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With its long-standing reputation of excellence, the university looks to both the past to maintain its academic and cultural heritage while at the same time is always forward looking, developing new methods and opportunities so as meet the needs of the changing world. The University of Freiburg has been home to some of the greatest minds, counting notable philosophers and theologians such as [[Hannah Arendt]], [[Rudolf Carnap]], [[Edmund Husserl]], [[Martin Heidegger]], and [[Karl Jaspers]], as well as numerous [[Nobel Prize|Nobel laureates]]. The school makes every attempt to give each student a quality education.
==History==
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Originally Albrechts University, the university started with four faculties ([[theology]], [[philosophy]], [[medicine]] and [[law]]).  Its establishment belongs to the second wave of German university foundings in the late [[Middle Ages]], like the [[Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen]] and the [[University of Basel]]. Established by papal privilege ([[papal bull]]) the University in Freiburg actually was - like all or most universities in the middle ages - a corporation of the church body and therefore belonged to the [[Roman Catholic Church]] and its hierarchy. The bishop of [[Basel]] consequently was its [[Provost (education)|provost]] or [[chancellor]] (''Kanzler''), the bishop of [[Konstanz]] was its [[patron]] while the real founder of the university was the sovereign, Archduke [[Albert VI of Austria]], being the brother of [[Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick III]], Emperor of the [[Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation]]. At its founding, the university was named after [[Albert VI of Austria]]. He provided the university with land and a huge amount of [[endowment]]s as well as its own [[jurisdiction]]. Also he declared Albrechts University as the "county university" (German ''Landesuniversität'') for his territory - in the past including an area from [[Alsace]] to [[Tyrol]] - until it was handed over to the Austrian [[House of Habsburg]] in 1490.  
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==Mission and Reputation==
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According to the university's mission statement, presented on the university's website, it declares that the Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg looks to both the past and future for how it operates today; conscious and proud of its long history, the university pays special attention to maintaining its academic and cultural heritage while at the same time developing new methods and opportunities so as meet the needs of the changing world.<ref name=mission>Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg (2007) [http://www.uni-freiburg.de/en/universitaet/leitbild/"Mission statement of the University of Freiburg"] Retrieved November 25, 2007.</ref> The school is also very conscious of giving every student a quality education, developing state-of-the art research facilities and developing cross-disciplinary programs.<ref name=mission/>
  
Shortly after that the university had a time of prosperity when numerous later famous [[humanists]] were educated there like [[Geiler von Kaysersberg]], [[Johann Reuchlin]] or [[Jakob Wimpfeling]]. When [[Ulric Zasius]] was teaching law (until 1536), Freiburg became a centre of [[Humanism|humanist]] jurisprudence. From 1529 to 1535 [[Erasmus of Rotterdam]] lived and taught in [[Freiburg]]. Since around 1559 the university was housed at the ''Altes Collegium'' ("Old College"), today called the "new town-hall". The importance of the university decreased during the time of the [[Counter-Reformation]]. To counter those tendencies, the administration of two faculties was handed over to the Roman-Catholic order of the [[Jesuits]] in 1620. (The two faculties were, of course, [[Theology]] (or [[Divinity (academic discipline)|Divinity]]) and [[Philosophy]].) Since 1682 the [[Jesuits]] built up their college as well as the Jesuit church (nowadays the "University Church" or ''Universitätskirche'').  
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The Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg has a long-standing reputation of excellence. The university's reputation attracts world-class professors and researchers to Freiburg, leading to an excellent position in the 2005 ''Humboldt Ranking'',<ref> Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung Foundation (2006) "Humboldt Rankings: Germany's most internationally attractive universities."</ref> which measures the number of research stays by foreign fellows and award winners sponsored by the [[Humboldt Foundation]]. Freiburg achieved a particularly high rank in the life sciences, finishing second. In 2007, it was named the 94th, out of 500, top universities around the world.<ref>Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University (2007) [http://www.arwu.org/rank/2007/ARWU2007_Top100.htm"Top 500 World Universities (1-99)"] Retrieved November 24, 2007.</ref> Within the top 100 European universities, Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg was named the 31st best.<ref>Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University (2007) [http://www.arwu.org/rank/2007/ARWU2007_TopEuro.htm"Top 100 European Universities"] Retrieved November 24, 2007.</ref>
  
At times, especially during the disorders of the [[Thirty Years' War]], the university had to move out of [[Freiburg]] temporarily, e.g. from 1686 to 1698, when French troops devastated [[Freiburg]] and the southern parts of the [[upper Rhine]] region.  
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In university rankings of German magazines and periodicals the Albert Ludwigs University has established itself as one of Germany's top universities. The faculties for [[law]], [[medicine]], [[history]], English studies, [[biology]], and [[pharmacology]] achieve especially high scores.<ref>CHE Centrum für Hochschulentwicklung (2007) [http://www.che.de/cms/?getObject=260&getName=Projekte+alphabetisch&strAction=show&PK_Projekt=172&getLang="Homepage"] Retrieved November 25, 2007.</ref>
  
After [[Freiburg]] as the capital of [[Further Austria]] was re-conquered, a new time began for the university by the reforms of Empress [[Maria Theresa of Austria]]. The requirements for admission were changed for all faculties in 1767 (before that time only [[Roman Catholic]]s were allowed to study) and [[Natural sciences|Natural Sciences]] were added as well as [[Public Administration (science)|Public Administration]]. Also in 1767, the university became a governmental institution despite the Church's protests. The Church finally lost its predominant influence on the university when the [[Jesuits]] were suppressed following a decree signed by [[Pope Clement XIII]] in 1773. It also might have been the ''Zeitgeist'' and the official line of the new Emperor [[Joseph II]] (successor and son of Empress [[Maria Theresa of Austria]]) that his Patent of Tolerance which ensured [[Protestants]] the same rights as [[Catholics]] (published 1781) finally began an era of [[Enlightenment (concept)|Enlightenment]] within the domains of the [[Habsburg]], nowadays known as an era called "''Josephinismus''". Consequently [[Johann Georg Jacobi]] (brother of the more famous philosopher [[Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi]]) in 1784 was the first Protestant professor teaching at the university in [[Freiburg]]. It is said that [[Joseph II]] instructed in his will to offer the professorship in [[Freiburg]] to [[Johann Heinrich Jacobi]], probably already guessing the shocked reaction which the citizens of [[Freiburg]] would show given the fact that the area around [[Freiburg]] was deeply devoted to [[Roman Catholic Church|Catholicism]].  
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==History==
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[[Image:Freiburg - Alte Uni.JPG|thumb|right|250 px|Old University in Freiburg, Germany]]
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Originally Albrechts University, the university started with four faculties ([[theology]], [[philosophy]], [[medicine]] and [[law]]).<ref name=history>Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg (2007) [http://www.uni-freiburg.de/en/universitaet/geschichte.php"The History of the Albert-Ludwig University of Freiburg"] Retrieved November 25, 2007.</ref> Its establishment belongs to the second wave of German university foundings in the late [[Middle Ages]], like the [[Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen]] and the [[University of Basel]]. Established by papal privilege ([[papal bull]]) the University in Freiburg actually was&mdash;like all or most universities in the middle ages&mdash;a corporation of the church body and therefore belonged to the [[Roman Catholic Church]] and its hierarchy. The bishop of [[Basel]] consequently was its [[Provost (education)|provost]] or [[chancellor]] ''(Kanzler)'', the bishop of [[Konstanz]] was its [[patron]] while the real founder of the university was the sovereign, Archduke [[Albert VI of Austria]], being the brother of [[Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick III]], Emperor of the [[Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation]].  
  
When [[Freiburg]] became a part of the newly established [[Grand Duchy]] of [[Baden]] (in German "''Großherzogtum Baden''") in 1805 (after [[Napoleon]] occupied the area of the formerly [[Further Austria]]), a crisis began for the university in [[Freiburg]]. Indeed there were considerations by [[Karl Friedrich, Grand Duke of Baden]] and [[Karl, Grand Duke of Baden]] to close down the university in [[Freiburg]] while both of them thought that the [[Grand Duchy]] could not afford to run two universities at the same time (the [[Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg]] also already existed since 1386). The university had enough [[endowment]]s and earnings to survive until the beginning of the regency of [[Ludwig I, Grand Duke of Baden]] in 1818. Finally in 1820 he saved the university with an annual contribution. Since then the university has been named Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg (''Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg'') as an acknowledgement of gratitude by the university and the citizens of [[Freiburg]].  
+
At its founding, the university was named after [[Albert VI]] of [[Austria]]. He provided the university with land and a huge amount of [[endowment]]s as well as its own [[jurisdiction]]. Also he declared Albrechts University as the "county university" (German ''Landesuniversität'') for his territory&mdash;in the past including an area from [[Alsace]] to [[Tyrol]]&mdash;until it was handed over to the Austrian House of [[Habsburg]] in 1490.  
  
In the [[1880s]] the population of the [[student]] body and faculty started to grow quickly. The excellent scientific reputation of Albert Ludwigs University attracted several researchers like economist [[Adolph Wagner]], historians [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georg_von_Below Georg von Below] and [[Friedrich Meinecke]], or jurists [[Karl von Amira]] and [[Paul Lenel]]. In 1899 Freiburg became the first German university to accept a female student. Just before [[World War I]] the university counted 3,000 students. After World War I the highly distinguished [[philosophy|philosophers]] [[Edmund Husserl]] and (since 1928) [[Martin Heidegger]] taught at Albert Ludwigs University, as well as [[Edith Stein]] (she was the assistant of [[Edmund Husserl]], the predecessor of [[Martin Heidegger]]). On the field of social sciences, [[Walter Eucken]] developed the idea of [[ordoliberalism]], which consequently is also known as the "[[Freiburg School]]".  
+
Shortly after that the university had a time of prosperity when numerous later famous [[humanism|humanists]] were educated there like [[Geiler von Kaysersberg]], [[Johann Reuchlin]] or [[Jakob Wimpfeling]]. The importance of the university decreased during the time of the [[Counter-Reformation]]. To counter those tendencies, the administration of two faculties was handed over to the Roman-Catholic order of the [[Jesuits]] in 1620. (The two faculties were, of course, [[Theology]] (or [[Divinity (academic discipline)|Divinity]]) and [[Philosophy]].)<ref name=howard>Thomas Albert Howard, ''Protestant Theology and the Making of the Modern German University'', (Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 0199266859).</ref> Since 1682 the Jesuits built up their college as well as the Jesuit church (nowadays the "University Church" or ''Universitätskirche''). At times, especially during the disorders of the [[Thirty Years' War]], the university had to move out of [[Freiburg]] temporarily, e.g. from 1686 to 1698, when French troops devastated Freiburg and the southern parts of the [[upper Rhine]] region.
  
In the beginning of the [[20th century]] several new university buildings were built in the centre of Freiburg, such as in 1911 the new main building. During the "[[Third Reich]]" the university went through the process of [[Gleichschaltung]] like the rest of the German universities. This means that most of the non-governmental or non-state-controlled institutions, unions, clubs and associations of students were illegal (e.g. Catholic student fraternities were declared illegal). Under the rector [[Martin Heidegger]] all Jewish faculty members, among them many excellent and renowned Jewish scientists and professors, were forced to leave the university in accordance with the "‘Law for the Reintroduction of Professional Civil Service".
+
After [[Freiburg]] as the capital of [[Further Austria]] was re-conquered, a new time began for the university by the reforms of Empress [[Maria Theresa of Austria]]. The requirements for admission were changed for all faculties in 1767 (before that time only [[Roman Catholic]]s were allowed to study) and [[Natural sciences|Natural Sciences]] were added as well as [[Public Administration (science)|Public Administration]]. Also in 1767, the university became a governmental institution despite the Church's protests. The Church finally lost its predominant influence on the university when the Jesuits were suppressed following a decree signed by [[Pope Clement XIII]] in 1773. It also might have been the ''Zeitgeist'' and the official line of the new Emperor [[Joseph II]] (successor and son of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria) that his Patent of Tolerance which ensured [[Protestants]] the same rights as [[Catholics]] (published 1781) finally began an era of [[Enlightenment]] within the domains of the Habsburg, nowadays known as an era called "''Josephinismus''."<ref name=howard/>
After [[World War II]] the university was re-opened. New buildings for natural [[sciences]] were erected in the ''Institutsviertel'' ("institute quarter").
 
  
In the late 20th century, the university was part of a mass education campaign and expanded rapidly. The student body grew to 10,000 by the [[1960s]], and doubled to 20,000 students by [[1980]].
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When Freiburg became a part of the newly established [[Grand Duchy]] of [[Baden]] (in German "''Großherzogtum Baden''") in 1805 (after [[Napoleon]] occupied the area of the formerly [[Further Austria]]), a crisis began for the university in Freiburg. Indeed there were considerations by [[Karl Friedrich, Grand Duke of Baden]] and [[Karl, Grand Duke of Baden]] to close down the university in Freiburg while both of them thought that the Grand Duchy could not afford to run two universities at the same time (the [[Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg]] also already existed since 1386). The university had enough [[endowment]]s and earnings to survive until the beginning of the regency of [[Ludwig I, Grand Duke of Baden]] in 1818. Finally in 1820 he saved the university with an annual contribution. Since then the university has been named Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg ''(Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg)'' as an acknowledgment of gratitude by the university and the citizens of Freiburg.<ref name=history/>
 
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[[Image:Universität Freiburg Kollegiengebäude I (Altbau).jpg|thumb|250px|''Kollegiengebäude I'', erected in 1913 as main building of the university.|left]]
In the [[1970s]], the faculty structure was changed to 14 departments, with the Faculty of [[applied science|Applied Sciences]] becoming the 15th faculty in [[1994]]. In [[2002]], the number of faculties was reduced to eleven.
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In the 1880s the population of the student body and faculty started to grow quickly. The excellent scientific reputation of Albert Ludwigs University attracted several researchers like economist [[Adolph Wagner]], historians [[Georg von Below]] and [[Friedrich Meinecke]], or jurists [[Karl von Amira]] and [[Paul Lenel]]. In 1899 Freiburg became the first German university to accept a female student. Just before [[World War I]] the university counted 3,000 students. After World War I the highly distinguished [[philosophy|philosophers]] [[Edmund Husserl]] and (since 1928) [[Martin Heidegger]] taught at Albert Ludwigs University, as well as [[Edith Stein]] (she was the assistant of Edmund Husserl, the predecessor of Martin Heidegger). On the field of social sciences, [[Walter Eucken]] developed the idea of [[ordoliberalism]], which consequently is also known as the "[[Freiburg School]]."
 
 
In 2003, the university opened a memorial dedicated to the victims of National Socialism among the students, staff, and faculty.
 
 
 
The Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg has many partnerships with universities all around the world, especially the "Sokrates/Erasmus" partnership - a system mainly throughout Europe with an exchange-programme that is very popular with foreign students.
 
 
 
Since March 2006, the Albert Ludwigs University (ALU) Freiburg is a member of the League of European Research Universities ([[LERU]]).
 
 
 
==Campus==
 
 
 
[[Image:tw-freiburg-university.jpg|thumb|300px|''Kollegiengebäude I ''as viewed from the library.]]
 
 
 
Having grown with the city since the 15th century, the university's buildings are deeply intertwined with the city of Freiburg. There are three large campuses scattered throughout the city (the university centre next to the historical city of Freiburg, the institutes quarter and the applied sciences campus), but other buildings can be found all over Freiburg.
 
  
The [[University Medical Center Freiburg]] (''Universitätsklinikum Freiburg'') is one of Germany's largest medical centers. It boasts nearly 1,800 beds and handles 54,000 in-patients a year, with another 300,000 being treated ambulatorily. It consists of 13 specialized clinics, 5 clinical institutes, and 5 centers (e.g. Center for Transplantation Medicine). Many of the University Medical Center's achievements are ground-breaking, such as the first implantation of an artificial heart (2002) and so help to make the university clinic one of Germany's most distinguished.
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In the beginning of the twentieth century several new university buildings were built in the center of Freiburg, including the new main building. During the "[[Third Reich]]" the university went through the process of [[Gleichschaltung]] like the rest of the German universities. This means that most of the non-governmental or non-state-controlled institutions, unions, clubs, and associations of students were illegal (Catholic student [[fraternity|fraternities]] were declared illegal). Under the rector [[Martin Heidegger]] all Jewish faculty members, among them many excellent and renowned Jewish scientists and professors, were forced to leave the university in accordance with the "Law for the Reintroduction of Professional Civil Service." After [[World War II]] the university was re-opened.<ref name=history/> Since March 2006, the university has been a member of the League of European Research Universities ([[LERU]]).
  
==Students==
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==Facilities==
Today the university has a student population of around 22,100, including both undergraduate and graduate students. Approximately 16% of these students are foreigners.
 
  
==Faculty==
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[[Image:Uni Freiburg.JPG|thumb|250px|Kollegiengebäude II der Universität Freiburg]]
Today, there are about 430 professors, 2,950 scientific employees and 8,400 non-scientific employees working for the Albert Ludwigs University, making it one of Freiburg's and the region's biggest employer.
 
  
 +
Having grown with the city since the fifteenth century, the university's buildings are deeply intertwined with the city of Freiburg. There are three large campuses scattered throughout the city (the university center next to the historical city of Freiburg, the institutes quarter and the applied sciences campus), but other buildings can be found all over Freiburg.
  
 +
The ''University Medical Center Freiburg'' ''(Universitätsklinikum Freiburg)'' is one of the largest medical centers in Germany, as well as one of the most reputable. It is the teaching hospital of the University. In 1751, the university's medical faculty began charity medical activities. In 1780, the first general clinic ''(Allgemeines Kranken-Spital)'' was established. In the nineteenth century a medical center was built, followed by an entire campus with different specialized departments. In 1887 the psychiatric clinic was constructed. In 1926 the architect Albert Lorenz began building a modern hospital complex at the present hospital location. During the bombing raid of 1944, almost all medical center facilities were destroyed. In 1952 the reconstruction of the medical center in accordance with the original plans began. Since then, the medical center has continuously expanded and added many institutes and satellite clinics.<ref name=medical>Office of Medical Services and International Business Development (2007) [http://www.uniklinik-freiburg.de/ims/live/history_en.html"History of the University Medical Center Freiburg"] Retrieved November 25, 2007.</ref>
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Today, the hospital boasts almost 1,800 beds and treats 54,000 in-patients each year. Over 300,000 out-patients are seen annually. The University Medical Center employs more than 8,240 people, including over 1,000 doctors. It consists of many specialized clinics and institutes, as well as research facilities and lecture halls.<ref name=medical/>
  
==Current affairs==
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The University Medical Center Freiburg enjoys an excellent international reputation, due to world-class medical treatment and extensive clinical research. Many sensational achievements have been made there, such as the first implantation of the [[artificial heart]] ''Jarvik-2000'', and the first [[brain surgery]] assisted by [[robot]]s, a procedure available in only a select few hospitals.  
In university rankings of German magazines and periodicals ([[Der Spiegel]], Zeit, Focus, etc. [http://www.uni-freiburg.de/en/universitaet/ranking.php?] [http://www.che.de/cms/?getObject=260&getName=Projekte+alphabetisch&strAction=show&PK_Projekt=172&getLang=] ) the Albert Ludwigs University has established itself as one of Germany's top universities. The faculties for law, medicine, history, English studies, biology, and pharmacology achieve especially high scores.  
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[[Image:Universität Freiburg FAW.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Fakultät für Angewandte Wissenschaften der Universität Freiburg: rechts das Gebäude 101 (Bibliothek, Hörsäle, Seminarräume, Dekanat), in der Mitte zwei Lehrstuhlgebäude, links hinten die Mensa; die Objekte in der Mitte sind Teile der Installation ''Jump and Twist'' by Dennis Oppenheim.]]
<br /><br />
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The university also has an excellent [[library]] with a large collection and a [[museum]], ''Uniseum Freiburg'', which traces the history of the university from its inception to modern day. Its collection includes invaluable artworks, photographs, writings, and more.<ref> [http://www.uniseum.de/"Uniseum Freiburg"] (2007) Retrieved November 25, 2007.</ref>
The European Commission compiled a list of the 22 European universities with the highest scientific impact [ftp://ftp.cordis.europa.eu/pub/indicators/docs/3rd_report_snaps10.pdf] (measured in terms of the impact factor of their scientific output), taking several years of specialist effort to evaluate. The ranking focuses on the scientific quality of an institution, as opposed to its size or perceived prestige. The University of Freiburg ranked 6th highest in Europe and 2nd highest in Germany.
 
<br/><br />
 
The University of Freiburg further demonstrated its position as one of the best German universities during the ''Excellence Initiative'' by the [[Federal Ministry for Education and Research (Germany)]], receiving funding for the new graduate school ''Molecular Cell Research in Biology and Medicine''. This graduate school is based on cooperation with other internationally renowned institutions, such as the ''International Max Planck Research School (IMPRS)'' and the ''Bernstein Center for Computational Neurosciences (BCCN)''. The university has also generated a very positive response towards the concept for the future of the university, called ''"Windows for Research” – New Universitas and Four Beacons of Learning'', which aims to promote a high level of interdisciplinarity between the research fields and attract scientists from all over the world. The University of Freiburg intends to found a ''"Freiburg Institute of Advanced Studies” (FRIAS)'' with four main schools: School of Historical Studies, School of Language and Literature, School of Life Sciences, and School of Soft Matter Science and Functional Systems. Members of this institute will be top researchers of international renown to be invited as fellows.  
 
  
On [[January 12]], [[2007]] the Excellence Initiative jury chose eight universities out of a total of 27 to submit their proposals for the second round of the contest. The University of Freiburg is among the institutions selected and is considered to be a favorite, due to the excellent placement in the first round. The final results will be announced in October 2007.
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==Programs==
  
In 2007, the Albert Ludwigs University celebrates its 550th anniversary.
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The Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg offers a wide variety of degrees in both the [[science]]s and [[humanities]], mostly at the undergraduate and graduate level. It is within the Medical program that the university offers its most varied programs of study; degrees in medical assistance, technicians, nursing, practicing and research doctors, as well as dental studies are all offered by the Faculty of Medicine.
  
==Organization==
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==Departments==
[[Image:Tw-freiburg-university-mensa.jpg|frame|right|Students eating in the central ''mensa'' (cafeteria) on Rempartstraße.|300px]]
 
[[Image:Universität Freiburg Epitaph.jpg|thumb|300px|"Die Wahrheit wird euch frei machen" (The truth will make you free).]]
 
 
The university is headed by a [[rector]] and divided into 11 faculties:
 
The university is headed by a [[rector]] and divided into 11 faculties:
  
Line 95: Line 81:
 
# Faculty of [[Applied science|Applied Science]] ([[MEMS]], [[computer science]])
 
# Faculty of [[Applied science|Applied Science]] ([[MEMS]], [[computer science]])
  
It is part of the regional [http://eucor-uni.u-strasbg.fr/pages/accueil.php3?la=en EUCOR] federation with [[Karlsruhe]], [[University of Basel|Basel]], [[Mulhouse]] and [[Strasbourg]].
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The University of Freiburg and its faculties offers many opportunities for excellent graduate education and research. In an evaluation of European graduate programs conducted by the Centrum für Hochschulentwicklung, a German think tank for higher education, Freiburg University ranked in the top group for all subject fields examined.<ref>[http://www.pr.uni-freiburg.de/pm/2007/pm.2007-11-29.396/ Universität Freiburg mit vier Fächern in der Top-Gruppe] Kommunikation und Presse, November 29, 2007. Retrieved December 21, 2007.</ref>
  
== Notable alumni and professors ==
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Apart from the many graduate programs of its faculties, Freiburg has set up additional specialized graduate schools and graduate research centers to help promote top-level research and ensure excellent future prospects for graduates.<ref>[http://www.iga.uni-freiburg.de/ International Graduate Academy (IGA) Freiburg] Retrieved December 21, 2007.</ref>
  
'''Humanities & Social Sciences'''
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==Student Life==
* [[Günther Anders]]
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[[Image:Tw-freiburg-university-mensa.jpg|thumb|right|250 px|Students eating in the central ''mensa'' (cafeteria) on Rempartstraße.]]
* [[Hannah Arendt]]
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Today the university has a student population of around 22,100, including both undergraduate and graduate students. Approximately 16 percent of these students are foreigners. Even though it is not located in a large metropolitan area, the Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg does offer students plenty of opportunities beyond their academic studies; there are numerous student clubs and activities offered on campus, sports clubs for students to take part in athletic ventures as well as for other students to be spectators, plays and movies, and the city of Freiburg does offer a nightlife. Students are also encouraged to take part in the local workforce through job placements by the division of German Labor Division.
* [[Götz Briefs]]
 
* [[Rudolf Carnap]]
 
* [[Alfred Döblin]]
 
* [[Erasmus|Erasmus of Rotterdam]]
 
* [[Hans Friedrich Karl Günther]]
 
* [[Edmund Husserl]]
 
* [[Martin Heidegger]]
 
* [[Karl Jaspers]]
 
* [[Paul Kirchhoff]]
 
* [[Emmanuel Lévinas]]
 
* [[Karl Löwith]]
 
* [[Niklas Luhmann]]
 
* [[Karl Mannheim]]
 
* [[Herbert Marcuse]]
 
* [[Friedrich Meinecke]]
 
* [[Wilfred Harold Munro]]
 
* [[Heinrich Rickert]]
 
* [[Gerhard Ritter]]
 
* [[James Harvey Robinson]]
 
* [[Franz Rosenzweig]]
 
* [[Humphrey Spender]]
 
* [[Leo Strauss]]
 
* [[Gerd Tellenbach]]
 
* [[Martin Waldseemüller]]
 
* [[Max Weber]]
 
  
'''Politics & Law'''
+
==Notable Alumni==
* [[Konrad Adenauer]]
+
With its long tradition of excellence, the University of Freiburg has been home to some of the greatest minds. Among the distinguished affiliates, there are numerous [[Nobel Prize|Nobel laureates]] and [[Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize|Leibniz Prize]] winners, in addition to key philosophers and theologians.
* [[Richard V. Allen]]
 
* [[Hildegard Behrens]]
 
* [[Karl Binding]]
 
* [[Konstantin Fehrenbach]]
 
* [[Hans Filbinger]]
 
* [[Joseph Goebbels]]
 
* [[Julius Leber]]
 
* [[Jutta Limbach]]
 
* [[Karl von Rotteck]]
 
* [[Panagiotis Pipinelis]]
 
* [[Wolfgang Schäuble]]
 
* [[Peter Schlechtriem]]
 
* [[Ulrich Zasius]]  
 
  
''' Economics'''
+
* [[Hannah Arendt]] - Jewish-American political theorist of German descent and one of the most original, challenging, and influential political thinkers of the twentieth century
* [[Walter Eucken]]
+
* [[Rudolf Carnap]] - an influential philosopher who was active in central Europe before 1935 and in the United States thereafter
 +
* [[Erasmus|Erasmus of Rotterdam]] - Dutch humanist and theologian, contributed to the intellectual foundations of the [[Reformation]]
 +
* [[Edmund Husserl]] - known as the "father" of phenomenology, a major philosophical movement in the twentieth century
 +
* [[Martin Heidegger]] - considered by many to be one of the most significant and influential philosophers of the twentieth century
 +
* [[Karl Jaspers]] - a German philosopher who developed a unique theistic existential philosophy
 +
* [[Joseph Goebbels]] - was a German politician and Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda during the National Socialist regime from 1933 to 1945
 
* [[Friedrich August von Hayek]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1974, Economics)
 
* [[Friedrich August von Hayek]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1974, Economics)
* [[Adolph Wagner]]
 
 
'''Theology'''
 
* [[Johann Eck]]
 
* [[Josef Frings]]
 
* [[Karl Cardinal Lehmann]]
 
* [[Gregor Reisch]]
 
* [[Franz Anton Staudenmaier]]
 
 
'''Medicine & Sciences'''
 
* [[Ludwig Aschoff]]
 
 
* [[Robert Bárány]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], scientist (Nobel Prize 1914, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Robert Bárány]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], scientist (Nobel Prize 1914, Physiology or Medicine)
* [[Erwin Baur]]
 
* [[Theodor Bilharz]]
 
* [[Vincenz Czerny]]
 
* [[Eugen Fischer]]
 
* [[Otfrid Foerster]]
 
 
* [[Paul Ehrlich]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1908, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Paul Ehrlich]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1908, Physiology or Medicine)
* [[Felix Hausdorff]]
 
 
* [[Philip Hench]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1950, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Philip Hench]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1950, Physiology or Medicine)
* [[Karl Herxheimer]]
 
 
* [[George de Hevesy]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student and professor (Nobel Prize 1943, Chemistry)
 
* [[George de Hevesy]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student and professor (Nobel Prize 1943, Chemistry)
* [[Alfred Hoche]]
 
* [[Karen Horney]]
 
 
* [[J. Hans D. Jensen]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1963, Physics)
 
* [[J. Hans D. Jensen]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1963, Physics)
 
* [[Georges J. F. Köhler]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]] , student and professor (Nobel Prize 1984, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Georges J. F. Köhler]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]] , student and professor (Nobel Prize 1984, Physiology or Medicine)
* [[Otto Krayer]]
 
 
* [[Hans Adolf Krebs]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1953, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Hans Adolf Krebs]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1953, Physiology or Medicine)
* [[Adolph Kussmaul]]
 
* [[Paul Langerhans]]
 
* [[Kurt Lewin]]
 
* [[Ferdinand von Lindemann]]
 
* [[Ernst Messerschmid]]
 
 
* [[Otto Meyerhof]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1922, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Otto Meyerhof]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1922, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Mario Molina]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]] , student (Nobel Prize 1995, Chemistry)
 
* [[Mario Molina]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]] , student (Nobel Prize 1995, Chemistry)
* [[Karl Wilhelm von Nägeli]]
 
* [[Julius von Sachs]]
 
 
* [[Bert Sakmann]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]] , student (Nobel Prize 1991, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Bert Sakmann]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]] , student (Nobel Prize 1991, Physiology or Medicine)
* [[Christoph Scheiner]]
 
 
* [[Hans Spemann]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1935, Physiology or Medicine)
 
* [[Hans Spemann]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1935, Physiology or Medicine)
 
 
* [[Hermann Staudinger]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1953, Chemistry)
 
* [[Hermann Staudinger]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1953, Chemistry)
* [[Otto Heinrich Warburg]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1931, Physiology or Medicine; Nobel Prize 1944 in Physiology or Medicine offered, was forced to decline due to political reasons)
 
* [[August Weismann]]
 
 
* [[Heinrich Otto Wieland]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1927, Chemistry)  
 
* [[Heinrich Otto Wieland]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1927, Chemistry)  
 
* [[Adolf Windaus]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1928, Chemistry)
 
* [[Adolf Windaus]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], student (Nobel Prize 1928, Chemistry)
 
* [[Georg Wittig]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1979, Chemistry)
 
* [[Georg Wittig]] [[Image:Nobel prize medal.svg|15px]], professor (Nobel Prize 1979, Chemistry)
* [[Ernst Zermelo]]
 
 
==See also==
 
* [[University Medical Center Freiburg]]
 
* [[Freiburg im Breisgau]]
 
 
==External link==
 
* [http://www.uni-freiburg.de/index_en.php Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg]
 
* [http://www.ub.uni-freiburg.de/index.html University Library]
 
* [http://www.uniklinik-freiburg.de/ip/splash/start.html University Medical Center Freiburg]
 
  
{{LERU}}
+
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 +
*Chickering, Roger. ''The Great War and Urban Life in Germany: Freiburg, 1914-1918''. Cambridge University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0521852562
 +
*Freidenreich, Harriet Pass. ''Female, Jewish, and Educated: The Lives of Central European University Women''. Indiana University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0253340993
 +
*Howard, Thomas Albert. ''Protestant Theology and the Making of the Modern German University''. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0199266859
  
1. http://www.uni-freiburg.de/en/universitaet/ranking.php <br>
+
==External links==
2. CHE research ranking (http://www.che.de/cms/?getObject=260&getName=Projekte+alphabetisch&strAction=show&PK_Projekt=172&getLang=)<br />
+
All links retrieved June 17, 2023.
3. Downsizing and specialising: the university model for the 21st century? (Ranking of top 22 European Universities with highest scientific impact, part of the "Third European Report on Science & Technology Indicators" 2003, updated 2004) ftp://ftp.cordis.europa.eu/pub/indicators/docs/3rd_report_snaps10.pdf
+
* [http://www.uni-freiburg.de/ Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg]
 
+
* [http://www.ub.uni-freiburg.de/index.html Freiburg University Library]
 
+
* [http://www.medizinstudium.uni-freiburg.de Medical Studies]
 
+
* [http://www.sgbm.uni-freiburg.de/ Spemann Graduate School of Biology and Medicine]
 
 
  
  
{{Credits|Albert_Ludwigs_University_of_Freiburg|131571925|}}
+
{{Credits|Albert_Ludwigs_University_of_Freiburg|131571925|University_Medical_Center_Freiburg|163343121}}

Latest revision as of 05:02, 17 June 2023


Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Universität Freiburg Epitaph.jpg
Latin: Alma Mater Alberto-Ludoviciana
Motto Die Weisheit hat sich ein Haus erbaut

("Wisdom has built itself a house")

Established 1457
Type Public university
Location Freiburg, Germany
Website www.uni-freiburg.de

Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg (German Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg) was founded 1457 in Freiburg by the Habsburgs. One of the oldest universities in Germany, it has a long tradition of teaching the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. The university is one of Germany's most prestigious, and is a leading research as well as teaching institution in Europe. While it suffered many challenges in its long history, having to relocate on several occasions due to wars and changing political as well as religious situations, it finally settled permanently in the historic and beautiful city of Freiburg.

With its long-standing reputation of excellence, the university looks to both the past to maintain its academic and cultural heritage while at the same time is always forward looking, developing new methods and opportunities so as meet the needs of the changing world. The University of Freiburg has been home to some of the greatest minds, counting notable philosophers and theologians such as Hannah Arendt, Rudolf Carnap, Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and Karl Jaspers, as well as numerous Nobel laureates. The school makes every attempt to give each student a quality education.

Mission and Reputation

According to the university's mission statement, presented on the university's website, it declares that the Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg looks to both the past and future for how it operates today; conscious and proud of its long history, the university pays special attention to maintaining its academic and cultural heritage while at the same time developing new methods and opportunities so as meet the needs of the changing world.[1] The school is also very conscious of giving every student a quality education, developing state-of-the art research facilities and developing cross-disciplinary programs.[1]

The Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg has a long-standing reputation of excellence. The university's reputation attracts world-class professors and researchers to Freiburg, leading to an excellent position in the 2005 Humboldt Ranking,[2] which measures the number of research stays by foreign fellows and award winners sponsored by the Humboldt Foundation. Freiburg achieved a particularly high rank in the life sciences, finishing second. In 2007, it was named the 94th, out of 500, top universities around the world.[3] Within the top 100 European universities, Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg was named the 31st best.[4]

In university rankings of German magazines and periodicals the Albert Ludwigs University has established itself as one of Germany's top universities. The faculties for law, medicine, history, English studies, biology, and pharmacology achieve especially high scores.[5]

History

Old University in Freiburg, Germany

Originally Albrechts University, the university started with four faculties (theology, philosophy, medicine and law).[6] Its establishment belongs to the second wave of German university foundings in the late Middle Ages, like the Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen and the University of Basel. Established by papal privilege (papal bull) the University in Freiburg actually was—like all or most universities in the middle ages—a corporation of the church body and therefore belonged to the Roman Catholic Church and its hierarchy. The bishop of Basel consequently was its provost or chancellor (Kanzler), the bishop of Konstanz was its patron while the real founder of the university was the sovereign, Archduke Albert VI of Austria, being the brother of Frederick III, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation.

At its founding, the university was named after Albert VI of Austria. He provided the university with land and a huge amount of endowments as well as its own jurisdiction. Also he declared Albrechts University as the "county university" (German Landesuniversität) for his territory—in the past including an area from Alsace to Tyrol—until it was handed over to the Austrian House of Habsburg in 1490.

Shortly after that the university had a time of prosperity when numerous later famous humanists were educated there like Geiler von Kaysersberg, Johann Reuchlin or Jakob Wimpfeling. The importance of the university decreased during the time of the Counter-Reformation. To counter those tendencies, the administration of two faculties was handed over to the Roman-Catholic order of the Jesuits in 1620. (The two faculties were, of course, Theology (or Divinity) and Philosophy.)[7] Since 1682 the Jesuits built up their college as well as the Jesuit church (nowadays the "University Church" or Universitätskirche). At times, especially during the disorders of the Thirty Years' War, the university had to move out of Freiburg temporarily, e.g. from 1686 to 1698, when French troops devastated Freiburg and the southern parts of the upper Rhine region.

After Freiburg as the capital of Further Austria was re-conquered, a new time began for the university by the reforms of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria. The requirements for admission were changed for all faculties in 1767 (before that time only Roman Catholics were allowed to study) and Natural Sciences were added as well as Public Administration. Also in 1767, the university became a governmental institution despite the Church's protests. The Church finally lost its predominant influence on the university when the Jesuits were suppressed following a decree signed by Pope Clement XIII in 1773. It also might have been the Zeitgeist and the official line of the new Emperor Joseph II (successor and son of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria) that his Patent of Tolerance which ensured Protestants the same rights as Catholics (published 1781) finally began an era of Enlightenment within the domains of the Habsburg, nowadays known as an era called "Josephinismus."[7]

When Freiburg became a part of the newly established Grand Duchy of Baden (in German "Großherzogtum Baden") in 1805 (after Napoleon occupied the area of the formerly Further Austria), a crisis began for the university in Freiburg. Indeed there were considerations by Karl Friedrich, Grand Duke of Baden and Karl, Grand Duke of Baden to close down the university in Freiburg while both of them thought that the Grand Duchy could not afford to run two universities at the same time (the Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg also already existed since 1386). The university had enough endowments and earnings to survive until the beginning of the regency of Ludwig I, Grand Duke of Baden in 1818. Finally in 1820 he saved the university with an annual contribution. Since then the university has been named Albert Ludwigs University Freiburg (Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg) as an acknowledgment of gratitude by the university and the citizens of Freiburg.[6]

Kollegiengebäude I, erected in 1913 as main building of the university.

In the 1880s the population of the student body and faculty started to grow quickly. The excellent scientific reputation of Albert Ludwigs University attracted several researchers like economist Adolph Wagner, historians Georg von Below and Friedrich Meinecke, or jurists Karl von Amira and Paul Lenel. In 1899 Freiburg became the first German university to accept a female student. Just before World War I the university counted 3,000 students. After World War I the highly distinguished philosophers Edmund Husserl and (since 1928) Martin Heidegger taught at Albert Ludwigs University, as well as Edith Stein (she was the assistant of Edmund Husserl, the predecessor of Martin Heidegger). On the field of social sciences, Walter Eucken developed the idea of ordoliberalism, which consequently is also known as the "Freiburg School."

In the beginning of the twentieth century several new university buildings were built in the center of Freiburg, including the new main building. During the "Third Reich" the university went through the process of Gleichschaltung like the rest of the German universities. This means that most of the non-governmental or non-state-controlled institutions, unions, clubs, and associations of students were illegal (Catholic student fraternities were declared illegal). Under the rector Martin Heidegger all Jewish faculty members, among them many excellent and renowned Jewish scientists and professors, were forced to leave the university in accordance with the "Law for the Reintroduction of Professional Civil Service." After World War II the university was re-opened.[6] Since March 2006, the university has been a member of the League of European Research Universities (LERU).

Facilities

Kollegiengebäude II der Universität Freiburg

Having grown with the city since the fifteenth century, the university's buildings are deeply intertwined with the city of Freiburg. There are three large campuses scattered throughout the city (the university center next to the historical city of Freiburg, the institutes quarter and the applied sciences campus), but other buildings can be found all over Freiburg.

The University Medical Center Freiburg (Universitätsklinikum Freiburg) is one of the largest medical centers in Germany, as well as one of the most reputable. It is the teaching hospital of the University. In 1751, the university's medical faculty began charity medical activities. In 1780, the first general clinic (Allgemeines Kranken-Spital) was established. In the nineteenth century a medical center was built, followed by an entire campus with different specialized departments. In 1887 the psychiatric clinic was constructed. In 1926 the architect Albert Lorenz began building a modern hospital complex at the present hospital location. During the bombing raid of 1944, almost all medical center facilities were destroyed. In 1952 the reconstruction of the medical center in accordance with the original plans began. Since then, the medical center has continuously expanded and added many institutes and satellite clinics.[8] Today, the hospital boasts almost 1,800 beds and treats 54,000 in-patients each year. Over 300,000 out-patients are seen annually. The University Medical Center employs more than 8,240 people, including over 1,000 doctors. It consists of many specialized clinics and institutes, as well as research facilities and lecture halls.[8]

The University Medical Center Freiburg enjoys an excellent international reputation, due to world-class medical treatment and extensive clinical research. Many sensational achievements have been made there, such as the first implantation of the artificial heart Jarvik-2000, and the first brain surgery assisted by robots, a procedure available in only a select few hospitals.

Fakultät für Angewandte Wissenschaften der Universität Freiburg: rechts das Gebäude 101 (Bibliothek, Hörsäle, Seminarräume, Dekanat), in der Mitte zwei Lehrstuhlgebäude, links hinten die Mensa; die Objekte in der Mitte sind Teile der Installation Jump and Twist by Dennis Oppenheim.

The university also has an excellent library with a large collection and a museum, Uniseum Freiburg, which traces the history of the university from its inception to modern day. Its collection includes invaluable artworks, photographs, writings, and more.[9]

Programs

The Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg offers a wide variety of degrees in both the sciences and humanities, mostly at the undergraduate and graduate level. It is within the Medical program that the university offers its most varied programs of study; degrees in medical assistance, technicians, nursing, practicing and research doctors, as well as dental studies are all offered by the Faculty of Medicine.

Departments

The university is headed by a rector and divided into 11 faculties:

  1. Faculty of Theology
  2. Faculty of Law
  3. Faculty of Medicine
  4. Faculty of Economics and Behavioural Sciences
  5. Faculty of Philology
  6. Faculty of Philosophy (history, sociology, etc.)
  7. Faculty of Mathematics and Physics
  8. Faculty of Chemistry, Pharmacy and Geo-sciences
  9. Faculty of Biology
  10. Faculty of Forestry and Environmental science
  11. Faculty of Applied Science (MEMS, computer science)

The University of Freiburg and its faculties offers many opportunities for excellent graduate education and research. In an evaluation of European graduate programs conducted by the Centrum für Hochschulentwicklung, a German think tank for higher education, Freiburg University ranked in the top group for all subject fields examined.[10]

Apart from the many graduate programs of its faculties, Freiburg has set up additional specialized graduate schools and graduate research centers to help promote top-level research and ensure excellent future prospects for graduates.[11]

Student Life

Students eating in the central mensa (cafeteria) on Rempartstraße.

Today the university has a student population of around 22,100, including both undergraduate and graduate students. Approximately 16 percent of these students are foreigners. Even though it is not located in a large metropolitan area, the Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg does offer students plenty of opportunities beyond their academic studies; there are numerous student clubs and activities offered on campus, sports clubs for students to take part in athletic ventures as well as for other students to be spectators, plays and movies, and the city of Freiburg does offer a nightlife. Students are also encouraged to take part in the local workforce through job placements by the division of German Labor Division.

Notable Alumni

With its long tradition of excellence, the University of Freiburg has been home to some of the greatest minds. Among the distinguished affiliates, there are numerous Nobel laureates and Leibniz Prize winners, in addition to key philosophers and theologians.

  • Hannah Arendt - Jewish-American political theorist of German descent and one of the most original, challenging, and influential political thinkers of the twentieth century
  • Rudolf Carnap - an influential philosopher who was active in central Europe before 1935 and in the United States thereafter
  • Erasmus of Rotterdam - Dutch humanist and theologian, contributed to the intellectual foundations of the Reformation
  • Edmund Husserl - known as the "father" of phenomenology, a major philosophical movement in the twentieth century
  • Martin Heidegger - considered by many to be one of the most significant and influential philosophers of the twentieth century
  • Karl Jaspers - a German philosopher who developed a unique theistic existential philosophy
  • Joseph Goebbels - was a German politician and Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda during the National Socialist regime from 1933 to 1945
  • Friedrich August von Hayek Nobel prize medal.svg, professor (Nobel Prize 1974, Economics)
  • Robert Bárány Nobel prize medal.svg, scientist (Nobel Prize 1914, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Paul Ehrlich Nobel prize medal.svg, student (Nobel Prize 1908, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Philip Hench Nobel prize medal.svg, student (Nobel Prize 1950, Physiology or Medicine)
  • George de Hevesy Nobel prize medal.svg, student and professor (Nobel Prize 1943, Chemistry)
  • J. Hans D. Jensen Nobel prize medal.svg, student (Nobel Prize 1963, Physics)
  • Georges J. F. Köhler Nobel prize medal.svg , student and professor (Nobel Prize 1984, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Hans Adolf Krebs Nobel prize medal.svg, student (Nobel Prize 1953, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Otto Meyerhof Nobel prize medal.svg, student (Nobel Prize 1922, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Mario Molina Nobel prize medal.svg , student (Nobel Prize 1995, Chemistry)
  • Bert Sakmann Nobel prize medal.svg , student (Nobel Prize 1991, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Hans Spemann Nobel prize medal.svg, professor (Nobel Prize 1935, Physiology or Medicine)
  • Hermann Staudinger Nobel prize medal.svg, professor (Nobel Prize 1953, Chemistry)
  • Heinrich Otto Wieland Nobel prize medal.svg, professor (Nobel Prize 1927, Chemistry)
  • Adolf Windaus Nobel prize medal.svg, student (Nobel Prize 1928, Chemistry)
  • Georg Wittig Nobel prize medal.svg, professor (Nobel Prize 1979, Chemistry)

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg (2007) "Mission statement of the University of Freiburg" Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung Foundation (2006) "Humboldt Rankings: Germany's most internationally attractive universities."
  3. Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University (2007) "Top 500 World Universities (1-99)" Retrieved November 24, 2007.
  4. Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University (2007) "Top 100 European Universities" Retrieved November 24, 2007.
  5. CHE Centrum für Hochschulentwicklung (2007) "Homepage" Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg (2007) "The History of the Albert-Ludwig University of Freiburg" Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Thomas Albert Howard, Protestant Theology and the Making of the Modern German University, (Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 0199266859).
  8. 8.0 8.1 Office of Medical Services and International Business Development (2007) "History of the University Medical Center Freiburg" Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  9. "Uniseum Freiburg" (2007) Retrieved November 25, 2007.
  10. Universität Freiburg mit vier Fächern in der Top-Gruppe Kommunikation und Presse, November 29, 2007. Retrieved December 21, 2007.
  11. International Graduate Academy (IGA) Freiburg Retrieved December 21, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Chickering, Roger. The Great War and Urban Life in Germany: Freiburg, 1914-1918. Cambridge University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0521852562
  • Freidenreich, Harriet Pass. Female, Jewish, and Educated: The Lives of Central European University Women. Indiana University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0253340993
  • Howard, Thomas Albert. Protestant Theology and the Making of the Modern German University. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 0199266859

External links

All links retrieved June 17, 2023.


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