Harman Patil (Editor)

University of Parma

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Type
  
Public

Rector
  
Prof. Loris Borghi

Students
  
26,000 (2016)

Phone
  
+39 0521 902111

Total enrollment
  
23,322 (2014)

Founded
  
962 AD

Established
  
962

Administrative staff
  
1,798

Location
  
Parma, Italy

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
1,005.87 EUR (2011)

Province
  
Province of Parma

Color
  
Blue and yellow

University of Parma

Address
  
Via dell'Università, 12, 43121 Parma PR, Italy

Notable alumni
  
Flavio Delbono, Bernardino Ramazzini, Clarissa Marchese, Vittorio Gallese, Alberto Broggi

Similar
  
University of Modena and Regg, University of Bologna, University of Milan, University of Pavia, University of Padua

Profiles

Universit di parma the world waiting for you


The University of Parma (Italian: Università degli Studi di Parma, UNIPR) is one of the oldest universities in the world, founded in the 10th century. It is organised in nine departments. As of 2016 the University of Parma has about 26,000 students.

Contents

Interview with dr cesare pitea university of parma


History

The school was founded in 962 A.D by imperial decree of Otto I. Initially it was a center for study of the general liberal arts curriculum of the medieval period. The faculties of law and medicine were added in the 13th century. Pope John XXII closed the school in 1322, and during the next hundred years it was often reopened and closed. It became a university in 1502, and after 1545 under the patronage of the ducal House of Farnese. The Farnese Duke Ranuccio I founded and endowed the university College of Nobles with a distinguished faculty, but between 1731 and 1748 the university was again neglected. Things improved in 1762 under Duke Ferdinand I de Bourbon, when he founded a great state university at Parma and endowed it with possessions confiscated from the Jesuits. Future Jesuit Father General Luigi Fortis was invited to head the College of Nobles. New studies were added. The university experienced a rapid growth phase and established an astronomical observatory, a botanical garden and laboratories of anatomy, chemistry and experimental physics. In 1811 the French government deemed the university an Academy of the Empire, but it lost this status a mere three years later. The university was closed to foreign students in 1831 and fell into decay. It was revived in 1854 by the duchess regent and is now a state administration with administrative autonomy.

Notable students, alumni and faculty

  • Francesco Accarigi (c. 1557—1622), professor of civil law
  • Flavio Delbono (born 1959), economist and politician
  • Macedonio Melloni (c. 1798—1854), physicist
  • Bernardino Ramazzini (c. 1633—1724), professor of medicine and father of Occupational Medicine
  • Cesare Beccaria (c. 1738—1794), economist and criminologist
  • Organization

    The university is now divided into 9 departments.

    From 2012 to 2016 the university was divided into 18 departments:

    The university was formerly divided into 12 faculties:

    References

    University of Parma Wikipedia


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