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The University of Valencia (Valencian: Universitat de València [univeɾsiˈtad de vaˈlensi.a]), shortened to UV, is a public research university in Valencia, Spain. It is one of the oldest universities in Spain, and the oldest in the Valencian Community. It is regarded as one of Spain's leading academic institutions.
Universitat de València | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 30 April 1499 |
Academic affiliations | Vives Network |
Rector | Maria Vicenta Mestre Escrivà |
Academic staff | 3,300 |
Students | 65,789 (Total) |
Undergraduates | 45,000 |
Postgraduates | 8,000 |
Location | Valencia , , Spain 39°28′45″N 0°21′33″W / 39.47905110°N 0.35908730°W |
Campus | Urban |
Website | www |
The university was founded in 1499, and currently has around 55,000 students. Most of the courses are taught in Spanish, however their plan is to increase the number of courses available in Valencian and English as well.
It is located in the Mediterranean Spanish baseline, in the city of Valencia which is the capital and most populous city of the autonomous community of Valencia and the third largest city in Spain, with a population of 829,705 in 2014. One of its campuses is located in the metropolitan area of Valencia, in the municipalities of Burjassot and Paterna.
The current chancellor is María Vicenta Mestre Escrivá.
History
At the request of James I the Conqueror, Pope Innocent IV in 1246 authorized (by a Bull) the establishment of estudis generals in Valencia. The University Statutes were passed by the municipal magistrates of Valencia on 30 April 1499; this is considered to be the 'founding' of the university. In 1501, Pope Alexander VI signed the bill of approval and one year later Ferdinand II the Catholic proclaimed the Royal Mandatory Concession.[citation needed]
Its foundation was due to the zeal of Vincent Ferrer (later canonised) and to the donation of a building by Mosen Pedro Vilaragut.[citation needed] Only very meagre accounts have been preserved of the practical workings of the university. From the time of its foundation the courses included Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, philosophy, mathematics, and physics, theology, Canon law, and medicine.[citation needed]
The closing years of the seventeenth, and the whole of the eighteenth century, witnessed the most prosperous era of the university, Greek, Latin, mathematics, and medicine being specially cultivated. Among the names of illustrious students that of Tosca, Evangelista Torricelli's friend, noted physicist and author of important mathematical works, stands out prominently. Escolano says that it was the leading university in mathematics, the humanities, philosophy, and medicine. Large anatomical drawings were made by the students. Valencia was the first university of Spain to found a course for the study of herbs. Many of the Valencian graduates of medicine became famous. discovered the third small bone of the ear. He was professor at Alcalá and had for a pupil the celebrated Vallés. Luis Collado, professor of botany, made some valuable discoveries and carried on exhaustive studies of the plants of the Levant; Vicente Alfonso Lorente wrote works on botany; and the famous botanist Cavanilles was also a student of this university.[citation needed]
In the seventeenth century, the university divided into two factions, the Thomists and the anti-Thomists. The discussions were heated and aroused partisan feelings throughout the entire Kingdom of Valencia. The university possessed a library of 27,000 volumes which was destroyed by the soldiers under the command of General Suchet. Among the most noted professors of the university was D. Francisco Pérez Bayer, a man of wide culture and great influence in the reign of Charles III of Spain. Around the university several colleges for poor students sprang up: the first was founded by St. Thomas of Villanova in 1561 and then followed those founded by Doña Angela Alonsar, and Mosen Pedro Martín. The most famous, called Corpus Christi, was founded by Blessed Juan de Ribera; Philip II founded that of San Jorge; and founded the last in 1643. During the Spanish Civil War, in 1938, a fire badly damaged the library.
Campuses
The University of Valencia has three main urban campuses located in Valencia city and in Burjassot-Paterna, and some other buildings and facilities in the hearth of Valencia town, such as the Historic Building, Botanical Garden, Cerveró Palace, the Rectorate and others, and the , located in the town of Aras de los Olmos.
- The Burjassot Campus houses the colleges of Biology, Pharmacy, Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics and the School of Engineering.
- On the Avenida de Blasco Ibañez Campus are the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry, Philosophy and Educational Sciences, Psychology, Geography and History, Philology and Translation and Communication, Physical Education, Physiotherapy and Nursing.
- The third campus, Tarongers, houses the Schools of Law, Economics and Business, Social Sciences, and recently the School of Elementary Teacher Training, which moved from its previous location near the Blasco Ibañez Campus.
Schools and Faculties
The University of Valencia has 18 Schools and Faculties located in its three main campuses. Each one allocates different academic departments and offers undergraduate, official masters and PhD programs.
Studying at the University of Valencia
The University of Valencia offers degrees in almost all of the academic fields: Arts and Humanities, Engineering, Health sciences, Science, and Social sciences.
The exchange programs with foreign universities, as well as other programs of International Cooperation and Development Aid, allow students to study in other academic institutions from Europe, North America, Latin America, and Asia. Regarding student mobility through Erasmus program, it is among the top ten universities in Europe. The university has partnered with International Studies Abroad, a study abroad provider based in Austin, Texas, to bring inbound students from the United States and Canada.
Research
Research is conducted through several ways. The Academic Departments within each School, the Research Institutes, the Science Park and some others.
The Research Institutes are conceived as multi-disciplinary research structures beyond the framework of the departments; they aim to meet the demand of the economic and social context in the research and transfer fields.
Notable faculty
- Juan José Martí (1570–1604) — novelist and canon lawyer
- Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852–1934) — received Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1906
- Dámaso Alonso (1898–1990) — poet, philologist, literary critic
- Ernest Lluch (1937–2000) — economist and politician
- Álvaro López-García (1941–2019) —astronomer
- Carmen Aranegui (born 1945) —archaeologist
- Carles Solà (born 1945) — chemist and academic administrator
- Josep Guia (born 1947) — mathematician
- Jon Juaristi (born 1951) — poet, essayist and translator
Notable alumni
Arts and Science
- Juan Luis Vives (1493–1540) — Renaissance scholar; father of modern psychology
- Joseph Calasanz (1557–1648) — priest
- Juan Tomás de Rocaberti (1627–1699) — theologian
- Mathieu Orfila (1787–1853) — toxicologist, founder of science of toxicology
- Graciano López Jaena (1856–1896) — Filipino journalist
- José Martínez Ruiz (1873–1967) — novelist and literary critic
- José Gaos (1900–1969) — philosopher
- Isabel-Clara Simó (1943–2020) — journalist
- Rafael Ninyoles i Monllor (1943–2019) — sociolinguist
- José Luis Soberanes (born 1950) — Mexican lawyer
- Amparo Acker-Palmer (born 1968) — Spanish cell biologist and neuroscientist
- Josep Carles Laínez (born 1970) — philologist
- Carlos Alós-Ferrer — economist
- Etelvina Andreu — physicist, medical doctor, politician
- José-Miguel Bernardo — mathematician, statistician
- Marti Bonmati Luis — medical doctor
- Estrella Durá — psychologist, politician
- María Ángeles Durán — sociologist
- Pablo Jarillo-Herrero — physicist
- Andrés Piquer — physician, philosopher
- Antoni Roig Muntaner — chemist
- Manuel Sánchez Ayuso — economist, politician
- Daniel Tordera — chemist
- Hassan Ugail — mathematician
- Muriel Villanueva i Perarnau — writer
- Antonio Vidal-Puig — medical doctor and scientist
- Aquilino Cayuela — writer, columnist, and professor specializing in moral philosophy, politics, bioethics, and theology
- Carmen Agulló Díaz — professor, non-fiction author
- Jorge Mateu — mathematician, author, and academic
- Juan José López-Ibor — psychiatrist
Politics
- Gabriela Bravo — politician
- Gema Climent — scientist, tech entrepreneur
- Esther Herranz García (born 1969) — politician
- Belén Hoyo Juliá — politician
- Joan Lerma — politician
- Enrique Monsonís — politician
- María Sornosa Martinez (born 1949) — politician
- José Manuel Vela Bargues (1962–2022) — economist and politician
- José Viñals (born 1954) — economist
Ranking
University rankings | |
---|---|
Global – Overall | |
ARWU World | 201–300 (2024) |
QS World | 445 (2025) |
THE World | 501–600 (2024) |
USNWR Global | 212 (2023) |
See also
- Vives Network
- List of medieval universities
- Route of the Borgias
Notes
- "University of Valencia" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
- ESMO. "ESMO Course in Medical Oncology for Medical Students Valencia 2024: Acknowledgements". www.esmo.org. Retrieved 2024-04-10.
- "University of Valencia". Catholic Answers. Retrieved 2024-04-10.
- LOST MEMORY – LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES DESTROYED IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY (Archived 5 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine)
- "Valencia, Spain Study Abroad Universities – ISA". Studiesabroad.com. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
- "ARWU World University Rankings 2024". www.shanghairanking.com. Retrieved 6 November 2024.
- "QS World University Rankings 2025". topuniversities.com. 4 June 2024. Retrieved 6 November 2024.
- "World University Rankings". timeshighereducation.com. 6 August 2023. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
- "U.S. News Education: Best Global Universities 2022-23". Retrieved 23 November 2023.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "University of Valencia". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
External links
- Official website (in English)
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources University of Valencia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message The University of Valencia Valencian Universitat de Valencia univeɾsiˈtad de vaˈlensi a shortened to UV is a public research university in Valencia Spain It is one of the oldest universities in Spain and the oldest in the Valencian Community It is regarded as one of Spain s leading academic institutions University of ValenciaUniversitat de ValenciaTypePublicEstablished30 April 1499 525 years ago 1499 04 30 Academic affiliationsVives NetworkRectorMaria Vicenta Mestre EscrivaAcademic staff3 300Students65 789 Total Undergraduates45 000Postgraduates8 000LocationValencia Valencian Community Spain 39 28 45 N 0 21 33 W 39 47905110 N 0 35908730 W 39 47905110 0 35908730CampusUrbanWebsitewww wbr uv wbr es wbr uvweb wbr college wbr en wbr university valencia 1285845048380 wbr htmlHistoric claustre of la Nau buildingThe University of Valencia s Historic Building The university was founded in 1499 and currently has around 55 000 students Most of the courses are taught in Spanish however their plan is to increase the number of courses available in Valencian and English as well It is located in the Mediterranean Spanish baseline in the city of Valencia which is the capital and most populous city of the autonomous community of Valencia and the third largest city in Spain with a population of 829 705 in 2014 One of its campuses is located in the metropolitan area of Valencia in the municipalities of Burjassot and Paterna The current chancellor is Maria Vicenta Mestre Escriva HistoryAt the request of James I the Conqueror Pope Innocent IV in 1246 authorized by a Bull the establishment of estudis generals in Valencia The University Statutes were passed by the municipal magistrates of Valencia on 30 April 1499 this is considered to be the founding of the university In 1501 Pope Alexander VI signed the bill of approval and one year later Ferdinand II the Catholic proclaimed the Royal Mandatory Concession citation needed Its foundation was due to the zeal of Vincent Ferrer later canonised and to the donation of a building by Mosen Pedro Vilaragut citation needed Only very meagre accounts have been preserved of the practical workings of the university From the time of its foundation the courses included Latin Greek Hebrew Arabic philosophy mathematics and physics theology Canon law and medicine citation needed The closing years of the seventeenth and the whole of the eighteenth century witnessed the most prosperous era of the university Greek Latin mathematics and medicine being specially cultivated Among the names of illustrious students that of Tosca Evangelista Torricelli s friend noted physicist and author of important mathematical works stands out prominently Escolano says that it was the leading university in mathematics the humanities philosophy and medicine Large anatomical drawings were made by the students Valencia was the first university of Spain to found a course for the study of herbs Many of the Valencian graduates of medicine became famous discovered the third small bone of the ear He was professor at Alcala and had for a pupil the celebrated Valles Luis Collado professor of botany made some valuable discoveries and carried on exhaustive studies of the plants of the Levant Vicente Alfonso Lorente wrote works on botany and the famous botanist Cavanilles was also a student of this university citation needed In the seventeenth century the university divided into two factions the Thomists and the anti Thomists The discussions were heated and aroused partisan feelings throughout the entire Kingdom of Valencia The university possessed a library of 27 000 volumes which was destroyed by the soldiers under the command of General Suchet Among the most noted professors of the university was D Francisco Perez Bayer a man of wide culture and great influence in the reign of Charles III of Spain Around the university several colleges for poor students sprang up the first was founded by St Thomas of Villanova in 1561 and then followed those founded by Dona Angela Alonsar and Mosen Pedro Martin The most famous called Corpus Christi was founded by Blessed Juan de Ribera Philip II founded that of San Jorge and founded the last in 1643 During the Spanish Civil War in 1938 a fire badly damaged the library CampusesThe University of Valencia s Rectorate The University of Valencia has three main urban campuses located in Valencia city and in Burjassot Paterna and some other buildings and facilities in the hearth of Valencia town such as the Historic Building Botanical Garden Cervero Palace the Rectorate and others and the located in the town of Aras de los Olmos The Burjassot Campus houses the colleges of Biology Pharmacy Physics Chemistry Mathematics and the School of Engineering On the Avenida de Blasco Ibanez Campus are the Schools of Medicine and Dentistry Philosophy and Educational Sciences Psychology Geography and History Philology and Translation and Communication Physical Education Physiotherapy and Nursing The third campus Tarongers houses the Schools of Law Economics and Business Social Sciences and recently the School of Elementary Teacher Training which moved from its previous location near the Blasco Ibanez Campus Schools and FacultiesThe Botanical Garden of Valencia administered by the universityObservatorio de Aras de los Olmos University of Valencia The University of Valencia has 18 Schools and Faculties located in its three main campuses Each one allocates different academic departments and offers undergraduate official masters and PhD programs Studying at the University of ValenciaThe University of Valencia offers degrees in almost all of the academic fields Arts and Humanities Engineering Health sciences Science and Social sciences The exchange programs with foreign universities as well as other programs of International Cooperation and Development Aid allow students to study in other academic institutions from Europe North America Latin America and Asia Regarding student mobility through Erasmus program it is among the top ten universities in Europe The university has partnered with International Studies Abroad a study abroad provider based in Austin Texas to bring inbound students from the United States and Canada ResearchResearch is conducted through several ways The Academic Departments within each School the Research Institutes the Science Park and some others The Research Institutes are conceived as multi disciplinary research structures beyond the framework of the departments they aim to meet the demand of the economic and social context in the research and transfer fields Notable facultyJuan Jose Marti 1570 1604 novelist and canon lawyer Santiago Ramon y Cajal 1852 1934 received Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1906 Damaso Alonso 1898 1990 poet philologist literary critic Ernest Lluch 1937 2000 economist and politician Alvaro Lopez Garcia 1941 2019 astronomer Carmen Aranegui born 1945 archaeologist Carles Sola born 1945 chemist and academic administrator Josep Guia born 1947 mathematician Jon Juaristi born 1951 poet essayist and translatorNotable alumniArts and Science Juan Luis VivesJuan Luis Vives 1493 1540 Renaissance scholar father of modern psychology Joseph Calasanz 1557 1648 priest Juan Tomas de Rocaberti 1627 1699 theologian Mathieu Orfila 1787 1853 toxicologist founder of science of toxicology Graciano Lopez Jaena 1856 1896 Filipino journalist Jose Martinez Ruiz 1873 1967 novelist and literary critic Jose Gaos 1900 1969 philosopher Isabel Clara Simo 1943 2020 journalist Rafael Ninyoles i Monllor 1943 2019 sociolinguist Jose Luis Soberanes born 1950 Mexican lawyer Amparo Acker Palmer born 1968 Spanish cell biologist and neuroscientist Josep Carles Lainez born 1970 philologist Carlos Alos Ferrer economist Etelvina Andreu physicist medical doctor politician Jose Miguel Bernardo mathematician statistician Marti Bonmati Luis medical doctor Estrella Dura psychologist politician Maria Angeles Duran sociologist Pablo Jarillo Herrero physicist Andres Piquer physician philosopher Antoni Roig Muntaner chemist Manuel Sanchez Ayuso economist politician Daniel Tordera chemist Hassan Ugail mathematician Muriel Villanueva i Perarnau writer Antonio Vidal Puig medical doctor and scientist Aquilino Cayuela writer columnist and professor specializing in moral philosophy politics bioethics and theology Carmen Agullo Diaz professor non fiction author Jorge Mateu mathematician author and academic Juan Jose Lopez Ibor psychiatristPolitics Gabriela Bravo politician Gema Climent scientist tech entrepreneur Esther Herranz Garcia born 1969 politician Belen Hoyo Julia politician Joan Lerma politician Enrique Monsonis politician Maria Sornosa Martinez born 1949 politician Jose Manuel Vela Bargues 1962 2022 economist and politician Jose Vinals born 1954 economistRankingUniversity rankingsGlobal OverallARWU World201 300 2024 QS World445 2025 THE World501 600 2024 USNWR Global212 2023 See alsoVives Network List of medieval universities Route of the BorgiasNotes University of Valencia Map Google Maps Retrieved 11 April 2021 ESMO ESMO Course in Medical Oncology for Medical Students Valencia 2024 Acknowledgements www esmo org Retrieved 2024 04 10 University of Valencia Catholic Answers Retrieved 2024 04 10 LOST MEMORY LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES DESTROYED IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Archived 5 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine Valencia Spain Study Abroad Universities ISA Studiesabroad com Retrieved 25 October 2015 ARWU World University Rankings 2024 www shanghairanking com Retrieved 6 November 2024 QS World University Rankings 2025 topuniversities com 4 June 2024 Retrieved 6 November 2024 World University Rankings timeshighereducation com 6 August 2023 Retrieved 26 August 2023 U S News Education Best Global Universities 2022 23 Retrieved 23 November 2023 ReferencesThis article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 University of Valencia Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to University of Valencia Official website in English