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Cardiff University

Cardiff University (Welsh: Prifysgol Caerdydd) is a public research university in Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom. It was established in 1883 as the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire and became a founding college of the University of Wales in 1893. It merged with the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (UWIST) in 1988 as the University of Wales College, Cardiff (University of Wales, Cardiff, from 1996). In 1997 it received degree-awarding powers, but held them in abeyance. It adopted the operating name of Cardiff University in 1999; this became its legal name in 2005, when it became an independent university awarding its own degrees.

Cardiff University
Welsh: Prifysgol Caerdydd
Coat of arms of Cardiff University
MottoWelsh: Gwirionedd, Undod a Chytgord[1]
Motto in English
Truth, Unity and Concord[1]
TypePublic
Established1883 (UCSWM/UCC)
2005 (independent university status)
Endowment£45.5 million (2021)[2]
Budget£603.4 million (2020–21)[2]
ChancellorJenny Randerson[3]
Vice-ChancellorColin Riordan
Academic staff
3,350 (2019/20)[4]
Total staff
6,900 (2019/20)[4]
Students33,260 (2019/20)[5]
Undergraduates23,755 (2019/20)[5]
Postgraduates9,505 (2019/20)[5]
Location,
51°29′16″N 3°10′44″W / 51.4877°N 3.1790°W / 51.4877; -3.1790Coordinates: 51°29′16″N 3°10′44″W / 51.4877°N 3.1790°W / 51.4877; -3.1790
CampusUrban
Colours
AffiliationsRussell Group
EUA
Universities UK
GW4
Websitewww.cardiff.ac.uk

Cardiff University is the only Welsh member of the Russell Group of research-intensive British universities.[6] Academics and alumni of the university have included three heads of state or government, two Nobel laureates, 15 fellows of the Royal Society, 11 fellows of the Royal Academy of Engineering, seven fellows of the British Academy, 21 fellows of the Academy of Medical Sciences and 34 fellows of the Academy of Social Sciences.[7]

Present status

Cardiff University is the third oldest university in Wales and contains three colleges: Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences; Biomedical and Life Sciences; and Physical Sciences and Engineering.

In 2018–2019, Cardiff had a turnover of £537.1 million, including £116.0 million in research grants and contracts.[8] It has an undergraduate enrolment of 23,755 and a total enrolment of 33,260 (according to HESA data for 2019/20)[5] making it one of the ten largest UK universities. The Cardiff University Students' Union works to promote student interests in the university and further afield.

History

University College

 
Lord Aberdare was instrumental in the university's founding.

Discussions on the founding of a university college in South Wales began in 1879, when a group of Welsh and English MPs urged the government to consider the poor provision of higher and intermediate education in Wales and "the best means of assisting any local effort which may be made for supplying such deficiency."[9]

In October 1881, William Ewart Gladstone's government appointed a departmental committee to conduct "an enquiry into the nature and extent of intermediate and higher education in Wales", chaired by Lord Aberdare and consisting of Viscount Emlyn, Reverend Prebendary H. G. Robinson, Henry Richard, John Rhys and Lewis Morris.[10] The Aberdare Report, as it came to be known, took evidence from a wide range of sources and over 250 witnesses and recommended a college each for North Wales and South Wales, the latter to be located in Glamorgan and the former to be the established University College of Wales in Aberystwyth (now Aberystwyth University). The committee cited the unique Welsh national identity and noted that many students in Wales could not afford to travel to University in England or Scotland. It advocated a national degree-awarding university for Wales, composed of regional colleges, which should be non-sectarian in nature and exclude the teaching of theology.[11][12]

 
John Viriamu Jones was the founding principal of the college.

After the recommendation was published, Cardiff Corporation sought to secure the location of the college in Cardiff, and on 12 December 1881 formed a University College Committee to aid the matter.[13] There was competition to be the site between Swansea and Cardiff. On 12 March 1883, after arbitration, a decision was made in Cardiff's favour.[13] This was strengthened by the need to consider the interests of Monmouthshire, at that time not legally incorporated into Wales, and the greater sum received by Cardiff in support of the college, through a public appeal that raised £37,000 and a number of private donations, notably from the Lord Bute and Lord Windsor.[14][15] In April Lord Aberdare was appointed as the college's first president.[13] The possible locations considered included Cardiff Arms Park, Cathedral Road, and Moira Terrace, Roath, before the site of the Old Royal Infirmary buildings on Newport Road was chosen.[13]

The University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire opened on 24 October 1883 with courses in Biology, Chemistry, English, French, German, Greek, History, Latin, Mathematics and Astronomy, Music, Welsh, Logic and Philosophy, and Physics. It was incorporated by Royal Charter the following year, this being the first in Wales to allow the enrolment of women, and specifically forbidding religious tests for entry.[15] John Viriamu Jones was appointed as the university's first principal at the age of 27. As Cardiff was not an independent university and could not award its own degrees, it prepared its students for examinations of the University of London or for further study at Oxford or Cambridge.[16]

In 1888 the University College at Cardiff and that of North Wales (now Bangor University) proposed to the University College Wales at Aberystwyth joint action to gain a university charter for Wales, modelled on that of Victoria University, a confederation of new universities in Northern England. Such a charter was granted to the new University of Wales in 1893, allowing the colleges to award degrees as members. The Chancellor was set ex officio as the Prince of Wales, and the position of operational head would rotate among heads of the colleges.[15]

In 1885, Aberdare Hall opened as the first hall of residence, allowing women access to the university. This moved to its current site in 1895, but remains a single-sex hall. In 1904 came the appointment of the first female associate professor in the UK, Millicent Mackenzie, who in 1910 became the first female full professor at a fully chartered UK university.

In 1901 Principal Jones persuaded Cardiff Corporation to give the college a five-acre site in Cathays Park (instead of selling it as they would have done otherwise).[17] Soon after, in 1905, work on a new building commenced under the architect W. D. Caröe. Money ran short for the project, however. Although the side-wings were completed in the 1960s, the planned Great Hall has never been built. Caroe sought to combine the charm and elegance of his former (Trinity College, Cambridge) with the picturesque balance of many Oxford colleges. On 14 October 1909 the "New College" building in Cathays Park (now Main Building) was opened in a ceremony involving a procession from the "Old College" in Newport Road.[18]

In 1931, the School of Medicine, founded as part of the college in 1893 along with the Departments of Anatomy, Physiology, Pathology, Pharmacology, was split off to form the Welsh National School of Medicine, which was renamed in 1984 the University of Wales College of Medicine.

In 1972, the institution was renamed University College Cardiff.[19]

1988 merger

In 1988, University College Cardiff underwent financial difficulties, and a declaration of insolvency was considered.[20] This led to a merger with the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology (UWIST), to form the University of Wales College of Cardiff. The Principal of the new institution was Sir Aubrey Trotman-Dickenson, who had been the principal of UWIST. After changes to the constitution in 1996, its name was changed to the University of Wales, Cardiff.

In the early 1990s, the university's computer systems served as the home for The Internet Movie Database.[21]

Independence and 2004 merger

 
Queen Elizabeth II with Anthony J. Moses during her visit in Cardiff University in 2000

In 1997, the college was granted full independent degree-awarding powers by the Privy Council, though, as a member of the University of Wales it could not begin using them, and in 1999 the public name of the university was changed to Cardiff University.

In 2002, ideas were floated to merge Cardiff again with the University of Wales College of Medicine, after publication of the Welsh Assembly Government's review of higher education in Wales. This merger became effective on 1 August 2004, when Cardiff University ceased to be a constituent of the University of Wales and became an independent "link institution" affiliated to the federal university. The process of the merger was completed on 1 December 2004, when the Act of Parliament transferring UWCM's assets to Cardiff University received Royal Assent. On 17 December it was announced that the Privy Council had given approval to the new Supplemental Charter and had granted university status to Cardiff, legally changing the name of the institution to Cardiff University. Cardiff awarded University of Wales degrees to students admitted before 2005, but these have been replaced by Cardiff degrees.

 
A Cardiff University graduation ceremony in 2006

In 2005, Wales College of Medicine, as part of the university, launched the North Wales Clinical School in Wrexham, in collaboration with the North East Wales Institute of Higher Education in Wrexham, the University of Wales, Bangor, and the National Health Service in Wales. This received funds of £12.5 million from the Welsh Assembly[22] and trebled the number of trainee doctors in clinical training in Wales over a four-year period.

The university also has a popular Centre for Lifelong Learning, which has been teaching a wide range of courses for over 125 years.[23] However, in July 2009, the university announced it was ending over 250 humanities courses at the centre, making over 100 staff redundant. The university has since reintroduced a number of humanities courses for a trial period beginning in 2010.[24]

In June 2010, the university launched three new research institutes,[25] each offering a new approach to a major modern research issue. The Neurosciences and Mental Health Research Institute and the Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute are housed in the purpose-built Hadyn Ellis Building, and in the Sustainable Places Research Institute. Another part of the Science and Development Campus, the Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre (CUBRIC), opened in June 2016 for neuroimaging research.[26]

Campus

Academic facilities

 
The main reading room of the Science Library, pictured in 2017.

The university's academic facilities are centred around Cathays Park in central Cardiff,[27] which contains the university's grade II* listed main building,[28] housing administrative facilities and the science library, previously called the Drapers' library;[29][30] the grade II listed Bute building,[31] which contains the Welsh School of Architecture,[32] the grade I listed Glamorgan building,[33] which houses the Cardiff Schools of Planning and Geography and Social Sciences,[34] the Redwood Building (named in 1979 after the Redwood Family of Boverton near Llantwit Major by a 1978 suggestion by J. D. R. Thomas), which houses the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences;[35] the law building which houses the Cardiff Law School;[36] and the biosciences building, which provides facilities for both biosciences and medical teaching.[37] The School of Engineering, School of Computer Science and Informatics and School of Physics and Astronomy are located in the Queen's Buildings, off Newport Road, and the School of Journalism, Media and Culture at 2 Central Square.

A number of university academic facilities are located at the Heath Park campus, based at the University Hospital of Wales. This covers the Cardiff University School of Medicine, the School of Dentistry, the School of Healthcare Sciences, and the School of Optometry and Vision Sciences.[38]

Buildings of Cardiff University

Athletics facilities

Most of the university's sports facilities are located at the sports training village in the Talybont Halls complex. This includes facilities for football, badminton, basketball, tennis, hockey and gym.[39] Additional gym facilities and squash courts are located at the university fitness and squash centre, near the city centre campus at Cathays Park.[40] Extensive playing fields for Rugby, football and lacrosse are located at the university playing fields near Llanrumney.[41] The university also utilises the nearby Millennium Stadium for rugby fixtures such as the annual varsity tournament.[42]

Organisation

Schools and colleges

The 26 academic schools of the university are divided into three colleges: Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences; Biomedical and Life Sciences; and Physical Sciences.[43]

Cardiff also has a Doctoral Academy,[44] that brings together the work of four previous discipline-based Graduate Schools and the postgraduate research activity of the university's Graduate Centre.

Finances

In the financial year ended 31 July 2012, Cardiff University had a total net income of £425.54 million.[45] Key sources of income included £87.65 million from research grants and contracts, £117.36 million from Funding Council grants, £123.84 million from tuition fees and support grants and £3.17 million from endowment and investment income.[45] During the 2011/12 financial year Cardiff had a capital expenditure of £14.29 million.

At 31 July 2012 Cardiff had endowments of £25.58 million and total net assets of £402.86 million.[45]

Academic profile

Reputation and rankings

Rankings
National rankings
Complete (2023)[46]26
Guardian (2023)[47]35=
Times / Sunday Times (2023)[48]25
Global rankings
ARWU (2022)[49]151–200
QS (2023)[50]166
THE (2023)[51]187=

Cardiff has two Nobel Laureates on its staff, Sir Martin Evans and Robert Huber.[52] A number of Cardiff University staff have been elected as Fellows of the Royal Society, these include Graham Hutchings FRS, professor of Physical Chemistry and Director of the Cardiff Catalysis Institute, School of Chemistry,[53] Ole Holger Petersen, MRC Professor and Director of Cardiff School of Biosciences.[54] and John M. Pearce, Professor of Psychology.[55]

In 2013, Cardiff University was ranked as one of the best UK universities for supporting LGBT students, by the charity Stonewall in its annual Gay by Degree guide. The university was one of only two in the UK and the only one in Wales to achieve top marks in a Stonewall checklist of priorities for LGBT+ students.[56]

Cardiff University was ranked joint 168th in Best Global Universities by US News in 2021.[57] It was ranked 164th among universities around the world by SCImago Institutions Rankings in 2021.[58] The Round University Rankings ranked Cardiff University 162nd globally in 2021.[59] The Center for World University Rankings listed Cardiff University 159th in the world in 2021.[60]

According to QS World University Rankings by Subject in 2021, Cardiff University ranked within the world's top 50 universities in communication and media studies (28), and in architecture and built environment (37).[61] Other subjects ranked within the top 100 are dentistry, and mineral and mining engineering (49) civil and structural engineering, geography, social policy and administration, pharmacy and pharmacology, English language and literature, psychology, and sociology.[61]

Admissions

UCAS Admission Statistics
2022 2021 2020 2019 2018
Applications[α][62] 46,345 44,155 39,225 34,465 33,320
Accepted[α][62] 7,375 7,915 7,500 6,940 6,770
Applications/Accepted Ratio[α] 6.3 5.6 5.2 5.0 4.9
Offer Rate (%)[β][63] 68.2 70.3 73.4 72.5 71.1
Average Entry Tariff[64] n/a n/a 148 144 153
  1. ^ a b c Main scheme applications, International and UK
  2. ^ UK domiciled applicants
HESA Student Body Composition (2022)
Domicile[65] and Ethnicity[66] Total
British White 63% 63
 
British Ethnic Minorities[a] 15% 15
 
International EU 3% 3
 
International Non-EU 19% 19
 
Undergraduate Widening Participation Indicators[67][68]
Female 60% 60
 
Independent School 14% 14
 
Low Participation Areas[b] 9% 9
 

In terms of average UCAS points of entrants, Cardiff ranked 26th in Britain in 2018.[69] The university gave offers of admission to 75.2 per cent of its applicants in 2015, the 13th lowest amongst the Russell Group.[70]

According to the 2017 Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide, approximately 15 per cent of Cardiff's undergraduates come from independent schools.[71] In the 2016–2017 academic year, the university had a domicile breakdown of 76:5:19 of UK:EU:non-EU students respectively with a female to male ratio of 59:41.[72]

Student life

Student accommodation

The university maintains 15 student halls and a number of student houses throughout the city of Cardiff; providing a total of 5,362 student places in accommodation.[73] They are in a variety of architectural styles and ages, from the Gothic Aberdare Hall, built in 1895, to the modern Talybont Gate Building, completed in 2014. All first-year students are guaranteed a place in university owned and managed halls.[74] The Cardiff University Halls are:

  • Aberconway Hall
  • Aberdare Hall
  • Cartwright Court
  • Clodien House
  • Colum Hall
  • Hodge Hall
  • Gordon Hall
  • Roy Jenkins Hall
  • Senghennydd Court
  • Senghennydd Hall
  • The Talybont 'Student Village' (Including Talybont North, South, Court and Gate Halls)
  • University Hall
  • Houses in Colum Road and Colum Place
  • Student Village Houses

Students' Union

The Cardiff University Students' Union is a student-run organisation aiming to promote student interests within the university and further afield. The Cardiff University Students' Union building is near Cathays Park, next to Cathays railway station. It has shops, a night club and the studios of Xpress Radio and Gair Rhydd, the student newspaper. It is democratically controlled by the student body through the election of seven full-time officers, who manage the running of the Union.[75] The Union provides a range of services, including a number of cafes, bars and shops, as well as advice, training and representation. The Union is an affiliated member of the National Union of Students.[76]

Groups and societies

The Union also supports over 260 other clubs and societies across a wide range of interests,[77] including: Cardiff University Debating Society,[78] and Act One, the student dramatic society.[79] All clubs offer opportunities for beginners and the more experienced students.

Media

 
Nick Clegg at Cardiff University Students' Union conducting an interview with CUTV in 2010

The Union provides facilities and support for several student media groups, including: Gair Rhydd, an award-winning, free student newspaper that is released every Monday of term;[80] Quench, a monthly arts and lifestyle magazine that specialises in the local music scene as well as original investigative feature articles;[81] and CUTV, the student television channel.[82]

Xpress Radio is the student radio station.[83] It broadcasts daily during term from studios in the Students' Union building, with programming such as comedy panel shows, new music showcases, local music showcases, and film reviews.[84][85]

Athletics

 
Swansea and Cardiff Universities Men's Senior eights during The Welsh Boat Race in 2006

The Cardiff University Athletic Union is the body that supports student sport at Cardiff, it oversees more than 60 competitive and non-competitive sports clubs, many of which compete in the British Universities and Colleges Sport league.[86] The university's Ice Hockey team, the Cardiff Redhawks (which also recruits players from other Welsh universities) competes in the British Universities Ice Hockey Association leagues.[87]

The university's sports teams also take part in the annual Welsh Varsity against Swansea University, which includes the Welsh Boat Race, and several other sporting competitions.[88] The Welsh Varsity rugby match has been described as "probably... the second biggest Varsity Game next to Oxford vs Cambridge".[89]

Cardiff participates in British Universities and Colleges Sport which manages a sporting framework of competitive fixtures and events for over 150 institutions around the UK. Cardiff registers nearly 100 teams in the various leagues and competitions each year and sees students travelling around the country to represent Cardiff University. In 2013 Cardiff team achieved 15th position overall across the 50 different sports hosting events.

Insignia and other representations

Motto

Cardiff University's motto is Gwirionedd, Undod a Chytgord. The Welsh motto translates as Truth, Unity and Concord or Truth, Unity and Harmony. It is taken from the prayer for the Church militant as it appears in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer.[90]

Coat of arms

Cardiff University's current coat of arms was granted by the College of Arms in 1988 following the merger of University College Cardiff and the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology.[91] The coat of arms incorporates features from the heraldry of both former institutions. The three chevrons are derived from the arms of the de Clare lords of Glamorgan. The open book signifies learning; on it are the crescent and annulet, marks of cadence that indicate that University College Cardiff was the second of the University of Wales' institutions, and that the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology was the fifth.[92]

A notable feature of the arms are the supporters, which in heraldry are rarely granted to universities. The supporters are an angel from University College Cardiff and a Welsh Dragon from the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology. The crest is a Welsh dragon in the stance of a lion; it stands on the helmet. Both the dragon and the helmet are distinguished by being front-facing rather than in profile as is more usually found in Welsh heraldry.[92]

Notable alumni and faculty

Vice-Chancellors

List of Vice-Chancellors and Principals of Cardiff University and its predecessors (shown in brackets):

Heads of state and government

Politics

Academia

 
Robert Huber, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry

Business

Sport

Arts and journalism

 
Huw Edwards, BAFTA award-winning journalist

Workload controversy

On 19 February 2018, Malcolm Anderson, a university lecturer committed suicide by jumping off a university building and died at age 48.[103][104][105][106][107] The inquiry determined that Anderson's suicide was the result of a high-pressure workload.[105][106]

In 2020, Grace Krause, a PhD student employed at Cardiff University started experiencing headaches and back pain after lengthy work at a computer.[106][108] She tweeted that "Staff are marking hundreds of essays in an impossibly short time. It is exhausting. Everyone is in crisis mode. Stressed, moody, morose, everyone feels like they’re drowning."[106] Soon after, an email from the university was sent to all PhD students asking for these comments to be deleted, in order to avoid negative media attention.[106] This has since sparked a debate about freedom of speech between employers and employees.[106]

See also

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External links

  • Official website

cardiff, university, welsh, prifysgol, caerdydd, public, research, university, cardiff, wales, united, kingdom, established, 1883, university, college, south, wales, monmouthshire, became, founding, college, university, wales, 1893, merged, with, university, w. Cardiff University Welsh Prifysgol Caerdydd is a public research university in Cardiff Wales United Kingdom It was established in 1883 as the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire and became a founding college of the University of Wales in 1893 It merged with the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology UWIST in 1988 as the University of Wales College Cardiff University of Wales Cardiff from 1996 In 1997 it received degree awarding powers but held them in abeyance It adopted the operating name of Cardiff University in 1999 this became its legal name in 2005 when it became an independent university awarding its own degrees Cardiff UniversityWelsh Prifysgol CaerdyddCoat of arms of Cardiff UniversityMottoWelsh Gwirionedd Undod a Chytgord 1 Motto in EnglishTruth Unity and Concord 1 TypePublicEstablished1883 UCSWM UCC 2005 independent university status Endowment 45 5 million 2021 2 Budget 603 4 million 2020 21 2 ChancellorJenny Randerson 3 Vice ChancellorColin RiordanAcademic staff3 350 2019 20 4 Total staff6 900 2019 20 4 Students33 260 2019 20 5 Undergraduates23 755 2019 20 5 Postgraduates9 505 2019 20 5 LocationCardiff Wales United Kingdom51 29 16 N 3 10 44 W 51 4877 N 3 1790 W 51 4877 3 1790 Coordinates 51 29 16 N 3 10 44 W 51 4877 N 3 1790 W 51 4877 3 1790CampusUrbanColours AffiliationsRussell GroupEUAUniversities UKGW4Websitewww wbr cardiff wbr ac wbr ukCardiff University is the only Welsh member of the Russell Group of research intensive British universities 6 Academics and alumni of the university have included three heads of state or government two Nobel laureates 15 fellows of the Royal Society 11 fellows of the Royal Academy of Engineering seven fellows of the British Academy 21 fellows of the Academy of Medical Sciences and 34 fellows of the Academy of Social Sciences 7 Contents 1 Present status 2 History 2 1 University College 2 2 1988 merger 2 3 Independence and 2004 merger 3 Campus 3 1 Academic facilities 3 2 Athletics facilities 4 Organisation 4 1 Schools and colleges 4 2 Finances 5 Academic profile 5 1 Reputation and rankings 5 2 Admissions 6 Student life 6 1 Student accommodation 6 2 Students Union 6 2 1 Groups and societies 6 2 2 Media 6 3 Athletics 7 Insignia and other representations 7 1 Motto 7 2 Coat of arms 8 Notable alumni and faculty 8 1 Vice Chancellors 8 2 Heads of state and government 8 3 Politics 8 4 Academia 8 5 Business 8 6 Sport 8 7 Arts and journalism 9 Workload controversy 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksPresent status EditCardiff University is the third oldest university in Wales and contains three colleges Arts Humanities and Social Sciences Biomedical and Life Sciences and Physical Sciences and Engineering In 2018 2019 Cardiff had a turnover of 537 1 million including 116 0 million in research grants and contracts 8 It has an undergraduate enrolment of 23 755 and a total enrolment of 33 260 according to HESA data for 2019 20 5 making it one of the ten largest UK universities The Cardiff University Students Union works to promote student interests in the university and further afield History EditUniversity College Edit Lord Aberdare was instrumental in the university s founding Discussions on the founding of a university college in South Wales began in 1879 when a group of Welsh and English MPs urged the government to consider the poor provision of higher and intermediate education in Wales and the best means of assisting any local effort which may be made for supplying such deficiency 9 In October 1881 William Ewart Gladstone s government appointed a departmental committee to conduct an enquiry into the nature and extent of intermediate and higher education in Wales chaired by Lord Aberdare and consisting of Viscount Emlyn Reverend Prebendary H G Robinson Henry Richard John Rhys and Lewis Morris 10 The Aberdare Report as it came to be known took evidence from a wide range of sources and over 250 witnesses and recommended a college each for North Wales and South Wales the latter to be located in Glamorgan and the former to be the established University College of Wales in Aberystwyth now Aberystwyth University The committee cited the unique Welsh national identity and noted that many students in Wales could not afford to travel to University in England or Scotland It advocated a national degree awarding university for Wales composed of regional colleges which should be non sectarian in nature and exclude the teaching of theology 11 12 John Viriamu Jones was the founding principal of the college After the recommendation was published Cardiff Corporation sought to secure the location of the college in Cardiff and on 12 December 1881 formed a University College Committee to aid the matter 13 There was competition to be the site between Swansea and Cardiff On 12 March 1883 after arbitration a decision was made in Cardiff s favour 13 This was strengthened by the need to consider the interests of Monmouthshire at that time not legally incorporated into Wales and the greater sum received by Cardiff in support of the college through a public appeal that raised 37 000 and a number of private donations notably from the Lord Bute and Lord Windsor 14 15 In April Lord Aberdare was appointed as the college s first president 13 The possible locations considered included Cardiff Arms Park Cathedral Road and Moira Terrace Roath before the site of the Old Royal Infirmary buildings on Newport Road was chosen 13 The University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire opened on 24 October 1883 with courses in Biology Chemistry English French German Greek History Latin Mathematics and Astronomy Music Welsh Logic and Philosophy and Physics It was incorporated by Royal Charter the following year this being the first in Wales to allow the enrolment of women and specifically forbidding religious tests for entry 15 John Viriamu Jones was appointed as the university s first principal at the age of 27 As Cardiff was not an independent university and could not award its own degrees it prepared its students for examinations of the University of London or for further study at Oxford or Cambridge 16 In 1888 the University College at Cardiff and that of North Wales now Bangor University proposed to the University College Wales at Aberystwyth joint action to gain a university charter for Wales modelled on that of Victoria University a confederation of new universities in Northern England Such a charter was granted to the new University of Wales in 1893 allowing the colleges to award degrees as members The Chancellor was set ex officio as the Prince of Wales and the position of operational head would rotate among heads of the colleges 15 In 1885 Aberdare Hall opened as the first hall of residence allowing women access to the university This moved to its current site in 1895 but remains a single sex hall In 1904 came the appointment of the first female associate professor in the UK Millicent Mackenzie who in 1910 became the first female full professor at a fully chartered UK university In 1901 Principal Jones persuaded Cardiff Corporation to give the college a five acre site in Cathays Park instead of selling it as they would have done otherwise 17 Soon after in 1905 work on a new building commenced under the architect W D Caroe Money ran short for the project however Although the side wings were completed in the 1960s the planned Great Hall has never been built Caroe sought to combine the charm and elegance of his former Trinity College Cambridge with the picturesque balance of many Oxford colleges On 14 October 1909 the New College building in Cathays Park now Main Building was opened in a ceremony involving a procession from the Old College in Newport Road 18 In 1931 the School of Medicine founded as part of the college in 1893 along with the Departments of Anatomy Physiology Pathology Pharmacology was split off to form the Welsh National School of Medicine which was renamed in 1984 the University of Wales College of Medicine In 1972 the institution was renamed University College Cardiff 19 1988 merger Edit In 1988 University College Cardiff underwent financial difficulties and a declaration of insolvency was considered 20 This led to a merger with the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology UWIST to form the University of Wales College of Cardiff The Principal of the new institution was Sir Aubrey Trotman Dickenson who had been the principal of UWIST After changes to the constitution in 1996 its name was changed to the University of Wales Cardiff In the early 1990s the university s computer systems served as the home for The Internet Movie Database 21 Independence and 2004 merger Edit Queen Elizabeth II with Anthony J Moses during her visit in Cardiff University in 2000 In 1997 the college was granted full independent degree awarding powers by the Privy Council though as a member of the University of Wales it could not begin using them and in 1999 the public name of the university was changed to Cardiff University In 2002 ideas were floated to merge Cardiff again with the University of Wales College of Medicine after publication of the Welsh Assembly Government s review of higher education in Wales This merger became effective on 1 August 2004 when Cardiff University ceased to be a constituent of the University of Wales and became an independent link institution affiliated to the federal university The process of the merger was completed on 1 December 2004 when the Act of Parliament transferring UWCM s assets to Cardiff University received Royal Assent On 17 December it was announced that the Privy Council had given approval to the new Supplemental Charter and had granted university status to Cardiff legally changing the name of the institution to Cardiff University Cardiff awarded University of Wales degrees to students admitted before 2005 but these have been replaced by Cardiff degrees A Cardiff University graduation ceremony in 2006 In 2005 Wales College of Medicine as part of the university launched the North Wales Clinical School in Wrexham in collaboration with the North East Wales Institute of Higher Education in Wrexham the University of Wales Bangor and the National Health Service in Wales This received funds of 12 5 million from the Welsh Assembly 22 and trebled the number of trainee doctors in clinical training in Wales over a four year period The university also has a popular Centre for Lifelong Learning which has been teaching a wide range of courses for over 125 years 23 However in July 2009 the university announced it was ending over 250 humanities courses at the centre making over 100 staff redundant The university has since reintroduced a number of humanities courses for a trial period beginning in 2010 24 In June 2010 the university launched three new research institutes 25 each offering a new approach to a major modern research issue The Neurosciences and Mental Health Research Institute and the Cancer Stem Cell Research Institute are housed in the purpose built Hadyn Ellis Building and in the Sustainable Places Research Institute Another part of the Science and Development Campus the Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre CUBRIC opened in June 2016 for neuroimaging research 26 Campus EditAcademic facilities Edit The main reading room of the Science Library pictured in 2017 The university s academic facilities are centred around Cathays Park in central Cardiff 27 which contains the university s grade II listed main building 28 housing administrative facilities and the science library previously called the Drapers library 29 30 the grade II listed Bute building 31 which contains the Welsh School of Architecture 32 the grade I listed Glamorgan building 33 which houses the Cardiff Schools of Planning and Geography and Social Sciences 34 the Redwood Building named in 1979 after the Redwood Family of Boverton near Llantwit Major by a 1978 suggestion by J D R Thomas which houses the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences 35 the law building which houses the Cardiff Law School 36 and the biosciences building which provides facilities for both biosciences and medical teaching 37 The School of Engineering School of Computer Science and Informatics and School of Physics and Astronomy are located in the Queen s Buildings off Newport Road and the School of Journalism Media and Culture at 2 Central Square A number of university academic facilities are located at the Heath Park campus based at the University Hospital of Wales This covers the Cardiff University School of Medicine the School of Dentistry the School of Healthcare Sciences and the School of Optometry and Vision Sciences 38 Buildings of Cardiff University The Main Building completed in 1909 School of Chemistry School of Biosciences entrance Cardiff School of Engineering Bute Building Cardiff University School of Music School of Psychology Cardiff Business School Hadyn Ellis Building Tower Building Glamorgan Building Arts and Social Sciences Library School of Optometry and Vision Sciences Redwood Building School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Aberdare Hall Exterior view of Cardiff University Students Union from Park PlaceAthletics facilities Edit Most of the university s sports facilities are located at the sports training village in the Talybont Halls complex This includes facilities for football badminton basketball tennis hockey and gym 39 Additional gym facilities and squash courts are located at the university fitness and squash centre near the city centre campus at Cathays Park 40 Extensive playing fields for Rugby football and lacrosse are located at the university playing fields near Llanrumney 41 The university also utilises the nearby Millennium Stadium for rugby fixtures such as the annual varsity tournament 42 Organisation EditSchools and colleges Edit The 26 academic schools of the university are divided into three colleges Arts Humanities and Social Sciences Biomedical and Life Sciences and Physical Sciences 43 College of Arts Humanities and Social Sciences Business English Communication and Philosophy Geography and Planning History Archaeology and Religion Journalism Media and Cultural Studies Law and Politics Modern Languages Music Social Sciences Welsh College of Biomedical and Life Sciences Biosciences Dentistry Healthcare Sciences Medicine Optometry and Vision Sciences Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Postgraduate Medical and Dental Education Wales Deanery Psychology College of Physical Sciences and Engineering Architecture Chemistry Computer Science amp Informatics Earth and Environmental Sciences Engineering Mathematics Physics and Astronomy Cardiff also has a Doctoral Academy 44 that brings together the work of four previous discipline based Graduate Schools and the postgraduate research activity of the university s Graduate Centre Finances Edit In the financial year ended 31 July 2012 Cardiff University had a total net income of 425 54 million 45 Key sources of income included 87 65 million from research grants and contracts 117 36 million from Funding Council grants 123 84 million from tuition fees and support grants and 3 17 million from endowment and investment income 45 During the 2011 12 financial year Cardiff had a capital expenditure of 14 29 million At 31 July 2012 Cardiff had endowments of 25 58 million and total net assets of 402 86 million 45 Academic profile EditReputation and rankings Edit Glamorgan Building RankingsNational rankingsComplete 2023 46 26Guardian 2023 47 35 Times Sunday Times 2023 48 25Global rankingsARWU 2022 49 151 200QS 2023 50 166THE 2023 51 187 Cardiff has two Nobel Laureates on its staff Sir Martin Evans and Robert Huber 52 A number of Cardiff University staff have been elected as Fellows of the Royal Society these include Graham Hutchings FRS professor of Physical Chemistry and Director of the Cardiff Catalysis Institute School of Chemistry 53 Ole Holger Petersen MRC Professor and Director of Cardiff School of Biosciences 54 and John M Pearce Professor of Psychology 55 In 2013 Cardiff University was ranked as one of the best UK universities for supporting LGBT students by the charity Stonewall in its annual Gay by Degree guide The university was one of only two in the UK and the only one in Wales to achieve top marks in a Stonewall checklist of priorities for LGBT students 56 Cardiff University was ranked joint 168th in Best Global Universities by US News in 2021 57 It was ranked 164th among universities around the world by SCImago Institutions Rankings in 2021 58 The Round University Rankings ranked Cardiff University 162nd globally in 2021 59 The Center for World University Rankings listed Cardiff University 159th in the world in 2021 60 According to QS World University Rankings by Subject in 2021 Cardiff University ranked within the world s top 50 universities in communication and media studies 28 and in architecture and built environment 37 61 Other subjects ranked within the top 100 are dentistry and mineral and mining engineering 49 civil and structural engineering geography social policy and administration pharmacy and pharmacology English language and literature psychology and sociology 61 Admissions Edit UCAS Admission Statistics 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018Applications a 62 46 345 44 155 39 225 34 465 33 320Accepted a 62 7 375 7 915 7 500 6 940 6 770Applications Accepted Ratio a 6 3 5 6 5 2 5 0 4 9Offer Rate b 63 68 2 70 3 73 4 72 5 71 1Average Entry Tariff 64 n a n a 148 144 153 a b c Main scheme applications International and UK UK domiciled applicantsHESA Student Body Composition 2022 Domicile 65 and Ethnicity 66 TotalBritish White 63 63 British Ethnic Minorities a 15 15 International EU 3 3 International Non EU 19 19 Undergraduate Widening Participation Indicators 67 68 Female 60 60 Independent School 14 14 Low Participation Areas b 9 9 In terms of average UCAS points of entrants Cardiff ranked 26th in Britain in 2018 69 The university gave offers of admission to 75 2 per cent of its applicants in 2015 the 13th lowest amongst the Russell Group 70 According to the 2017 Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide approximately 15 per cent of Cardiff s undergraduates come from independent schools 71 In the 2016 2017 academic year the university had a domicile breakdown of 76 5 19 of UK EU non EU students respectively with a female to male ratio of 59 41 72 Student life EditStudent accommodation Edit The university maintains 15 student halls and a number of student houses throughout the city of Cardiff providing a total of 5 362 student places in accommodation 73 They are in a variety of architectural styles and ages from the Gothic Aberdare Hall built in 1895 to the modern Talybont Gate Building completed in 2014 All first year students are guaranteed a place in university owned and managed halls 74 The Cardiff University Halls are Aberconway Hall Aberdare Hall Cartwright Court Clodien House Colum Hall Hodge Hall Gordon Hall Roy Jenkins Hall Senghennydd Court Senghennydd Hall The Talybont Student Village Including Talybont North South Court and Gate Halls University Hall Houses in Colum Road and Colum Place Student Village Houses Students Union Edit The Cardiff University Students Union is a student run organisation aiming to promote student interests within the university and further afield The Cardiff University Students Union building is near Cathays Park next to Cathays railway station It has shops a night club and the studios of Xpress Radio and Gair Rhydd the student newspaper It is democratically controlled by the student body through the election of seven full time officers who manage the running of the Union 75 The Union provides a range of services including a number of cafes bars and shops as well as advice training and representation The Union is an affiliated member of the National Union of Students 76 Groups and societies Edit The Union also supports over 260 other clubs and societies across a wide range of interests 77 including Cardiff University Debating Society 78 and Act One the student dramatic society 79 All clubs offer opportunities for beginners and the more experienced students Media Edit Nick Clegg at Cardiff University Students Union conducting an interview with CUTV in 2010 The Union provides facilities and support for several student media groups including Gair Rhydd an award winning free student newspaper that is released every Monday of term 80 Quench a monthly arts and lifestyle magazine that specialises in the local music scene as well as original investigative feature articles 81 and CUTV the student television channel 82 Xpress Radio is the student radio station 83 It broadcasts daily during term from studios in the Students Union building with programming such as comedy panel shows new music showcases local music showcases and film reviews 84 85 Athletics Edit Swansea and Cardiff Universities Men s Senior eights during The Welsh Boat Race in 2006 The Cardiff University Athletic Union is the body that supports student sport at Cardiff it oversees more than 60 competitive and non competitive sports clubs many of which compete in the British Universities and Colleges Sport league 86 The university s Ice Hockey team the Cardiff Redhawks which also recruits players from other Welsh universities competes in the British Universities Ice Hockey Association leagues 87 The university s sports teams also take part in the annual Welsh Varsity against Swansea University which includes the Welsh Boat Race and several other sporting competitions 88 The Welsh Varsity rugby match has been described as probably the second biggest Varsity Game next to Oxford vs Cambridge 89 Cardiff participates in British Universities and Colleges Sport which manages a sporting framework of competitive fixtures and events for over 150 institutions around the UK Cardiff registers nearly 100 teams in the various leagues and competitions each year and sees students travelling around the country to represent Cardiff University In 2013 Cardiff team achieved 15th position overall across the 50 different sports hosting events Insignia and other representations EditMotto Edit Cardiff University s motto is Gwirionedd Undod a Chytgord The Welsh motto translates as Truth Unity and Concord or Truth Unity and Harmony It is taken from the prayer for the Church militant as it appears in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer 90 Coat of arms Edit Cardiff University s current coat of arms was granted by the College of Arms in 1988 following the merger of University College Cardiff and the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology 91 The coat of arms incorporates features from the heraldry of both former institutions The three chevrons are derived from the arms of the de Clare lords of Glamorgan The open book signifies learning on it are the crescent and annulet marks of cadence that indicate that University College Cardiff was the second of the University of Wales institutions and that the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology was the fifth 92 A notable feature of the arms are the supporters which in heraldry are rarely granted to universities The supporters are an angel from University College Cardiff and a Welsh Dragon from the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology The crest is a Welsh dragon in the stance of a lion it stands on the helmet Both the dragon and the helmet are distinguished by being front facing rather than in profile as is more usually found in Welsh heraldry 92 Notable alumni and faculty EditVice Chancellors Edit List of Vice Chancellors and Principals of Cardiff University and its predecessors shown in brackets 1883 1901 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire John Viriamu Jones 1901 1918 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire Ernest Howard Griffiths 1918 1929 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire A H Trow 1929 1949 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire Frederick Rees 1949 1966 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire Anthony Steel 1966 1972 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire C W L Bevan 1972 1987 University College Cardiff C W L Bevan 1968 1988 University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology Sir Aubrey Trotman Dickenson 1988 1993 Aubrey Trotman Dickenson 1993 2001 Brian Smith 2001 2012 David Grant 2012 present Colin RiordanHeads of state and government Edit Roy Jenkins former President of the European Commission Lord Jenkins former Chancellor of the Exchequer Home Secretary President of the European Commission and Chancellor of the University of Oxford did not graduate Barham Salih president of Iraq former prime minister of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region and former deputy prime minister of the Iraqi federal government Faisal Al Fayez Prime Minister of JordanPolitics Edit David Richards Chief of the Defence Staff David Bahati State Minister of Finance for Planning in the Cabinet of Uganda Christine Chapman MS for Cynon Valley Jeffrey Cuthbert Gwent Police and Crime Commissioner MS for Caerphilly and Welsh Government Minister for Communities and Tackling Poverty Hefin David MS for Caerphilly Wayne David MP for Caerphilly and UK Shadow Minister for Europe Shadow Minister for Defence Procurement and Shadow Minister for the Armed Forces S O Davies miner trade union official and Labour Party MP 93 Guto Harri broadcaster Communications Director for the Mayor of London Elin Jones MS for Ceredigion Presiding Officer of the National Assembly for Wales and Welsh Government Minister for Rural Affairs Fatou Sanyang Kinteh Gambian Minister for Women s Affairs Children and Social Welfare Sir Emyr Jones Parry British Permanent Representative to the United Nations 94 Glenys Kinnock MEP and UK Foreign Office Minister Neil Kinnock MP for Bedwellty and for Islwyn Leader of the Labour Party Leader of the Opposition Mike Hedges MS for Swansea East Hilary Marquand MP for Cardiff East and Minister for Health Robert Minhinnick co founder of Friends of the Earth Cymru 95 Christopher Walter Monckton 3rd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley advisor to Margaret Thatcher Craig Oliver Conservative Party Director of Communications Adam Price MS and leader of Plaid Cymru Bill Rammell MP for Harlow David Rees MS for Aberavon and Deputy Presiding Officer of the Senedd Cymru Lord Richards Chief of the Defence Staff Michael Shrimpton barrister politician and conspiracy theorist John Smith MP for the Vale of Glamorgan member of the Defence Select Committee Brian Wilson MP for Cunninghame North and Minister of State Mike Wood MP for Dudley SouthAcademia Edit Martin Evans Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine Robert Huber Nobel Laureate in Chemistry Abedelnasser Abulrob medical researcher Miguel Alcubierre Mexican theoretical physicist Rudolf K Allemann Swiss biochemist Gabrielle Allen computer scientist Robin Attfield philosopher Martin J Ball Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at Bangor University Cymru Wales Paul E A Barbier Professor of French at the University of Leeds Yehuda Bauer Professor of Holocaust Studies at the Avraham Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Leszek Borysiewicz Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge Gregory Cameron Bishop of St Asaph Sheila Cameron lawyer and ecclesiastical judge Archie Cochrane pioneer of scientific method in medicine Peter Coles Professor of Astrophysics Paul Colton Bishop of Cork Cloyne and Ross David Crouch historian Alun Davies bioscientist Huw Dixon economist Stephen Dunnett neuroscientist Alice Laura Embleton biologist zoologist and suffragist Martin Evans Nobel Prize for Medicine 96 2007 Mahmoud Ezzamel professorial fellow Dimitra Fimi writer John S Fossey Professor of synthetic chemistry at the University of Birmingham Burt Goldberg university professor microbiologist Karen Holford engineer Robert Huber Professor of Chemistry Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 1988 97 98 John Loughlin Professor of Politics Vaughan Lowe Chichele Professor of Public International Law in the University of Oxford Ursula Masson women s history and feminism Patrick Minford Professor of Applied Economics John Warwick Montgomery American lawyer and theologian Distinguished Research Professor of Philosophy and Christian Thought at Patrick Henry College 99 Christopher Norris literary critic Keith Peters Regius Professor of Physic in the University of Cambridge Leighton Durham Reynolds Emeritus Professor of Classical Languages and Literature University of Oxford Alice Roberts clinical anatomist and osteoarchaeologist Wendy Sadler physicist and science communicator H W Lloyd Tanner Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 1883 1909 Pamela Taylor Professor of Forensic Psychiatry since 2004 Meena Upadhyaya medical geneticist Dominic Walker Bishop of Monmouth Keith Ward philosopher Gresham Professor of Divinity Gresham College Chandra Wickramasinghe mathematician astronomer and astrobiologist Professor of Applied Mathematics Rheinallt Nantlais Williams professor of the philosophy of religion principal of the United Theological College Aberystwyth Emma Yhnell biomedical research scientistBusiness Edit Spencer Dale Chief economist Bank of England Andrew Gould chairman and former CEO Schlumberger 100 Martin Lewis personal finance journalist television presenter and website entrepreneur Dame Mary Perkins co founder Specsavers Ceri Powell senior Royal Dutch Shell executive John Pettigrew businessman CEO National Grid plc Lorenzo Simonelli CEO Baker Hughes CompanySport Edit Nathan Cleverly professional boxer and former WBO light heavyweight world champion Gareth Davies former Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player and current chief executive of Cardiff Rugby Football Club Gerald Davies former Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player Mike Hall former Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player Heather Knight English cricketer Steven Outerbridge Bermudian cricketer Jamie Roberts Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player James Tomlinson English cricketer Bradley Wadlan Welsh cricketer Alex Gough Squash playerArts and journalism Edit Huw Edwards BAFTA award winning journalist Tim Hetherington nominee of the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2011 Paul Atherton television and film producer and director Matt Barbet journalist Manish Bhasin journalist and television presenter Nick Broomfield documentary filmmaker and receiver of the BAFTA Lifetime Achievement Award for Contribution to Documentary Philip Cashian composer Suw Charman Anderson journalist and social software consultant Adrian Chiles television presenter Gillian Clarke poet and receiver of the Queen s Gold Medal for Poetry Huw Edwards journalist Ken Elias artist painter Max Foster CNN anchor CNN Today 101 M A Griffiths poet Julia Hartley Brewer journalist and television presenter Jiang Heping executive director of the CCTV Sports Programming Centre and Controller of CCTV 5 Tim Hetherington photo journalist and co director of Academy Award nominated Restrepo Elis James stand up comedian and actor Alun Hoddinott composer Sioned James 1974 2016 choral conductor Karl Jenkins composer Alan Johnston journalist Riz Khan journalist and television interviewer Bernard Knight crime writer Simon Lane co founder and Creative director of The Yogscast Ltd Gwilym Lee actor Sian Lloyd television presenter Los Campesinos six piece indie pop band Philip Madoc actor Paul Moorcraft writer Sharon Morgan actress Joanna Natasegara documentary producer Academy Award winner for Netflix documentary The White Helmets Sian Phillips actress Susanna Reid television presenter James Righton musician Leo Rowlands Welsh musical composer Catholic priest Arlene Sierra composer Mari Strachan novelist and librarian Richard Tait former BBC governor and BBC trustee Craig Thomas author Alex Thomson journalist amp television presenter Vedhicka Indian actress Grace Williams composer Ron Smerczak actor 102 Workload controversy EditOn 19 February 2018 Malcolm Anderson a university lecturer committed suicide by jumping off a university building and died at age 48 103 104 105 106 107 The inquiry determined that Anderson s suicide was the result of a high pressure workload 105 106 In 2020 Grace Krause a PhD student employed at Cardiff University started experiencing headaches and back pain after lengthy work at a computer 106 108 She tweeted that Staff are marking hundreds of essays in an impossibly short time It is exhausting Everyone is in crisis mode Stressed moody morose everyone feels like they re drowning 106 Soon after an email from the university was sent to all PhD students asking for these comments to be deleted in order to avoid negative media attention 106 This has since sparked a debate about freedom of speech between employers and employees 106 See also Edit Wales portalArmorial of UK universities College of advanced technology United Kingdom Education in Wales List of universities in Wales List of modern universities in Europe 1801 1945 List of UK universities Town and gownReferences Edit Includes those who indicate that they identify as Asian Black Mixed Heritage Arab or any other ethnicity except White Calculated from the Polar4 measure using Quintile1 in England and Wales Calculated from the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation SIMD measure using SIMD20 in Scotland a b History Cardiff University Retrieved 15 May 2016 a b FS Cardiff University PDF Baroness Randerson named Cardiff University Chancellor Cardiff University 16 January 2019 a b Who s working in HE HESA Retrieved 29 September 2021 a b c d Where do HE students study Higher Education Statistics Agency Retrieved 1 March 2020 Our universities Russell Group Retrieved 11 August 2017 Honours and awards Cardiff University Retrieved 29 April 2021 FS Cardiff University PDF Education Wales Resolution Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 18 July 1879 Evans W G 1982 1983 The Aberdare Report and education in Wales 1881 Welsh History Review 11 1 4 150 152 Retrieved 18 September 2014 Evans W G 1982 1983 The Aberdare Report and education in Wales 1881 Welsh History Review 11 1 4 153 155 Retrieved 18 September 2014 Brown Terry April 1984 A HANDBOOK ON WELSH CHURCH DEFENCE BY THE BISHOP OF ST ASAPH DENBIGH PRINTED BY C COTTON AND CO VALE STREET Retrieved 18 September 2014 a b c d Matthews John Hobson 1905 Cardiff Council Minutes 1881 3 Cardiff Records volume 5 pp 62 84 Archived from the original on 10 July 2014 Retrieved 18 September 2014 Cardiff Corporation Bill Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Commons 9 June 1884 a b c MACLEAN GEORGE EDWIN 1917 Studies in higher education in Ireland and Wales with suggestions for universities and colleges in the United States Washington DC GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE p 71 Retrieved 19 September 2014 Student Lists Senate House Library Archived from the original on 14 September 2010 Retrieved 27 March 2013 Poulton Edward 1911 John Viriamu Jones and other Oxford Memories London Longmans Green and Co p 156 Opening of the New College Cap and Gown No 7 University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire 14 October 1909 Cardiff University Higher Education Funding Council for Wales Archived from the original on 27 July 2013 Shattock Michael 1988 Financial Management in Universities The Lessons from University College Cardiff Financial Accountability amp Management 4 2 99 112 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0408 1988 tb00063 x IMDb Help help imdb com Health Minister opens North Wales Clinical School Welsh Assembly Government Retrieved 4 July 2008 permanent dead link New book celebrates 125 years of Lifelong Learning at Cardiff University Cardiff University Retrieved 16 May 2009 permanent dead link Part time courses for adults Cardiff University Cardiff creating three research institutes WalesOnline 13 June 2010 Retrieved 21 June 2010 Her Majesty The Queen Opens Innovative CUBRIC Building IBI Group 8 June 2016 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Heath Park Retrieved 10 May 2013 University of Wales Cardiff including Forecourt Walls BritishListedBuildings co uk Retrieved 11 August 2017 Science Library Archived from the original on 22 September 2013 Retrieved 10 May 2013 Cathays Park University www cardiffparks org uk Bute Building BritishListedBuildings co uk Retrieved 11 August 2017 Architecture school location Archived from the original on 15 June 2013 Retrieved 10 May 2013 Former Glamorgan County Hall BritishListedBuildings co uk Retrieved 11 August 2017 Social Sci location Retrieved 10 May 2013 Pharm location Retrieved 10 May 2013 Location Cardiff University Bio sci location Retrieved 16 June 2013 Heath Park Retrieved 10 May 2013 Sports training village Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Fitness and squash Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Playing fields Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Rugby Varsity Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 8 July 2013 College structure Cardiff University Retrieved 11 August 2017 Cardiff University University Graduate College www cardiff ac uk Retrieved 10 January 2017 a b c CARDIFF UNIVERSITY Annual Report and Financial Statements Year Ended 31 July 2012 PDF Cardiff University Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2013 Retrieved 5 September 2013 Complete University Guide 2023 The Complete University Guide 5 July 2022 Guardian University Guide 2023 The Guardian 24 September 2022 Good University Guide 2023 The Times 17 September 2022 Academic Ranking of World Universities 2022 Shanghai Ranking Consultancy 15 August 2022 QS World University Rankings 2023 Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd 8 June 2022 THE World University Rankings 2023 Times Higher Education 12 October 2022 School of Biosciences Prof Robert Huber Cardiff University Retrieved 9 March 2011 Graham Hutchings FRS Cardiff University Archived from the original on 7 December 2010 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Professor Ole Holger Petersen FRS Cardiff University Archived from the original on 17 January 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2011 Professor John Pearce FRS The Royal Society Retrieved 6 September 2015 Cardiff University leads the way in Stonewall Gay by Degree guide Retrieved 8 July 2013 permanent dead link Cardiff University in United Kingdom U S News amp World Report Retrieved 26 September 2021 University Rankings 2021 www scimagoir com Retrieved 26 September 2021 RUR 2021 Overall Rank www roundranking com Retrieved 26 September 2021 Top Universities in the United Kingdom in 2021 2022 Center for World University Rankings Retrieved 26 September 2021 a b QS World University Rankings by Subject 2021 Top Universities Retrieved 26 September 2021 a b UCAS Undergraduate Sector Level End of Cycle Data Resources 2022 ucas com UCAS Show me Domicile by Provider Retrieved 8 February 2023 2022 entry UCAS Undergraduate reports by sex area background and ethnic group UCAS 2 February 2023 Retrieved 2 February 2023 University League Tables entry standards 2023 The Complete University Guide Where do HE students study Students by HE provider HESA HE student enrolments by HE provider Retrieved 8 February 2023 Who s studying in HE Personal characteristics HESA 31 January 2023 Retrieved 8 February 2023 Widening participation UK Performance Indicators Table T2a Participation of under represented groups in higher education Higher Education Statistics Authority hesa ac uk Retrieved 8 February 2023 Good University Guide Social Inclusion Ranking The Times 16 September 2022 University League Table 2021 Complete University Guide Retrieved 9 June 2020 Which elite universities have the highest offer rates The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 21 October 2016 The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2017 Good University Guide London Retrieved 16 August 2016 subscription required Where do HE students study hesa ac uk Higher Education Statistics Authority Retrieved 9 February 2018 HESA student data Retrieved 15 July 2015 Residences PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 August 2013 Retrieved 10 May 2013 www cardiffstudents com https web archive org web 20211022104128 https www cardiffstudents com 404 url 2Fabout cusu 2Fyour officers 2F Archived from the original on 22 October 2021 Retrieved 29 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help NUS member Retrieved 15 May 2013 Cardiff Societies Archived from the original on 14 December 2012 Retrieved 15 May 2013 Debating society Archived from the original on 4 January 2012 Retrieved 15 May 2013 Act one society Archived from the original on 2 June 2013 Retrieved 15 May 2013 gair rhydd paper Retrieved 15 May 2013 Quench magazine Retrieved 15 May 2013 CUTV Retrieved 15 May 2013 Xpress Radio Cardiff Student Media Cardiff University Students Union Retrieved 16 August 2021 listen Xpress Radio Retrieved 13 April 2022 Xpress Radio Membership Cardiff University Students Union Retrieved 13 April 2022 Athletic union Retrieved 15 May 2013 Cardiff Redhawks Archived from the original on 19 August 2013 Retrieved 11 May 2013 Welsh Varsity Archived from the original on 13 May 2013 Retrieved 10 May 2013 Nick Hill selected for Welsh Varsity Match Aberavonquins Aberavonquins Retrieved 7 October 2018 Cardiff Motto Cardiff Motto Archived from the original on 15 August 2013 Retrieved 1 July 2013 History of Cardiff University Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 25 August 2013 a b Cardiff University coat of arms Archived from the original on 24 September 2013 Retrieved 25 August 2013 DAVIES STEPHEN OWEN 1886 1972 miners leader and Labour politician Dictionary of Welsh Biography Retrieved 9 November 2022 Former Permanent Representatives United Kingdom Mission to the United Nations Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2011 Robert Minhinnick British Council Archived from the original on 3 January 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2011 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2007 Nobelprize org Retrieved 9 March 2011 Nobel laureate joins University Cardiff University Retrieved 4 July 2008 The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1988 The Nobel Foundation Retrieved 4 July 2008 JWM s WEB SITE Retrieved 10 September 2012 Schlumberger CEO to retire remains as chairman Forbes Retrieved 1 August 2011 dead link CNN International Anchors amp Reporters Max Foster CNN International Retrieved 4 March 2011 Ron Smerczak at TVSA TVSA Retrieved 3 December 2014 Police name Cardiff University lecturer following death BBC News 22 February 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2020 Tributes to Cardiff University lecturer who died BBC News 23 February 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2020 a b Under pressure Cardiff University lecturer fell to death BBC News 6 June 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2020 a b c d e f Reidy Tess 12 February 2020 Naked intimidation how universities silence academics on social media The Guardian Retrieved 20 February 2020 Haf Jones Catrin 20 February 2019 Lecturer s widow hits out at Cardiff University workload BBC News Retrieved 20 February 2019 Deacon Thomas 18 November 2018 Overworked and undervalued The crippling stress university lecturers face WalesOnline Retrieved 20 February 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cardiff University Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cardiff University amp oldid 1139340219, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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