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University of Amsterdam

The University of Amsterdam (abbreviated as UvA, Dutch: Universiteit van Amsterdam) is a public research university located in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Established in 1632 by municipal authorities and later renamed for the city of Amsterdam, the University of Amsterdam is the third-oldest university in the Netherlands,[5] and one of the most prestigious academic institutions of the country, and in the world.[6]

University of Amsterdam
Universiteit van Amsterdam
Latin: Universitas Amstelodamensis
Former names
Athenaeum Illustre
(1632–1877)
Municipal University of Amsterdam
(1877–1961)
TypePublic
Established1632; 391 years ago (1632)
PresidentGeert ten Dam
Rector MagnificusKaren Maex
Academic staff
2,425[1]
Administrative staff
2,369[1]
Total staff
5,216 (2020) [2]
Students41,206 (2021)[3]
Location, ,
52°22′6″N 4°53′25″E / 52.36833°N 4.89028°E / 52.36833; 4.89028
CampusUrban
ColoursBlack, UvA Red and White[4]
     
AffiliationsLERU, UNICA, EUA, Universitas 21
Websiteuva.nl

The UvA is one of two large, publicly funded research universities in the city, the other being the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU). It is also part of the largest research universities in Europe with 31,186 students, 4,794 staff, 1,340 PhD students[1] and an annual budget of €600 million.[7][8] It is the largest university in the Netherlands by enrollment. The main campus is located in central Amsterdam, with a few faculties located in adjacent boroughs. The university is organised into seven faculties: Humanities, Social and Behavioural Sciences, Economics and Business, Science, Law, Medicine, Dentistry.

The University of Amsterdam has produced six Nobel Laureates and five prime ministers of the Netherlands.[9] The university has been placed in the top 100 universities in the world by five prominent ranking tables. By the QS World University Rankings it was ranked 55th in the world, 14th in Europe, and 1st in the Netherlands in 2022. In the past years, the UvA has usually been placed in the top 30 worldwide in dozens of fields, including Law, Political Science and Medicine according to the same ranking.[10] Between 2018 and 2022 the two departments of Media and Communication were commonly ranked 1st in the world by subject.

Close ties are harbored with other institutions internationally through its membership in the League of European Research Universities (LERU), the Institutional Network of the Universities from the Capitals of Europe (UNICA), European University Association (EUA) and Universitas 21.

History

Early professors at the University of Amsterdam

Athenaeum Illustre (1632–1877)

In January 1632, the Athenaeum Illustre of Amsterdam (Latin: Illustrious School of Amsterdam) was founded by the municipal authorities in Amsterdam.[5] It was mainly devoted to medical teaching.[5] The first two professors were Gerardus Vossius and Caspar Barlaeus. The Athenaeum Illustre provided education comparable to other higher education institutions, although it could not confer doctoral degrees. After training at the Athenaeum, students could complete their education at a university in another town.

At the time, Amsterdam also housed several other institutions of higher education, including the Collegium Chirugicum, which trained surgeons, and other institutions that provided theological courses for the Remonstrant and the Mennonite communities. Amsterdam's large degree of religious freedom allowed for the establishment of these institutions. Students of the Colegium Chirugicum and the theological institutions regularly attended classes at the Athenaeum Illustre.

 
The Anatomy Lesson of Dr. Nicolaes Tulp by Rembrandt shows an anatomy lesson taking place in Amsterdam in 1632, the year the university was founded. Nicolaes Tulp is considered one of the forefathers of the Faculty of Medicine.[11]

In 1815 it was given the statutory obligation “to disseminate taste, civilisation and learning" and “to replace, at least in part, the institutes of higher education and an academic education for those young men whose circumstances unable them to fully spend the time necessary for an academic career at an institute of higher education.” The Athenaeum began offering classes for students attending non-academic professional training in pharmacy and surgery in 1800. The Athenaeum Illustre largely worked together with Amsterdam's theological institutions such as the Evangelisch-Luthers Seminarium (evangelical-Lutheran) and the Klinische School (medical school), the successor to the Collegium Chirurgicum.

The Athenaeum remained a small institution until the 19th century, with no more than 250 students and eight professors. Alumni of the Athenaeum include Cornelis Petrus Tiele.[12][13]

Municipal university (1877–1961)

In 1877, the Athenuem Illustre became the Municipal University of Amsterdam and received the right to confer doctoral degrees. This gave the university the same privileges as national universities while being funded by the city of Amsterdam. The professors and lecturers were appointed by the municipal council. This resulted in a staff that was in many ways more colorful than the staffs of national universities. During its time as a municipal university, the university flourished, in particular in the science department, which counted many Nobel prize winners: Tobias Asser, Christiaan Eijkman, Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff, Johannes Diderik van der Waals, Pieter Zeeman, and Frits Zernike.

The University of Amsterdam's municipal status brought about the relatively early addition of the faculties of Economics and Social Sciences. After the World War II the dramatic rise in the cost of university education put a constraint on the university's growth.[12][13]

 
Buildings of the University of Amsterdam. The front building houses the Academic Club of the university

National university (1961–present)

In 1961, the national government made the university a national university, giving it its current name, the University of Amsterdam. Funding was now given by the national government instead of the city and the appointment of professors was transferred to the board of governors. The city of Amsterdam retained a limited influence until 1971, when the appointment was handed over to the executive board.

During May 1969, the university became the focus of nationwide news when UvA's administrative centre at the Maagdenhuis was occupied by hundreds of students who wanted more democratic influence in educational and administrative matters. The protest lasted for days and was eventually broken up by the police.[14] During the 1970s and 1980s, the university was often the target of nationwide student actions.

The university saw considerable expansion since becoming a national university, from 7,500 students in 1960 to over 32,000 in 2010. In 2007, UvA undertook the construction of the Science Park Amsterdam, a 70-hectare (170-acre) campus to house the Faculty of Science along with the new University Sports Center. Much of the park has now been completed.[15] The University of Amsterdam began working in close collaboration with the Hogeschool van Amsterdam. In 2008, the University of Amsterdam and VU University jointly founded the Amsterdam University College (AUC), an interuniversity institute that offers a three-year Bachelor (Honors) program in the Liberal Arts and Sciences.[12][13]

2015 student and staff protests

In February 2015, the university experienced occupations of two of their buildings in protest over proposed budget cuts. These budget cuts occurred in the wake of the university's attempt to deal with its speculative misjudgments and financial difficulties: in 2011, the university's total outstanding debt had increased to €136 million.[16] The Bungehuis occupation ended with the arrest of the 46 protesters on 24 February 2015. The following day a group of protesters forced the door of the Maagdenhuis, the main administrative building of the UvA, and began occupying it, once again raising their demands.[17] The occupation lasted 45 days; the occupiers were evicted on 11 April.[18][19]

The current logo of the University of Amsterdam consists of a black square with three white Saint Andrew's Crosses and a white "U." This an adaptation of the coat of arms of Amsterdam which also uses a black background and three white or silver Saint Andrew's Crosses. The three Saint Andrew's Crosses have been said to represent the three plagues of Amsterdam: fire, floods, and the Black Death. Another rumor is that they represent three fords in the River Amstel. These two explanations have no historical basis, however. It is believed by historians that the coat of arms of Amsterdam is derived from the coat of arms of Jan Persijn, the lord of Amsterdam between 1280 and 1282.[20] The "U" represents the word "university" while the colours and three crosses represent the city of Amsterdam.

Campus

As a metropolitan institution, the University of Amsterdam has always been housed in old and new buildings scattered throughout the capital. Because UvA is not a separate, secluded campus, students and city residents readily mix, allowing Amsterdam to maintain close cultural and academic ties to the school. The majority of UvA's buildings lie in the heart of Amsterdam, with only the faculties of Science, Medicine and Dentistry located outside the City Centre. The university lies within the largest megalopolis in the Netherlands, the Randstad, with a population 7.2 million inhabitants.[21]

City Centre

The administration of the school and most of the faculties are located in the historic City Centre of Amsterdam, within the canal ring which is itself a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The facilities in this area date from as early as the 15th century to the 21st-century. Architectural styles represented include the Dutch Renaissance, Dutch Baroque, Art Deco, Amsterdam School, and International style. The Agnietenkapel, Maagdenhuis, Oost-Indisch Huis, Bushuis, and Oudemanhuispoort are designated as Rijksmonuments (national monuments). The 15th century Agnietenkapel, where the university was founded was first constructed as a monastery chapel around 1470, but was later converted for use by the Athenaeum Illustre in 1631. The Agnes Gate in front of the Agnietenkapel is a major symbol of the university and dates back to 1571. It was renovated and moved to its current location in 1631.[22] Another area is a former hospital converted into university buildings, the Binnengasthuis, which is considered the heart of UvA. The Maagdenhuis is the current headquarters of UvA and HvA administration. The building was built between 1783 and 1787 and was formerly an orphanage.[14] The Oost-Indisch Huis, the former headquarters of the Dutch East India Company was built in 1606 and now used by UvA.[23] The Oudemanhuispoort was made a university building in 1880. It was constructed in 1602 as a retirement house and now houses some departments of the Humanities faculty.[24] One of the buildings of the University Library complex, the Bushuis, was built as an armory in 1606.[25]

 
The Faculty of Science at Science Park

Science Park

The Faculty of Science is located on the east side of the city at the newly constructed Science Park Amsterdam. This 70-hectare (170-acre) campus contains UvA's science facilities, research institutes, student housing, the University Sports Centre, and businesses. In order to attract distinguished students and researchers, the campus was built by collaboration between the University of Amsterdam, the City of Amsterdam, and the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research. In 2012, the Amsterdam University College was housed at the Science Park UvA campus.

Academic Medical Centre

In the southeastern Bijlmermeer neighbourhood, the Faculty of Medicine is housed in the Academic Medical Center (AMC), the Faculty of Medicine's teaching and research hospital. It was formed in 1983 when the UvA Faculty of Medicine and two hospitals, Binnengasthuis and the Wilhelmina Gasthuis, combined. Shortly after in 1988, the Emma Children's Hospital also moved to the AMC. It is one of Amsterdam's level 1 trauma centers and strongly cooperates with the VU University Medical Center (VUmc).

Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam

The Faculty of Dentistry is located in the Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA) in the southern Zuidas district on the campus of the VU University Medical Center. It was formed when the University of Amsterdam and the Vrije Universiteit combined their Dentistry schools in 1984.

Roeterseiland Campus

The Roeterseiland Campus is an open city campus designed to offer future-proof teaching and research facilities. The Faculties of Economics and Business and Social and Behavioural Sciences are located at the Roeterseiland campus. The Faculty of Law has settled in August 2017 on the campus.

 
The Bushuis building
 
The Binnengasthuis area
 
The Oost-Indisch Huis building
 
The Artis Library

Organisation and administration

Faculties

The university is divided into seven faculties, with each faculty headed by a dean. The faculties include the Faculties of Humanities, Social and Behavioural Sciences, Economics and Business, Science, Law, Medicine, and Dentistry. Students must be admitted to the faculty of their program before beginning their studies.

Faculty of Science

The Faculty of Science (Dutch: Faculteit der Natuurwetenschappen, Wiskunde en Informatica) (FNWI) covers a wide area of research and education. Research at the Faculty of Science covers the full width of the beta sciences. Spread across eight institutes, the main topics are astronomy, physics, mathematics, information sciences, life sciences, chemistry and biology.

The Faculty of Science offers 28 degree programmes for students, 7 of which are a joint degree with the Vrije Universiteit. There are 51 different nationalities studying at the Faculty of Science.

The Faculty of Science has around 6,800 students, as well as 1,700 members of staff working in education, research or support services. Around 50% of the staff are internationals. The main faculty buildings are located on the Science Park Amsterdam campus.

 

Faculty of Humanities

The Faculty of Humanities (Dutch: Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen) (FGw) comprises six departments: Dutch studies, History, European Studies and Religion, Archaeology and Classics, Language and Literature, Media studies, Philosophy, and Art and Cultural studies. With over 6000 students and about 1000 employees, it is the largest humanities faculty in the Netherlands. It was established in 1997 after a merger of the Faculty of Language and Culture, the Faculty of Theology and the Faculty of Philosophy. In 2011, the faculty was ranked number one in the Netherlands for Philosophy and Linguistics with international ranking in these areas of 37th and 22nd respectively.[26] In terms of research, the faculty produced 726 academic publications in 2009.[8]

Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences

The Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (Dutch: Faculteit der Maatschappij- en Gedragswetenschappen) (FMG) is the largest educational and research institution in the social and behavioural sciences in the Netherlands. The faculty has approximately 10,000 students and 1,200 staff members. The Faculty is home to six departments: Political Science, Sociology and Anthropology, Communication Science, Psychology, Social Geography, Planning and International Development Studies, and Educational sciences. The faculty was ranked the best in the Netherlands in 2011 for Sociology and Geography with international rankings in these areas of 33rd and 40th respectively.[26] In terms of research, the faculty produced 1,366 academic publications in 2009.[8]

Faculty of Economics and Business

 
The words Athenaeum Illustre on the gate of the Agnietenkapel.

The Faculty of Economics and Business (Dutch: Faculteit Economie en Bedrijfskunde) (FEB) was established in 1922. The FEB, which includes the Amsterdam School of Economics (ASE) and the Amsterdam Business School (ABS), currently has around 4,000 students and nearly 600 staff. It was ranked 44th in Economics & Econometrics and 45 in Accountancy & Finance among world universities.[26] In terms of research, the faculty produced 517 academic publications in 2009.[8]

Faculty of Law

The Faculty of Law (Dutch: Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid) (FdR) is based in the newly redesigned Roetersiland campus. It was earlier housed in the Oudemanhuispoort, a historic building dating from 1602 situated in the center of Amsterdam. It has approximately 3,700 students and 330 academic staff members. 58% of academic staff is female. The Faculty offers nine LLM programs, of which two are taught in English. In addition the Faculty offers three advanced LLM programs, which are all taught in English. Research at the Faculty is undertaken by five research institutes which specialize in the following areas: International law, Private law, Environmental law, Labor law, and Information law. In terms of research, the faculty produced 451 academic publications in 2018.[8] In the 2018 academic year, there were 41 PhD candidates, 67% of whom were female.

In 2015, a bequest from Trudie Vervoort-Jaarsma to the university established the Julia Henriëtte Jaarsma-Adolfs scholarship fund for assisting students pursuing an LLM in the law faculty. The bequest of €4 million was the largest single donation left to a Dutch university by a private citizen and was made to honor her mother's legal career. A second scholarship in the name of Vervoort-Jaarsma's daughter, Madeleine Vervoort, provides travel funds to students.[27]

Faculty of Medicine

The Faculty of Medicine (Dutch: Faculteit der Geneeskunde) (FdG), each year, approximately 350 first-year students begin their study of medicine at the Academic Medical Center. The first, three-year phase consists mainly of thematic teaching. The second, also three-year phase consists of training internships in and outside of the AMC. In terms of research, the faculty produced 3,206 academic publications in 2009.[8]

Faculty of Dentistry

The Academic Center for Dentistry in Amsterdam (Dutch: Faculteit der Tandheelkunde) (ACTA) was founded in 1984 through a merger of the two dentistry faculties of the Universiteit of Amsterdam and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. ACTA conducts scientific research, teaches, and provides patient care in the field of dentistry. ACTA is one of the largest dentistry education and training programmes in the world, with 500 staff members, an annual new-student enrolment of 128 and a total student body of 1000. It consists of three departments. In terms of research, the faculty produced 228 academic publications in 2009.[8]

Administration

 
The Maagdenhuis houses the administration of the UvA and HvA.

The University of Amsterdam is headed by an executive board. The university is then divided into seven faculties, with each faculty headed by a dean. Teaching and research are carried out in various departments and institutes within the individual faculties. UvA has an annual budget of €600 million (approximately $850 million),.[8][28]

In 1992, the board of governors of the University of Amsterdam set up the UvA Holding BV in order to bring its commercial activities into a form that is compatible with private law.[29] The University of Amsterdam holds all the shares of the subsidiaries of the holding. The subsidiaries are clustered into four activity areas which are increasingly outsourced to commercial enterprises and other market participants.[30]

International cooperation

The intellectual and cultural atmosphere at UvA is internationally oriented. Amsterdam attracts students from the Netherlands and beyond: with over 2,500 international students and researchers from over 100 countries.

UvA has an extensive network of foreign partner universities, facilitating student and staff exchanges. Within Europe, UvA has Socrates/Erasmus exchange agreements with over 200 institutions. Outside Europe, it has close ties with approximately 40 universities on all continents.[31]

Academics

 
The Oudemanhuispoort building

The university is accredited by the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, which grants accreditation to institutions who meet a national system of regulations and quality assurance controls. The Ministry has given it WO, or research university status. Dutch students must complete a six-year preparatory program to gain admission to national research universities. Only fifteen percent of students pass this preparatory program.

In terms of tuition in 2015–2016, EU full-time students are charged €1,951 per year for both Bachelor's and Master's programs, part-time students are charged €1,696 and non-EU students are charged between €9,000-€25,000 per year for Bachelor's programs and €10,500-€25,000 for Master's and Doctoral programs.[32] Costs for non-EU students varies depending on the faculty of matriculation. In terms of scholarships, the university offers the UvA Amsterdam Excellence Scholarship (AES),[33] Amsterdam Merit Scholarships, scholarships through the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science, Dutch Study Grants, and various European scholarships.[34]

Collectively the faculties offer 59 Bachelor's programmes, 133 Master's programmes, and 10 postgraduate programs.[35] The university awarded 2,565 propaedeutic, 3,204 Bachelor's, 3,990 Master's, 438 Doctoral, 242 Post-Doctoral degrees in 2009–2010, and 10,438 total degrees in 2009–2010.[36] The school's academic year lasts from early September until mid-July and is divided into two 20-week semesters. The first of these ends in late January and the second begins in early February. There are no mid-term breaks, only a short holiday around Christmas and New Year as well as Dutch National holidays.

Demographics of the student body[37]
Dutch 79%
Other EEA citizen 14%
Non-European 7%

Student body

In 2010, the university had an enrolment of 32,739 students: 20,185 undergraduate students, 9,361 master's students, 1,235 doctoral students, and 412 post-doctoral students.[7] Of all students, 93.4% are Dutch citizens and 6.6% are international students.[8] UvA has over 2,500 international students and researchers that come from over 100 countries.[31] Full-time students comprised 91% of the student body.[7] In 2010 students were enrolled in 7 faculties and the Amsterdam University College: 24% in Humanities, 13% in Law, 7% in Medicine, 1% in Dentistry, 11% in Science, 13% in Economics & Business, 30% in Social & Behavioral Sciences, and 0.5% in the Amsterdam University College.[7]

Overall, 20% of students in bachelor's programs complete their degree within three years, 48% in four years, and 69% in five years; 71% of master's students completed their degree in two years.[8] Students on average successfully complete 44 ECTS credits during the academic year.[8] In 2007, 88% of master's and doctoral graduates went on to paying jobs, with an additional 5% going on to continue their education within 1.5 years of graduating.[8]

University rankings

University rankings
Global – Overall
ARWU World[38]101-150 (2022)
CWUR World[39]83 (2022–23)
CWTS World[40]62 (2022)
QS World[41]58 (2023)
THE World[42]60 (2023)
USNWR Global[43]38 (2022)

On a subject basis the QS World University Rankings ranked the university in the top 75 in four out of five of the domains: Social Sciences & Management (41), Arts & Humanities (43), Life Sciences & Medicine (69) and Natural Sciences (75).[44]

The 2011-12 Times Higher Education World University Rankings ranked the University of Amsterdam 30th in Arts & Humanities[45] and 40th in Social Sciences, making it the highest ranking Dutch university in these fields and the highest ranking continental European university in the Social Sciences.[46]

The 2017 CWTS Leiden Global university ranking ranked the University of Amsterdam in the Global Top 8 in the field of social sciences and humanities.[1]

The CHE Excellence Ranking rated the school excellent in all seven categories for research, making it the only Dutch institution to accomplish this distinction.[47]

Research

 
The University Library (UB) is the largest library at the University of Amsterdam.
 
The Plantage Muidergracht Laboratory

The University of Amsterdam is one of Europe's largest research universities, with over 7,900 scientific publications in 2010.[7] The university spends about €100 million on research each year via direct funding. It receives an additional €23 million via indirect funding and about €49 million from commercial partners.[48] Faculty members often receive research prizes and grants, such as those from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). Research is organized into fifteen research priority areas and 28 research institutes within the faculties oversee this research.[49]

The University of Amsterdam has an extensive central University Library (UB), with over four million volumes. In addition, a number of departments have their own libraries. The main university library is located in the city center. It contains over four million books, 70,000 manuscripts, 500,000 letters, and 125,000 maps, as well as special collections of the Department of Rare and Precious Works, the Manuscript and Writing Museum, the Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana on Jewish history and culture, and the Department of Documentation on Social Movements. Three reading rooms are available for students to study in quiet.[50] In addition to the main University Library, there are approximately 70 departmental libraries spread throughout the center of Amsterdam. The university's printing arm, the Amsterdam University Press, has a publishing list of over 1,400 titles in both Dutch and English.

 
An ancient Egyptian sarcophagus in the Allard Pierson Museum dating from around 1000 BCE

In addition to its libraries, UvA has five museums. These include the Allard Pierson Museum, which houses antiquities from Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, the Near East, and central Italy during the time between 4000 BCE and 500 CE; the University Museum, with collections showing the history of UvA from 1632 until present; the Museum Vrolik, which houses anatomical, zoological and teratological specimens; The J.A. Dortmond Museum of Script which has exhibits showing the history of writing in the West from 3000 BCE to today; the UvA Computer Museum which houses displays showing how computers of the past worked and how calculations were made before the presence of the electronic computer; the Zoological Museum Amsterdam at the Amsterdam Artis Zoo contains collection of millions of shells, insects, mammals, birds, fishes and other animals used in scientific research.[51]

Student life

 
The CREA Cultural Center in 2013

At UvA, students can choose from many student organizations, athletic activities, and student services. These include the ASVA Student Union, CREA Cultural Center, the newly constructed University Sports Center, and the Agora student restaurant. In addition, the university provides religious services, career counseling, the International Student Network (ISN), counseling, disability services, and student health services.[52][53] The students are represented in the different faculty student councils and the central student council.

The University Sports Center (USC) offers over 50 sports activities at discount rates for UvA students and staff including Ice skating, tennis, rowing, aerobics, swimming, dancing, golf, and even skiing.

The CREA Cultural Center organizes courses, working groups and projects in drama, music, dance, photography, film, and visual arts. It also contains a bar and a theater.

 
The University Sports Center

The primary mode of transport for students is by bicycle.[54] The city of Amsterdam also has various public transportation options available to students. These include the Metro, trams, buses, and ferries.[55]

Student housing

The university tries to offer student housing to all students through non-profit housing corporations not owned by UvA. The housing corporations offer apartment-style housing in the City Center, Zuid, Oost, West, Zuid-Oost, and Amsterdam-Noord boroughs of Amsterdam as well as in the suburb of Diemen. Single rooms with private facilities (kitchen, bathroom), single rooms with shared facilities, shared rooms with shared facilities, and couples rooms are available. Students of the opposite sex are permitted to be roommates in all types of rooms. Rooms are anywhere from a few minutes to 45 minutes bike ride to the City Center.

Notable people and alumni

Professors and alumni of the University of Amsterdam have included six Nobel Prize winners and seven Spinoza Prize winners.[9]

Notable current and former professors

Notable current and former professors include winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1911 Tobias Asser,[56] mathematician Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1901 Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff,[57] winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1910 Johannes Diderik van der Waals,[58] winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1902 Pieter Zeeman,[59] winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1953 Frits Zernike,[60] and scholar of religion, C. Jouco Bleeker.[61]

Arts

In the area of the arts, notable alumni include cultural analyst Ien Ang,[62] Leiden University's first female professor Sophia Antoniadis,[63] writers Menno ter Braak, Willem Frederik Hermans,[64] J. Slauerhoff, and Simon Vestdijk,[65] Emmy award-winning producer Michael W. King,[66] actor Jeff Wilbusch, and Roman law specialist Boudewijn Sirks.[67]

Media

In the media area, alumni include Thomas von der Dunk, Dutch cultural historian, writer, and columnist.

Politics and government

Alumni in the area of politics and government include former Prime Ministers Pieter Cort van der Linden[68] and Joop den Uyl,[69] former Belgian prime minister and president of the European Council Charles Michel, former president of the European Central Bank, Minister of Finance, and president of the Central Bank of the Netherlands Wim Duisenberg,[70] Member of the European Parliament Thijs Berman,[71] former Secretary General of NATO Joseph Luns,[72] member of the Dutch royal family and legal advisor Princess Viktória de Bourbon de Parme, Senate group leader of the Labour Party and former trade union leader Marleen Barth,[73] president of OHIM Wubbo de Boer,[74] former Minister of Defence and former European Commissioner for Internal Market & Services Frits Bolkestein,[75] former Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport Els Borst,[76] state secretary of Health, Welfare and Sport Jet Bussemaker,[77] Minister of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment Jacqueline Cramer,[78] Minister of Foreign Trade within the Economic Affairs Frank Heemskerk,[79] Minister of Justice Ernst Hirsch Ballin,[80] Minister of the Interior and Kingdom Relations Guusje ter Horst,[81] former Minister of Social Affairs and Employment and currently deputy director of UNDP Ad Melkert,[82] Minister of Education, Culture and Science Ronald Plasterk[83] and Prime Minister of Sint Maarten Leona Marlin-Romeo.[84]

Science

Alumni in the science area include winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1929 Christiaan Eijkman,[85] inventor of DNA fingerprinting Alec Jeffreys,[86] physician and one of the founding fathers of gynecology in the Netherlands M.A. Mendes de Leon,[87] astrophysicist and Dutch communist Anton Pannekoek,[88] string theorist Erik Verlinde,[89] Dutch psychiatrist and World War II resistance hero Tina Strobos,[90] ESA astronaut André Kuipers, Dutch botanist Hendrik de Wit, nutrition education pioneer in Israel Sarah Bavly,[91] Turkish-American high performance computing and supercomputing research scientist Ilkay Altintas[92] and Menno Sluijter, anaesthetist who developed pulsed radiofrequency pain treatment.[93]

Sports

Alumni in the area of sport include Max Euwe, 1935–1937 World Chess Champion. Missionary vicar of the Westerkerk Cristina Pumplun taught at the UvA.

See also

References

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  2. ^ "UvA Factbook". Tableau Software.
  3. ^ "Student Enrollment". Tableau Software. 31 October 2021.
  4. ^ kleur – website of the University of Amsterdam
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  18. ^ "Univ Amsterdam Protestors take 2nd building". NL Times. 26 February 2015.
  19. ^ "Police remove Univ. Amsterdam Occupiers; nine in custody". NL Times. 11 April 2015.
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External links

  • Official website (in Dutch)

Coordinates: 52°22′6″N 4°53′25″E / 52.36833°N 4.89028°E / 52.36833; 4.89028

university, amsterdam, confused, with, vrije, universiteit, amsterdam, hogeschool, amsterdam, abbreviated, dutch, universiteit, amsterdam, public, research, university, located, amsterdam, netherlands, established, 1632, municipal, authorities, later, renamed,. Not to be confused with Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam or Hogeschool van Amsterdam The University of Amsterdam abbreviated as UvA Dutch Universiteit van Amsterdam is a public research university located in Amsterdam Netherlands Established in 1632 by municipal authorities and later renamed for the city of Amsterdam the University of Amsterdam is the third oldest university in the Netherlands 5 and one of the most prestigious academic institutions of the country and in the world 6 University of AmsterdamUniversiteit van AmsterdamLatin Universitas AmstelodamensisFormer namesAthenaeum Illustre 1632 1877 Municipal University of Amsterdam 1877 1961 TypePublicEstablished1632 391 years ago 1632 PresidentGeert ten DamRector MagnificusKaren MaexAcademic staff2 425 1 Administrative staff2 369 1 Total staff5 216 2020 2 Students41 206 2021 3 LocationAmsterdam North Holland Netherlands52 22 6 N 4 53 25 E 52 36833 N 4 89028 E 52 36833 4 89028CampusUrbanColoursBlack UvA Red and White 4 AffiliationsLERU UNICA EUA Universitas 21Websiteuva nlThe UvA is one of two large publicly funded research universities in the city the other being the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam VU It is also part of the largest research universities in Europe with 31 186 students 4 794 staff 1 340 PhD students 1 and an annual budget of 600 million 7 8 It is the largest university in the Netherlands by enrollment The main campus is located in central Amsterdam with a few faculties located in adjacent boroughs The university is organised into seven faculties Humanities Social and Behavioural Sciences Economics and Business Science Law Medicine Dentistry The University of Amsterdam has produced six Nobel Laureates and five prime ministers of the Netherlands 9 The university has been placed in the top 100 universities in the world by five prominent ranking tables By the QS World University Rankings it was ranked 55th in the world 14th in Europe and 1st in the Netherlands in 2022 In the past years the UvA has usually been placed in the top 30 worldwide in dozens of fields including Law Political Science and Medicine according to the same ranking 10 Between 2018 and 2022 the two departments of Media and Communication were commonly ranked 1st in the world by subject Close ties are harbored with other institutions internationally through its membership in the League of European Research Universities LERU the Institutional Network of the Universities from the Capitals of Europe UNICA European University Association EUA and Universitas 21 Contents 1 History 1 1 Athenaeum Illustre 1632 1877 1 2 Municipal university 1877 1961 1 3 National university 1961 present 1 3 1 2015 student and staff protests 1 4 University logo 2 Campus 2 1 City Centre 2 2 Science Park 2 3 Academic Medical Centre 2 4 Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam 2 5 Roeterseiland Campus 3 Organisation and administration 3 1 Faculties 3 1 1 Faculty of Science 3 1 2 Faculty of Humanities 3 1 3 Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences 3 1 4 Faculty of Economics and Business 3 1 5 Faculty of Law 3 1 6 Faculty of Medicine 3 1 7 Faculty of Dentistry 3 2 Administration 3 3 International cooperation 4 Academics 4 1 Student body 4 2 University rankings 5 Research 6 Student life 6 1 Student housing 7 Notable people and alumni 7 1 Notable current and former professors 7 2 Arts 7 3 Media 7 4 Politics and government 7 5 Science 7 6 Sports 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditEarly professors at the University of Amsterdam Gerardus Vossius Caspar Barlaeus Athenaeum Illustre 1632 1877 Edit In January 1632 the Athenaeum Illustre of Amsterdam Latin Illustrious School of Amsterdam was founded by the municipal authorities in Amsterdam 5 It was mainly devoted to medical teaching 5 The first two professors were Gerardus Vossius and Caspar Barlaeus The Athenaeum Illustre provided education comparable to other higher education institutions although it could not confer doctoral degrees After training at the Athenaeum students could complete their education at a university in another town At the time Amsterdam also housed several other institutions of higher education including the Collegium Chirugicum which trained surgeons and other institutions that provided theological courses for the Remonstrant and the Mennonite communities Amsterdam s large degree of religious freedom allowed for the establishment of these institutions Students of the Colegium Chirugicum and the theological institutions regularly attended classes at the Athenaeum Illustre The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp by Rembrandt shows an anatomy lesson taking place in Amsterdam in 1632 the year the university was founded Nicolaes Tulp is considered one of the forefathers of the Faculty of Medicine 11 In 1815 it was given the statutory obligation to disseminate taste civilisation and learning and to replace at least in part the institutes of higher education and an academic education for those young men whose circumstances unable them to fully spend the time necessary for an academic career at an institute of higher education The Athenaeum began offering classes for students attending non academic professional training in pharmacy and surgery in 1800 The Athenaeum Illustre largely worked together with Amsterdam s theological institutions such as the Evangelisch Luthers Seminarium evangelical Lutheran and the Klinische School medical school the successor to the Collegium Chirurgicum The Athenaeum remained a small institution until the 19th century with no more than 250 students and eight professors Alumni of the Athenaeum include Cornelis Petrus Tiele 12 13 Municipal university 1877 1961 Edit In 1877 the Athenuem Illustre became the Municipal University of Amsterdam and received the right to confer doctoral degrees This gave the university the same privileges as national universities while being funded by the city of Amsterdam The professors and lecturers were appointed by the municipal council This resulted in a staff that was in many ways more colorful than the staffs of national universities During its time as a municipal university the university flourished in particular in the science department which counted many Nobel prize winners Tobias Asser Christiaan Eijkman Jacobus Henricus van t Hoff Johannes Diderik van der Waals Pieter Zeeman and Frits Zernike The University of Amsterdam s municipal status brought about the relatively early addition of the faculties of Economics and Social Sciences After the World War II the dramatic rise in the cost of university education put a constraint on the university s growth 12 13 Buildings of the University of Amsterdam The front building houses the Academic Club of the university National university 1961 present Edit In 1961 the national government made the university a national university giving it its current name the University of Amsterdam Funding was now given by the national government instead of the city and the appointment of professors was transferred to the board of governors The city of Amsterdam retained a limited influence until 1971 when the appointment was handed over to the executive board During May 1969 the university became the focus of nationwide news when UvA s administrative centre at the Maagdenhuis was occupied by hundreds of students who wanted more democratic influence in educational and administrative matters The protest lasted for days and was eventually broken up by the police 14 During the 1970s and 1980s the university was often the target of nationwide student actions The university saw considerable expansion since becoming a national university from 7 500 students in 1960 to over 32 000 in 2010 In 2007 UvA undertook the construction of the Science Park Amsterdam a 70 hectare 170 acre campus to house the Faculty of Science along with the new University Sports Center Much of the park has now been completed 15 The University of Amsterdam began working in close collaboration with the Hogeschool van Amsterdam In 2008 the University of Amsterdam and VU University jointly founded the Amsterdam University College AUC an interuniversity institute that offers a three year Bachelor Honors program in the Liberal Arts and Sciences 12 13 2015 student and staff protests Edit Main article Bungehuis and Maagdenhuis occupations In February 2015 the university experienced occupations of two of their buildings in protest over proposed budget cuts These budget cuts occurred in the wake of the university s attempt to deal with its speculative misjudgments and financial difficulties in 2011 the university s total outstanding debt had increased to 136 million 16 The Bungehuis occupation ended with the arrest of the 46 protesters on 24 February 2015 The following day a group of protesters forced the door of the Maagdenhuis the main administrative building of the UvA and began occupying it once again raising their demands 17 The occupation lasted 45 days the occupiers were evicted on 11 April 18 19 University logo Edit The current logo of the University of Amsterdam consists of a black square with three white Saint Andrew s Crosses and a white U This an adaptation of the coat of arms of Amsterdam which also uses a black background and three white or silver Saint Andrew s Crosses The three Saint Andrew s Crosses have been said to represent the three plagues of Amsterdam fire floods and the Black Death Another rumor is that they represent three fords in the River Amstel These two explanations have no historical basis however It is believed by historians that the coat of arms of Amsterdam is derived from the coat of arms of Jan Persijn the lord of Amsterdam between 1280 and 1282 20 The U represents the word university while the colours and three crosses represent the city of Amsterdam Campus EditAs a metropolitan institution the University of Amsterdam has always been housed in old and new buildings scattered throughout the capital Because UvA is not a separate secluded campus students and city residents readily mix allowing Amsterdam to maintain close cultural and academic ties to the school The majority of UvA s buildings lie in the heart of Amsterdam with only the faculties of Science Medicine and Dentistry located outside the City Centre The university lies within the largest megalopolis in the Netherlands the Randstad with a population 7 2 million inhabitants 21 City Centre Edit The administration of the school and most of the faculties are located in the historic City Centre of Amsterdam within the canal ring which is itself a UNESCO World Heritage Site The facilities in this area date from as early as the 15th century to the 21st century Architectural styles represented include the Dutch Renaissance Dutch Baroque Art Deco Amsterdam School and International style The Agnietenkapel Maagdenhuis Oost Indisch Huis Bushuis and Oudemanhuispoort are designated as Rijksmonuments national monuments The 15th century Agnietenkapel where the university was founded was first constructed as a monastery chapel around 1470 but was later converted for use by the Athenaeum Illustre in 1631 The Agnes Gate in front of the Agnietenkapel is a major symbol of the university and dates back to 1571 It was renovated and moved to its current location in 1631 22 Another area is a former hospital converted into university buildings the Binnengasthuis which is considered the heart of UvA The Maagdenhuis is the current headquarters of UvA and HvA administration The building was built between 1783 and 1787 and was formerly an orphanage 14 The Oost Indisch Huis the former headquarters of the Dutch East India Company was built in 1606 and now used by UvA 23 The Oudemanhuispoort was made a university building in 1880 It was constructed in 1602 as a retirement house and now houses some departments of the Humanities faculty 24 One of the buildings of the University Library complex the Bushuis was built as an armory in 1606 25 The Faculty of Science at Science Park Science Park Edit The Faculty of Science is located on the east side of the city at the newly constructed Science Park Amsterdam This 70 hectare 170 acre campus contains UvA s science facilities research institutes student housing the University Sports Centre and businesses In order to attract distinguished students and researchers the campus was built by collaboration between the University of Amsterdam the City of Amsterdam and the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research In 2012 the Amsterdam University College was housed at the Science Park UvA campus Academic Medical Centre Edit In the southeastern Bijlmermeer neighbourhood the Faculty of Medicine is housed in the Academic Medical Center AMC the Faculty of Medicine s teaching and research hospital It was formed in 1983 when the UvA Faculty of Medicine and two hospitals Binnengasthuis and the Wilhelmina Gasthuis combined Shortly after in 1988 the Emma Children s Hospital also moved to the AMC It is one of Amsterdam s level 1 trauma centers and strongly cooperates with the VU University Medical Center VUmc Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam Edit The Faculty of Dentistry is located in the Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam ACTA in the southern Zuidas district on the campus of the VU University Medical Center It was formed when the University of Amsterdam and the Vrije Universiteit combined their Dentistry schools in 1984 Roeterseiland Campus Edit The Roeterseiland Campus is an open city campus designed to offer future proof teaching and research facilities The Faculties of Economics and Business and Social and Behavioural Sciences are located at the Roeterseiland campus The Faculty of Law has settled in August 2017 on the campus The Bushuis building The Binnengasthuis area The Oost Indisch Huis building The Allard Pierson Museum The Artis LibraryOrganisation and administration EditFaculties Edit The university is divided into seven faculties with each faculty headed by a dean The faculties include the Faculties of Humanities Social and Behavioural Sciences Economics and Business Science Law Medicine and Dentistry Students must be admitted to the faculty of their program before beginning their studies Faculty of Science Edit The Faculty of Science Dutch Faculteit der Natuurwetenschappen Wiskunde en Informatica FNWI covers a wide area of research and education Research at the Faculty of Science covers the full width of the beta sciences Spread across eight institutes the main topics are astronomy physics mathematics information sciences life sciences chemistry and biology The Faculty of Science offers 28 degree programmes for students 7 of which are a joint degree with the Vrije Universiteit There are 51 different nationalities studying at the Faculty of Science The Faculty of Science has around 6 800 students as well as 1 700 members of staff working in education research or support services Around 50 of the staff are internationals The main faculty buildings are located on the Science Park Amsterdam campus The Amsterdam Academic Medical Center Faculty of Humanities Edit The Faculty of Humanities Dutch Faculteit der Geesteswetenschappen FGw comprises six departments Dutch studies History European Studies and Religion Archaeology and Classics Language and Literature Media studies Philosophy and Art and Cultural studies With over 6000 students and about 1000 employees it is the largest humanities faculty in the Netherlands It was established in 1997 after a merger of the Faculty of Language and Culture the Faculty of Theology and the Faculty of Philosophy In 2011 the faculty was ranked number one in the Netherlands for Philosophy and Linguistics with international ranking in these areas of 37th and 22nd respectively 26 In terms of research the faculty produced 726 academic publications in 2009 8 Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences Edit The Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences Dutch Faculteit der Maatschappij en Gedragswetenschappen FMG is the largest educational and research institution in the social and behavioural sciences in the Netherlands The faculty has approximately 10 000 students and 1 200 staff members The Faculty is home to six departments Political Science Sociology and Anthropology Communication Science Psychology Social Geography Planning and International Development Studies and Educational sciences The faculty was ranked the best in the Netherlands in 2011 for Sociology and Geography with international rankings in these areas of 33rd and 40th respectively 26 In terms of research the faculty produced 1 366 academic publications in 2009 8 Faculty of Economics and Business Edit The words Athenaeum Illustre on the gate of the Agnietenkapel The Faculty of Economics and Business Dutch Faculteit Economie en Bedrijfskunde FEB was established in 1922 The FEB which includes the Amsterdam School of Economics ASE and the Amsterdam Business School ABS currently has around 4 000 students and nearly 600 staff It was ranked 44th in Economics amp Econometrics and 45 in Accountancy amp Finance among world universities 26 In terms of research the faculty produced 517 academic publications in 2009 8 Faculty of Law Edit The Faculty of Law Dutch Faculteit der Rechtsgeleerdheid FdR is based in the newly redesigned Roetersiland campus It was earlier housed in the Oudemanhuispoort a historic building dating from 1602 situated in the center of Amsterdam It has approximately 3 700 students and 330 academic staff members 58 of academic staff is female The Faculty offers nine LLM programs of which two are taught in English In addition the Faculty offers three advanced LLM programs which are all taught in English Research at the Faculty is undertaken by five research institutes which specialize in the following areas International law Private law Environmental law Labor law and Information law In terms of research the faculty produced 451 academic publications in 2018 8 In the 2018 academic year there were 41 PhD candidates 67 of whom were female In 2015 a bequest from Trudie Vervoort Jaarsma to the university established the Julia Henriette Jaarsma Adolfs scholarship fund for assisting students pursuing an LLM in the law faculty The bequest of 4 million was the largest single donation left to a Dutch university by a private citizen and was made to honor her mother s legal career A second scholarship in the name of Vervoort Jaarsma s daughter Madeleine Vervoort provides travel funds to students 27 Faculty of Medicine Edit The Faculty of Medicine Dutch Faculteit der Geneeskunde FdG each year approximately 350 first year students begin their study of medicine at the Academic Medical Center The first three year phase consists mainly of thematic teaching The second also three year phase consists of training internships in and outside of the AMC In terms of research the faculty produced 3 206 academic publications in 2009 8 Faculty of Dentistry Edit The Academic Center for Dentistry in Amsterdam Dutch Faculteit der Tandheelkunde ACTA was founded in 1984 through a merger of the two dentistry faculties of the Universiteit of Amsterdam and the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam ACTA conducts scientific research teaches and provides patient care in the field of dentistry ACTA is one of the largest dentistry education and training programmes in the world with 500 staff members an annual new student enrolment of 128 and a total student body of 1000 It consists of three departments In terms of research the faculty produced 228 academic publications in 2009 8 Administration Edit The Maagdenhuis houses the administration of the UvA and HvA The University of Amsterdam is headed by an executive board The university is then divided into seven faculties with each faculty headed by a dean Teaching and research are carried out in various departments and institutes within the individual faculties UvA has an annual budget of 600 million approximately 850 million 8 28 In 1992 the board of governors of the University of Amsterdam set up the UvA Holding BV in order to bring its commercial activities into a form that is compatible with private law 29 The University of Amsterdam holds all the shares of the subsidiaries of the holding The subsidiaries are clustered into four activity areas which are increasingly outsourced to commercial enterprises and other market participants 30 International cooperation Edit The intellectual and cultural atmosphere at UvA is internationally oriented Amsterdam attracts students from the Netherlands and beyond with over 2 500 international students and researchers from over 100 countries UvA has an extensive network of foreign partner universities facilitating student and staff exchanges Within Europe UvA has Socrates Erasmus exchange agreements with over 200 institutions Outside Europe it has close ties with approximately 40 universities on all continents 31 Academics Edit The Oudemanhuispoort building The university is accredited by the Dutch Ministry of Education Culture and Science which grants accreditation to institutions who meet a national system of regulations and quality assurance controls The Ministry has given it WO or research university status Dutch students must complete a six year preparatory program to gain admission to national research universities Only fifteen percent of students pass this preparatory program In terms of tuition in 2015 2016 EU full time students are charged 1 951 per year for both Bachelor s and Master s programs part time students are charged 1 696 and non EU students are charged between 9 000 25 000 per year for Bachelor s programs and 10 500 25 000 for Master s and Doctoral programs 32 Costs for non EU students varies depending on the faculty of matriculation In terms of scholarships the university offers the UvA Amsterdam Excellence Scholarship AES 33 Amsterdam Merit Scholarships scholarships through the Dutch Ministry of Education Culture and Science Dutch Study Grants and various European scholarships 34 Collectively the faculties offer 59 Bachelor s programmes 133 Master s programmes and 10 postgraduate programs 35 The university awarded 2 565 propaedeutic 3 204 Bachelor s 3 990 Master s 438 Doctoral 242 Post Doctoral degrees in 2009 2010 and 10 438 total degrees in 2009 2010 36 The school s academic year lasts from early September until mid July and is divided into two 20 week semesters The first of these ends in late January and the second begins in early February There are no mid term breaks only a short holiday around Christmas and New Year as well as Dutch National holidays Demographics of the student body 37 Dutch 79 Other EEA citizen 14 Non European 7 Student body Edit In 2010 the university had an enrolment of 32 739 students 20 185 undergraduate students 9 361 master s students 1 235 doctoral students and 412 post doctoral students 7 Of all students 93 4 are Dutch citizens and 6 6 are international students 8 UvA has over 2 500 international students and researchers that come from over 100 countries 31 Full time students comprised 91 of the student body 7 In 2010 students were enrolled in 7 faculties and the Amsterdam University College 24 in Humanities 13 in Law 7 in Medicine 1 in Dentistry 11 in Science 13 in Economics amp Business 30 in Social amp Behavioral Sciences and 0 5 in the Amsterdam University College 7 Overall 20 of students in bachelor s programs complete their degree within three years 48 in four years and 69 in five years 71 of master s students completed their degree in two years 8 Students on average successfully complete 44 ECTS credits during the academic year 8 In 2007 88 of master s and doctoral graduates went on to paying jobs with an additional 5 going on to continue their education within 1 5 years of graduating 8 University rankings Edit University rankingsGlobal OverallARWU World 38 101 150 2022 CWUR World 39 83 2022 23 CWTS World 40 62 2022 QS World 41 58 2023 THE World 42 60 2023 USNWR Global 43 38 2022 On a subject basis the QS World University Rankings ranked the university in the top 75 in four out of five of the domains Social Sciences amp Management 41 Arts amp Humanities 43 Life Sciences amp Medicine 69 and Natural Sciences 75 44 The 2011 12 Times Higher Education World University Rankings ranked the University of Amsterdam 30th in Arts amp Humanities 45 and 40th in Social Sciences making it the highest ranking Dutch university in these fields and the highest ranking continental European university in the Social Sciences 46 The 2017 CWTS Leiden Global university ranking ranked the University of Amsterdam in the Global Top 8 in the field of social sciences and humanities 1 The CHE Excellence Ranking rated the school excellent in all seven categories for research making it the only Dutch institution to accomplish this distinction 47 Research Edit The University Library UB is the largest library at the University of Amsterdam The Plantage Muidergracht Laboratory The University of Amsterdam is one of Europe s largest research universities with over 7 900 scientific publications in 2010 7 The university spends about 100 million on research each year via direct funding It receives an additional 23 million via indirect funding and about 49 million from commercial partners 48 Faculty members often receive research prizes and grants such as those from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO Research is organized into fifteen research priority areas and 28 research institutes within the faculties oversee this research 49 The University of Amsterdam has an extensive central University Library UB with over four million volumes In addition a number of departments have their own libraries The main university library is located in the city center It contains over four million books 70 000 manuscripts 500 000 letters and 125 000 maps as well as special collections of the Department of Rare and Precious Works the Manuscript and Writing Museum the Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana on Jewish history and culture and the Department of Documentation on Social Movements Three reading rooms are available for students to study in quiet 50 In addition to the main University Library there are approximately 70 departmental libraries spread throughout the center of Amsterdam The university s printing arm the Amsterdam University Press has a publishing list of over 1 400 titles in both Dutch and English An ancient Egyptian sarcophagus in the Allard Pierson Museum dating from around 1000 BCE In addition to its libraries UvA has five museums These include the Allard Pierson Museum which houses antiquities from Ancient Egypt Ancient Greece the Near East and central Italy during the time between 4000 BCE and 500 CE the University Museum with collections showing the history of UvA from 1632 until present the Museum Vrolik which houses anatomical zoological and teratological specimens The J A Dortmond Museum of Script which has exhibits showing the history of writing in the West from 3000 BCE to today the UvA Computer Museum which houses displays showing how computers of the past worked and how calculations were made before the presence of the electronic computer the Zoological Museum Amsterdam at the Amsterdam Artis Zoo contains collection of millions of shells insects mammals birds fishes and other animals used in scientific research 51 Student life Edit The CREA Cultural Center in 2013 At UvA students can choose from many student organizations athletic activities and student services These include the ASVA Student Union CREA Cultural Center the newly constructed University Sports Center and the Agora student restaurant In addition the university provides religious services career counseling the International Student Network ISN counseling disability services and student health services 52 53 The students are represented in the different faculty student councils and the central student council The University Sports Center USC offers over 50 sports activities at discount rates for UvA students and staff including Ice skating tennis rowing aerobics swimming dancing golf and even skiing The CREA Cultural Center organizes courses working groups and projects in drama music dance photography film and visual arts It also contains a bar and a theater The University Sports Center The primary mode of transport for students is by bicycle 54 The city of Amsterdam also has various public transportation options available to students These include the Metro trams buses and ferries 55 Student housing Edit The university tries to offer student housing to all students through non profit housing corporations not owned by UvA The housing corporations offer apartment style housing in the City Center Zuid Oost West Zuid Oost and Amsterdam Noord boroughs of Amsterdam as well as in the suburb of Diemen Single rooms with private facilities kitchen bathroom single rooms with shared facilities shared rooms with shared facilities and couples rooms are available Students of the opposite sex are permitted to be roommates in all types of rooms Rooms are anywhere from a few minutes to 45 minutes bike ride to the City Center Notable people and alumni EditProfessors and alumni of the University of Amsterdam have included six Nobel Prize winners and seven Spinoza Prize winners 9 Tobias Asser 1911 Nobel Prize for Peace Christiaan Eijkman 1929 Nobel Prize for Medicine Jacobus Henricus van t Hoff 1901 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Johannes Diderik van der Waals 1910 Nobel Prize for Physics Pieter Zeeman 1902 Nobel Prize for Physics Frits Zernike 1953 Nobel Prize for PhysicsNotable current and former professors Edit Notable current and former professors include winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1911 Tobias Asser 56 mathematician Luitzen Egbertus Jan Brouwer winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1901 Jacobus Henricus van t Hoff 57 winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1910 Johannes Diderik van der Waals 58 winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1902 Pieter Zeeman 59 winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1953 Frits Zernike 60 and scholar of religion C Jouco Bleeker 61 Arts Edit In the area of the arts notable alumni include cultural analyst Ien Ang 62 Leiden University s first female professor Sophia Antoniadis 63 writers Menno ter Braak Willem Frederik Hermans 64 J Slauerhoff and Simon Vestdijk 65 Emmy award winning producer Michael W King 66 actor Jeff Wilbusch and Roman law specialist Boudewijn Sirks 67 Sophia Antoniadis Menno ter Braak Willem Frederik Hermans J Slauerhoff Simon VestdijkMedia Edit In the media area alumni include Thomas von der Dunk Dutch cultural historian writer and columnist Politics and government Edit Alumni in the area of politics and government include former Prime Ministers Pieter Cort van der Linden 68 and Joop den Uyl 69 former Belgian prime minister and president of the European Council Charles Michel former president of the European Central Bank Minister of Finance and president of the Central Bank of the Netherlands Wim Duisenberg 70 Member of the European Parliament Thijs Berman 71 former Secretary General of NATO Joseph Luns 72 member of the Dutch royal family and legal advisor Princess Viktoria de Bourbon de Parme Senate group leader of the Labour Party and former trade union leader Marleen Barth 73 president of OHIM Wubbo de Boer 74 former Minister of Defence and former European Commissioner for Internal Market amp Services Frits Bolkestein 75 former Minister of Health Welfare and Sport Els Borst 76 state secretary of Health Welfare and Sport Jet Bussemaker 77 Minister of Housing Spatial Planning and the Environment Jacqueline Cramer 78 Minister of Foreign Trade within the Economic Affairs Frank Heemskerk 79 Minister of Justice Ernst Hirsch Ballin 80 Minister of the Interior and Kingdom Relations Guusje ter Horst 81 former Minister of Social Affairs and Employment and currently deputy director of UNDP Ad Melkert 82 Minister of Education Culture and Science Ronald Plasterk 83 and Prime Minister of Sint Maarten Leona Marlin Romeo 84 Science Edit Alumni in the science area include winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1929 Christiaan Eijkman 85 inventor of DNA fingerprinting Alec Jeffreys 86 physician and one of the founding fathers of gynecology in the Netherlands M A Mendes de Leon 87 astrophysicist and Dutch communist Anton Pannekoek 88 string theorist Erik Verlinde 89 Dutch psychiatrist and World War II resistance hero Tina Strobos 90 ESA astronaut Andre Kuipers Dutch botanist Hendrik de Wit nutrition education pioneer in Israel Sarah Bavly 91 Turkish American high performance computing and supercomputing research scientist Ilkay Altintas 92 and Menno Sluijter anaesthetist who developed pulsed radiofrequency pain treatment 93 Sports Edit Alumni in the area of sport include Max Euwe 1935 1937 World Chess Champion Missionary vicar of the Westerkerk Cristina Pumplun taught at the UvA See also Edit Netherlands portalEducation in the Netherlands List of modern universities in Europe 1801 1945 List of universities in the Netherlands CORPNETReferences Edit a b c Amsterdam Universiteit van 6 March 2018 Kerncijfers Universiteit van Amsterdam www uva nl UvA Factbook Tableau Software Student Enrollment Tableau Software 31 October 2021 kleur website of the University of Amsterdam a b c Belzen Jacob 2010 Towards Cultural Psychology of Religion Principles Approaches Applications p 215 Rankings University of Amsterdam Retrieved 2 February 2023 a b c d e Facts and figures University of Amsterdam Retrieved 19 December 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l Facts and Figures 2018 University of Amsterdam a b Academic awards University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2011 QS World Ranking by Subjects 2022 QS Retrieved 2 February 2023 The Anatomy Lesson of Dr Nicolaes Tulp UvA Retrieved 18 June 2011 a b c History of the Athenaeum Illustre and the Universiteit van Amsterdam Retrieved 25 June 2011 a b c A short history of the UvA University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2011 a b Maagdenhuis in Dutch Bureau Monumenten amp Archeologie Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2011 Science Park Amsterdam Science Park Amsterdam Retrieved 27 July 2011 Engelen Ewald Fernandez Rodrigo Hendrikse Reijer 2014 How Finance Penetrates its Other A Cautionary Tale on the Financialization of a Dutch University Antipode 46 4 1083 doi 10 1111 anti 12086 Amsterdamse studenten vallen Maagdenhuis binnen NOS 25 February 2015 Retrieved 28 February 2015 Univ Amsterdam Protestors take 2nd building NL Times 26 February 2015 Police remove Univ Amsterdam Occupiers nine in custody NL Times 11 April 2015 Helmers Johanneke 1 June 2005 Het wapen van Amsterdam in Dutch City of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 4 April 2007 Retrieved 15 June 2011 Introduction to the Randstad Region Archived from the original on 2 September 2011 Retrieved 12 July 2011 Agnietenkapel in Dutch Bureau Monumenten amp Archeologie Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2011 Oost Indisch Huis in Dutch Bureau Monumenten amp Archeologie Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2011 Oudemanhuispoort in Dutch Bureau Monumenten amp Archeologie Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2011 Bushuis in Dutch Bureau Monumenten amp Archeologie Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 10 July 2011 a b c QS World University Rankings 2011 QS Retrieved 5 September 2011 Wiegman Marcel 7 June 2016 Wie was de vrouw die de UvA een Indisch kapitaal naliet Who Was the Woman Who Left UvA East Indian Capital Het Parool in Dutch Amsterdam The Netherlands Archived from the original on 1 September 2019 Retrieved 2 September 2019 Feiten en Cijfers Amsterdam Universiteit van UvA Holding BV Universiteit van Amsterdam www uva nl UvA Holding BV www uvaholding nl a b Education without borders Archived from the original on 2 September 2011 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Amsterdam Universiteit van 26 April 2017 Collegegeld Universiteit van Amsterdam www uva nl Amsterdam Universiteit van 24 May 2018 Amsterdam Excellence Scholarship University of Amsterdam www uva nl Scholarships University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 26 July 2011 Tuition fees for the academic year 2011 2012 University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2011 Number of degrees awarded University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2011 Tableau Public Academic Ranking of World Universities 2022 Shanghai Ranking Consultancy Retrieved 16 August 2022 CWUR World University Rankings 2022 2023 Center for World University Rankings Retrieved 10 July 2022 CWTS Leiden Ranking 2022 PP top 10 CWTS Leiden Ranking Retrieved 10 July 2022 QS World University Rankings 2023 Quacquarelli Symonds Ltd Retrieved 16 August 2022 World University Rankings 2023 Times Higher Education THE Retrieved 14 October 2022 Best Global Universities Rankings 2022 U S News Education Retrieved 24 December 2021 UvA Profile Rankings University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 9 February 2013 Retrieved 16 February 2013 Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2011 2012 Times Higher Education Retrieved 18 November 2011 Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2011 2012 Times Higher Education Retrieved 18 November 2011 CHE Excellence Rankings CHE Retrieved 27 June 2011 Research Perspective of the University of Amsterdam University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 22 September 2011 Retrieved 27 June 2011 Research priority areas at the UvA University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2011 Library collections University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2011 Libraries and museums University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 19 June 2011 Student organisations University of Amsterdam Archived from the original on 19 June 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Student organisations University of Amsterdam Retrieved 28 June 2011 Getting here and getting around GVB Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Transport types GVB Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 22 July 2011 The Nobel Peace Prize 1911 Tobias Asser Alfred Fried Retrieved 8 July 2011 JACOBUS HEXRICUS VAN T HOFF 1852 1911 PDF Retrieved 6 July 2011 JOHANNES DIDERIK VAN DER WAALS 1837 1923 PDF Retrieved 6 July 2011 PIETER ZEEMAN 1865 1943 PDF Retrieved 6 July 2011 FRITS ZERNIKE 1888 1966 PDF Retrieved 6 July 2011 Eliade Mircea ed 1987 Bleeker C Jouco The Encyclopedia of Religion New York Macmillan gt Professor Ien Ang Retrieved 7 July 2011 Album Academicum albumacademicum uva nl Retrieved 10 August 2020 Korte biografie van Willem Frederik Hermans in Dutch Retrieved 7 July 2011 Levensloop in Dutch Retrieved 7 July 2011 Biography for Michael King IMDb Retrieved 7 July 2011 Professor Boudewijn Sirks Retrieved 7 July 2011 Linden Pieter Wilhelm Adrianus Cort van der 1846 1935 in Dutch Retrieved 9 July 2011 Archief Joop den Uyl in Dutch Retrieved 9 July 2011 Dr W F Wim Duisenberg in Dutch Retrieved 9 July 2011 Daarom Thijs in Dutch Archived from the original on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 9 July 2011 Joseph Luns in Dutch Retrieved 9 July 2011 Drs M A M Marleen Barth in Dutch Retrieved 6 July 2011 Wubbo de Boer Retrieved 7 July 2011 Frederik Frits Bolkestein Retrieved 7 July 2011 Dr E Els Borst Eilers Retrieved 6 July 2011 Dr M Jet Bussemaker in Dutch Retrieved 7 July 2011 Jacqueline Cramer PvdA Volkshuisvesting Ruimtelijke Ordening en Milieubeheer in Dutch Retrieved 6 July 2011 Drs F Frank Heemskerk in Dutch Retrieved 7 July 2011 Ernst Hirsch Ballin Archived from the original on 21 September 2011 Retrieved 7 July 2011 Dr G ter Horst PvdA in Dutch Retrieved 6 July 2011 Drs A P W Ad Melkert in Dutch Retrieved 6 July 2011 Dr R H A Ronald Plasterk in Dutch Retrieved 6 July 2011 Leona Marlin Dr Lloyd Richardson go forward together with winning team PDF The DailyHerald 16 August 2010 pp 1 5 CHRISTIAAN EIJKMAN 1858 1930 PDF Retrieved 6 July 2011 The Gene Genius PDF University of Leicester Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2011 Retrieved 7 July 2011 Lammes FB April 2008 MA Mendes de Leon 1856 1924 gynaecoloog van het eerste uur M A Mendes de Leon 1856 1924 a founding father of gynaecology Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde in Dutch 152 16 956 63 PMID 18561794 Pannekoek Antonie 1873 1960 in Dutch Retrieved 7 July 2011 Website of Erik Verlinde Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 6 July 2011 Langer Emily 29 February 2012 Tina Strobos Dutch student who rescued 100 Jews during the Holocaust dies at 91 The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 22 April 2018 Endevelt Ronit 1 March 2009 Sarah Bavly 1900 1993 Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia Jewish Women s Archive Retrieved 8 January 2017 Dr Ilkay Altintas Chief Data Scientist of the San Diego Supercomputer Center SDSC at UC San Diego Named Guest Speaker for the Nov 30 Precision Institute at National University Distinguished Speakers Series National University California 15 November 2017 Retrieved 9 July 2020 Prof dr M E Sluijter 1932 at the Album Academicum of the Universiteit van AmsterdamExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of Amsterdam Official website in Dutch Coordinates 52 22 6 N 4 53 25 E 52 36833 N 4 89028 E 52 36833 4 89028 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Amsterdam amp oldid 1143151292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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