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University of Zagreb

The University of Zagreb (Croatian: Sveučilište u Zagrebu, Latin: Universitas Studiorum Zagrabiensis) is a public research university in Zagreb, Croatia. It is the largest Croatian university and one of the oldest continuously operating universities in Europe.[4] The University of Zagreb and the University North are the only public universities operating in Northern and Central Croatia.

University of Zagreb
Sveučilište u Zagrebu
Latin: Universitas Studiorum Zagrabiensis
TypePublic
Established23 September 1669; 354 years ago (23 September 1669)
Endowment557 million HRK – 73,57 million EUR (2019)[1]
Budget2456.3 million HRK – 324.5 million EUR (2019)[1]
RectorStjepan Lakušić
Academic staff
7,963 (2012)[2]
Students72,480 (2015)[3]
Postgraduates7243 (2007)
842 (2007)
Location,
CampusCity wide, central
Colours 
AffiliationsEuropean University Association
Websiteunizg.hr

The history of the University began on September 23, 1669, when the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I issued a decree granting the establishment of the Jesuit Academy of the Royal Free City of Zagreb. The decree was accepted at the Council of the Croatian Kingdom on November 3, 1671. The Academy was run by the Jesuits for more than a century until the order was dissolved by Pope Clement XIV in 1773. In 1776, Empress Maria Theresa issued a decree founding the Royal Academy of Science which succeeded the previous Jesuit Academy. Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer proposed the founding of a University to the Croatian Parliament in 1861. Emperor Franz Joseph signed the decree on the establishment of the University of Zagreb in 1869. The Act of Founding was passed by the Parliament in 1874, and was ratified by the Emperor on January 5, 1874. On October 19, 1874, the Royal University of Franz Joseph I was officially opened.

The University is composed of 29 faculties, 3 art academies and 1 university center with more than 70,000 students.

History edit

Academy edit

The beginnings of the later university date back to 23 September 1669 when Emperor and King Leopold I Habsburg issued a decree granting the establishment of the Jesuit Academy of the Royal Free City of Zagreb.[5] According to that document the study of philosophy in Zagreb acquired a formal and legal status as Neoacademia Zagrabiensis and officially became a public institution of higher education.

 
Filip Kaušić (1618–1673) was the first rector of the Academy

The academy was run by the Jesuits for more than a century until the order was dissolved by Pope Clement XIV in 1773. Under a new leadership in 1772 the academy enrolled a total of 200 students.

In 1776 Empress and Queen Maria Theresa issued a decree founding the Royal Academy of Science (Latin: Regia Scientiarum Academia).[5] It consisted of three studies or faculties of philosophy, theology, and law. The former political-cameral studies became part of the newly established faculty of law, and thus were integrated into the academy. Each of the faculties of the Royal Academy of Sciences had several chairs teaching one or several courses. During the Austro-Turkish War of 1788–1791 and following the Austrian occupation of Belgrade on 8 October 1789 the Royal Academy requested to be granted the university status with the following argumentation:

If we consider the current circumstances in which serious consideration is given not only to the removal of obstacles to science, but also to the appointment of our local citizens to all services in these kingdoms, and if we also consider for a moment future opportunities, not only that the part of Croatia that is still sobbing under the Turkish yoke but also the kingdoms of Bosnia and Serbia – [...] – will be liberated and that these glorious kingdoms will be almost expanded. We believe that it is not only proud and useful, but also absolutely necessary to have in our environment such a university in which – when all obstacles to scientific work are removed and when funds for its development are obtained – number of local youth will be educated in all the sciences and noble skills for performing various services in their homeland.[6]

The academy in Zagreb remained until 1874, despite numerous organizational changes, the focal institution of higher education in Croatia, educating most of the members of the Croatian intelligentsia.

University edit

 
Matija Mesić, first rector of the University
 
Promotion of new PhDs in 2015

Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer in 1861 proposed to the Croatian Parliament the founding of a university at Zagreb. During his visit in 1869, the Emperor Franz Joseph signed the decree on the establishment of the University of Zagreb. Five years later, the Parliament passed the Act of Founding, which was ratified by the Emperor on 5 January 1874. On 19 October 1874, a ceremony was held in the name of the founding of the Royal University of Franz Joseph I in Zagreb,[7] making it the third university in the Hungarian realm of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[8]

In 1874 the University had four faculties:

  • Law (Pravno-državoslovni fakultet)
  • Theology (Bogoslovni fakultet)
  • Philosophy (Mudroslovni fakultet)
  • Medicine (Liječnički fakultet)

The Faculty of Medicine was not put into function in 1874; it had to wait until 1917. The Faculty of Philosophy served as the general scientific faculty. Since 1876 it had geology, botany, physics, mathematics, and chemistry; since 1877 zoology; since 1882 pharmacy; since 1883 geography.

In 1860, the Royal Agriculture and Forestry College was founded in Križevci.[9] In 1898, the Academy of Forestry (Šumarska akademija) was founded as part of the Faculty of Philosophy, which encompassed all technical studies. In 1919, this school became the Faculty of Husbandry and Forestry.

In 1919, the School of Technology (Tehnička visoka škola) was founded, which was transformed into a university faculty in 1926. Also in 1919 the School of Veterinary Medicine (Veterinarska visoka škola) was founded; it transformed into a university faculty in 1925.

 
Great Hall of the University

In the Faculty of Philosophy, major reorganization ensued in the 1920s, as mathematics, pharmacy and other sciences started to split off, first with the creation of separate mathematics and pharmaceutical departments in 1928, when the faculty was renamed into its current name Filozofski fakultet.

In 1926, the university was composed of seven faculties:

  • Theology (Bogoslovni fakultet)
  • Law (Pravnički fakultet)
  • Medicine (Liječnički fakultet)
  • Philosophy (Mudroslovni fakultet)
    • Philosophy dept. (Filozofski odjel)
    • Pharmacy dept. (Farmaceutski odjel)
  • Husbandry and Forestry (Gospodarsko-šumarski fakultet)
  • Veterinary Medicine (Veterinarski fakultet)
  • Technology (Tehnički fakultet)
    • Construction dept. (Građevni odsjek)
    • Engineering dept. (Strojarski odsjek)
    • Chemical engineering dept. (Kemijsko-inženjerski odsjek)

On 26 August 1936 a group of Macedonian students belonging to the MANAPO signed the Political Declaration, an illegal document requesting political and social emancipation of Macedonians in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[10]

During the Independent State of Croatia (1941–1945), the university was known as the Croatian University (Hrvatsko sveučilište).

The individual departments of the Faculty of Philosophy became separate faculties in 1942, 1946 when the Faculty of Sciences was formed, and finally in 1963.

In 1956, the Faculty of Technology was divided into four faculties:

  • Architecture-Construction-Geodesy (Arhitektonsko-građevinsko-geodetski fakultet)
  • Electrical engineering (Elektrotehnički fakultet)
  • Mechanical engineering-Shipbuilding (Strojarsko-brodograđevni fakultet)
  • Chemistry-Food technology-Mining (Tehnološki fakultet)

These eventually split up into the current layout.

In 1999., the University decided to implement European Credit Transfer System – ECTS. When Croatia signed to be a part of The Bologna declaration, all of the universities in Croatia adopted this system of easily readable and comparable degrees.

University offers 160 undergraduate programmes (ba/bsc), 22 integrated undergraduate-graduate programmes, 9 vocational undergraduate programmes, 174 graduate programmes (ma/msc), 1 vocational graduate programme, 72 doctoral programmes (PhD) and 165 specialist postgraduate programmes.

Faculties edit

Natural sciences

Engineering

Biomedical sciences

Biotechnology

Social sciences

Humanities

The arts

Philosophy and Religious Sciences edit

Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences
 
Former names
Faculty of Philosophy of the Society of Jesus (FFDI)
TypeJesuit, Catholic
Established1662; 362 years ago (1662)
ChancellorDalibor Renić
DeanProf. Ivan Koprek
Location
Jordanovac 110, HR-10 000 Zagreb, Croatia
WebsiteFFRZ

Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences (FFRZ) is a part of the University of Zagreb, Croatia It remains a work of the Society of Jesus and traces its origins to 1662.

FFRZ in Zagreb began as a Jesuit school of philosophy on 6 November 1662 with the establishment of the Philosophy Department at Zagreb College, which would become the University of Zagreb.[11]

The Faculty of Philosophy of the Society of Jesus (FFDI) closed in 1773 due to the suppression of the Society of Jesus, and the Jesuit philosophy school in Zagreb did not reopen until 1937, when it offered a three-year course leading to the licentiate in philosophy, as it does today.[12]

On 31 July 1989 the Congregation for Catholic Education of the Holy See decreed that the Faculty of Philosophy could confer the baccalaureate, licentiate, and doctorate in philosophy.[13]

With a decision of 7 October 1992, the Ministry of Science and Technology entered FFDI into the register as a Scientific Research Organization in philosophy and it became a part of the Croatian Studies Department of the University of Zagreb.

On 8 December 2016, the Senate of the University of Zagreb determined that FFDI would become a faculty and equal component of the University under the title Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences (FFRZ).[14][12]

Undergraduates may major in Philosophy and Religious Sciences, Philosophy, or Philosophy and Latin Language. Graduate students may major in Philosophy or Religious Science. FFRZ also offers post-graduate studies.[15]

FFRZ has a formal relationship with Laudato TV to "work together to promote and implement educational, cultural and scientific activities in the Christian and humanistic atmosphere".[16]

 
Palace of the University and the Faculty of Law, Republic of Croatia Square

In 2017 there were two current research studies at the Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences:

  • Practical ethics and commitment to the common good in times of crisis. Is there a place for virtue in Croatian society?
  • Christian philosophy within the Croatian philosophy of the 20th century.[17]

On 5 May 2017 a symposium was held on "Religions and Migration: Displaced Persons and Refugees".[18]

The faculty is led by a chancellor and his deputy along with a dean and vice-dean. The chancellor is Arturo Sosa, General Superior of the Society of Jesus based in Rome. His deputy is Dalibor Renić, Provincial Superior of the Croatian Province of the Society of Jesus based in Zagreb. The dean is Prof. Ivan Koprek,[19] The Faculty Council is composed of all regular and extraordinary professors and the Faculty Conference includes all current lecturers, student representatives, and faculty officials.[20]

Rectors edit

01. Matija Mesić (1874–75)
02. Stjepan Spevec (1875–76)
03. Anton Kržan (1876–77)
04. Konstantin Vojnović (1877–78)
05. Franjo Maixner (1878–79)
06. Franjo Iveković (1879–80)
07. Aleksandar Bresztyenszky (1880–81)
08. Franjo Marković (1881–82)
09. Feliks Suk (1882–83)
10. Blaž Lorković (1883–84)
11. Đuro Pilar (1884–85)
12. Gustav Baron (1885–86)
13. Franjo Vrbanić (1886–87)
14. Tadija Smičiklas (1887–88)
15. Antun Franki (1888–89)
16. Luka Marjanović (1889–90)
17. Natko Nodilo (1890–91)
18. Ivan Bujanović (1891–92)
19. Josip Pliverić (1892–93)
20. Vinko Dvořák (1893–94)
21. Antun Maurović (1894–95)
22. Franjo Spevec (1895–96)
23. Armin Pavić (1896–97)
24. Juraj Dočkal (1897–98)
25. Josip Šilović (1898–99)
26. Đuro Arnold (1899–1900)
27. Rudolf Vimer (1900–01)
28. Franjo Vrbanić (1901–02)
29. Vjekoslav Klaić (1902–03)
30. Ivan Bujanović (1903–04)
31. Josip Pliverić (1904–05)
32. Antun Heinz (1905–06)
33. Antun Bauer (1906–07)
34. Milivoj-Klement Maurović (1907–08)
35. Gustav Janeček (1908–09)
36. Josip Volović (1909–10)
37. Julije Rorauer (1910–11)
38. Julije Domac (1911–12)
39. Josip Pazman (1912–13)
40. Edo Lovrić (1913–14)
41. Đuro Korbler (1914–15)
42. Fran Barac (1915–16)
43. Ernest Miler (1916–17)
44. Julije Golik (1917–18)
45. Ivan Angelo Ruspini (1918–19)
46. Ladislav Polić (1919–20)
47. Karlo Radoničić (1920–21)
48. Vladimir Varićak (1921–22)
49. Đuro Nenadić (1922–23)
50. Stjepan Zimmerman (1923–24)
51. Ladislav Polić (1924–25)
52. Drago Perović (1925–26)
53. Ernest Miler (1926–28)
54. Josip Belobrk (1928–32)
55. Albert Bazala (1932–33)
56. Đuro Stipetić (1933–35)
57. Stanko Hondl (1935–37)
58. Edo Lovrić (1937–38)
59. Andrija Živković (1938–40)
60. Stjepan Ivšić (1940–43)
61. Božidar Špišić (1943–44)
62. Stjepan Horvat (1944–45)
63. Andrija Štampar (1945–46)
64. Grga Novak (1946–47)
65. Andro Mohorovičić (1947–49)
66. Marko Kostrenčić (1949–50)
67. Antun Barac (1950–51)
68. Fran Bošnjaković (1951–52)
69. Teodor Varićak (1952–53)
70. Željko Marković (1953–54)
71. Hrvoje Iveković (1954–56)
72. Zoran Bujas (1956–58)
73. Marijan Horvat (1958–60)
74. Vladimir Serdar (1960–63)
75. Slavko Macarol (1963–66)
76. Jakov Sirotković (1966–68)
77. Ivan Supek (1968–72)
78. Predrag Vranicki (1972–76)
79. Drago Grdenić (1976–78)
80. Ivan Jurković (1978–82)
81. Zvonimir Krajina (1982–86)
82. Vladimir Stipetić (1986–88)
83. Zvonimir Šeparović (1988–90)
84. Marijan Šunjić (1990–98)
85. Branko Jeren (1998–2002)
86. Tomislav Ivančić (2001)*
87. Helena Jasna Mencer (2002–06)
88. Aleksa Bjeliš (2006–14)
89. Damir Boras (2014–22)
90. Stjepan Lakušić (2022–)
* Ivančić was elected rector in 2001, but resigned due to health reasons before his term started.[21]
Source: List of rectors at the University of Zagreb website

Rankings edit

University rankings
Global – Overall
ARWU World[22]401–500 (2019)
CWTS World[23]422 (2019)
Regional – Overall
QS Emerging Europe and Central Asia[24]47 (2022)

As of 2020, the university ranked 801–1000 by QS,[25] ranking 575 by USN,[26] ranking 512 by CWUR,[27] ranked 401–500 by ARWU,[28] and 1001+ by THE.[29]

Legacy edit

Since 1874, more than 200,000 students have received a bachelor's degree, more than 18,000 a master's, and more than 8,000 a doctorate from the University of Zagreb.

Notable alumni edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b http://www.unizg.hr/fileadmin/rektorat/O_Sveucilistu/Jucer_danas_sutra/Poslovanje/Financiranje/2019_SuZg_Odluka_Senata_Godisnje_financijsko_izvjesce_za_2019..pdf[bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ http://www.unizg.hr/fileadmin/rektorat/Studiji_studiranje/Studiji/Kvaliteta/Upravljanje_kvalitetom/Samoanliza_i_dokumentacija_za_vanjsku_neovisnu_prosudbu.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Konecki, Mario Konecki, Mladen. "Homepage". www.unizg.hr.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Thomas, Liz; Wright, Malcolm (2011). Institutional Transformation to Engage a Diverse Student Body. Emerald Group Publishing. p. 236. ISBN 9780857249036.
  5. ^ a b Rüegg, Walter: "European Universities and Similar Institutions in Existence between 1812 and the End of 1944: A Chronological List", in: Rüegg, Walter (ed.): A History of the University in Europe. Vol. 3: Universities in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries (1800–1945), Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0-521-36107-1, p. 685
  6. ^ Drago Roksandić (2017). "Jugoslavenstvo prije Jugoslavije*". In Latinka Perović; Drago Roksandić; Mitja Velikonja; Wolfgang Hoepken; Florian Bieber (eds.). Jugoslavija u istorijskoj perspektivi. Helsinki Federation for Human Rights Serbia. pp. 27–54. ISBN 978-86-7208-207-4.
  7. ^ History of the University of Zagreb at public.carnet.hr
  8. ^ Charle, Christophe: "Patterns", in Rüegg, Walter (ed.): A History of the University in Europe. Vol. 3: Universities in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries (1800–1945), Cambridge University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0-521-36107-1, p. 41
  9. ^ Husinec, Renata, and Dejan Marenčić. n.d. "Križevci College of Agriculture." 2009-12-29 at the Wayback Machine Accessed: April 13, 2013.
  10. ^ Ljubica Jančeva; Aleksandar Litovski (2017). "Makedonija i Makedonci u Jugoslaviji: uspostavljanje sopstvenog identiteta" [Macedonia and Macedonians in Yugoslavia: Establishing Their Own Identity]. In Latinka Perović; Drago Roksandić; Mitja Velikonja; Wolfgang Hoepken; Florian Bieber (eds.). Jugoslavija u istorijskoj perspektivi [Yugoslavia in Historical Perspective]. Helsinki Federation for Human Rights Serbia. pp. 149–171. ISBN 978-86-7208-207-4.
  11. ^ . LaudatoTV (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  12. ^ a b prekimaster. . www.ffdi.hr (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  13. ^ . www.slu.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-08-19. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  14. ^ Konecki, Mario Konecki, Mladen. "Filozofski fakultet Družbe Isusove postaje 34. sastavnica Sveučilišta u Zagrebu". www.unizg.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2017-11-18.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ prekimaster. "Poslijediplomski studij". www.ffdi.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  16. ^ Robi. "HRsvijet.net – Laudato TV ostvarila suradnju s Fakultetom filozofije i religijskih znanosti". hrsvijet.net (in Croatian). Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  17. ^ prekimaster. "Znanstveni projekti". www.ffdi.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  18. ^ ""Religije i migracije: prognanici i izbjeglice" – znanstveni simpozij – Book". Book (in Croatian). 2017-05-04. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  19. ^ . HRK. Archived from the original on 2018-04-14. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  20. ^ prekimaster. "Uprava". www.ffdi.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  21. ^ http://www.unizg.hr/fileadmin/rektorat/O_Sveucilistu/Tijela_sluzbe/Senat/Sjednice/2001_2002/zapisnik_2001_2002_20122001.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  22. ^ [Academic Ranking of World Universities 2019 http://www.shanghairanking.com/ARWU2019.html 2019-08-15 at the Wayback Machine]
  23. ^ [CWTS Leiden Ranking 2019 https://www.leidenranking.com/ranking/2019/list]
  24. ^ "QS World University Rankings-Emerging Europe & Central Asia". Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  25. ^ "University of Zagreb". Top Universities. 2015-07-16. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
  26. ^ "University of Zagreb". Retrieved 2020-01-13.
  27. ^ "CWUR – World University Rankings 2019–2020". cwur.org. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
  28. ^ "University of Zagreb | Academic Ranking of World Universities – 2020 | Shanghai Ranking – 2020". www.shanghairanking.com. Retrieved 2020-09-04.
  29. ^ "University of Zagreb". Times Higher Education (THE). 2019-09-09. Retrieved 2019-09-29.

Further reading edit

  • Raković, Aleksandar (2013). "Short Existence of the Faculty of Eastern Orthodox Theology at the University of Zagreb 1920–1924" (PDF). Теолошки погледи. 46 (3): 951–956.

External links edit

  • Official website

45°48′38.42″N 15°58′12.35″E / 45.8106722°N 15.9700972°E / 45.8106722; 15.9700972

university, zagreb, croatian, sveučilište, zagrebu, latin, universitas, studiorum, zagrabiensis, public, research, university, zagreb, croatia, largest, croatian, university, oldest, continuously, operating, universities, europe, university, north, only, publi. The University of Zagreb Croatian Sveuciliste u Zagrebu Latin Universitas Studiorum Zagrabiensis is a public research university in Zagreb Croatia It is the largest Croatian university and one of the oldest continuously operating universities in Europe 4 The University of Zagreb and the University North are the only public universities operating in Northern and Central Croatia University of ZagrebSveuciliste u ZagrebuLatin Universitas Studiorum ZagrabiensisTypePublicEstablished23 September 1669 354 years ago 23 September 1669 Endowment557 million HRK 73 57 million EUR 2019 1 Budget2456 3 million HRK 324 5 million EUR 2019 1 RectorStjepan LakusicAcademic staff7 963 2012 2 Students72 480 2015 3 Postgraduates7243 2007 Doctoral students842 2007 LocationZagreb CroatiaCampusCity wide centralColours AffiliationsEuropean University AssociationWebsiteunizg hrThe history of the University began on September 23 1669 when the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I issued a decree granting the establishment of the Jesuit Academy of the Royal Free City of Zagreb The decree was accepted at the Council of the Croatian Kingdom on November 3 1671 The Academy was run by the Jesuits for more than a century until the order was dissolved by Pope Clement XIV in 1773 In 1776 Empress Maria Theresa issued a decree founding the Royal Academy of Science which succeeded the previous Jesuit Academy Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer proposed the founding of a University to the Croatian Parliament in 1861 Emperor Franz Joseph signed the decree on the establishment of the University of Zagreb in 1869 The Act of Founding was passed by the Parliament in 1874 and was ratified by the Emperor on January 5 1874 On October 19 1874 the Royal University of Franz Joseph I was officially opened The University is composed of 29 faculties 3 art academies and 1 university center with more than 70 000 students Contents 1 History 1 1 Academy 1 2 University 2 Faculties 2 1 Philosophy and Religious Sciences 3 Rectors 4 Rankings 5 Legacy 6 Notable alumni 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editAcademy edit The beginnings of the later university date back to 23 September 1669 when Emperor and King Leopold I Habsburg issued a decree granting the establishment of the Jesuit Academy of the Royal Free City of Zagreb 5 According to that document the study of philosophy in Zagreb acquired a formal and legal status as Neoacademia Zagrabiensis and officially became a public institution of higher education nbsp Filip Kausic 1618 1673 was the first rector of the AcademyThe academy was run by the Jesuits for more than a century until the order was dissolved by Pope Clement XIV in 1773 Under a new leadership in 1772 the academy enrolled a total of 200 students In 1776 Empress and Queen Maria Theresa issued a decree founding the Royal Academy of Science Latin Regia Scientiarum Academia 5 It consisted of three studies or faculties of philosophy theology and law The former political cameral studies became part of the newly established faculty of law and thus were integrated into the academy Each of the faculties of the Royal Academy of Sciences had several chairs teaching one or several courses During the Austro Turkish War of 1788 1791 and following the Austrian occupation of Belgrade on 8 October 1789 the Royal Academy requested to be granted the university status with the following argumentation If we consider the current circumstances in which serious consideration is given not only to the removal of obstacles to science but also to the appointment of our local citizens to all services in these kingdoms and if we also consider for a moment future opportunities not only that the part of Croatia that is still sobbing under the Turkish yoke but also the kingdoms of Bosnia and Serbia will be liberated and that these glorious kingdoms will be almost expanded We believe that it is not only proud and useful but also absolutely necessary to have in our environment such a university in which when all obstacles to scientific work are removed and when funds for its development are obtained number of local youth will be educated in all the sciences and noble skills for performing various services in their homeland 6 The academy in Zagreb remained until 1874 despite numerous organizational changes the focal institution of higher education in Croatia educating most of the members of the Croatian intelligentsia University edit See also Franz Joseph University disambiguation nbsp Matija Mesic first rector of the University nbsp Promotion of new PhDs in 2015Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer in 1861 proposed to the Croatian Parliament the founding of a university at Zagreb During his visit in 1869 the Emperor Franz Joseph signed the decree on the establishment of the University of Zagreb Five years later the Parliament passed the Act of Founding which was ratified by the Emperor on 5 January 1874 On 19 October 1874 a ceremony was held in the name of the founding of the Royal University of Franz Joseph I in Zagreb 7 making it the third university in the Hungarian realm of the Austro Hungarian Empire 8 In 1874 the University had four faculties Law Pravno drzavoslovni fakultet Theology Bogoslovni fakultet Philosophy Mudroslovni fakultet Medicine Lijecnicki fakultet The Faculty of Medicine was not put into function in 1874 it had to wait until 1917 The Faculty of Philosophy served as the general scientific faculty Since 1876 it had geology botany physics mathematics and chemistry since 1877 zoology since 1882 pharmacy since 1883 geography In 1860 the Royal Agriculture and Forestry College was founded in Krizevci 9 In 1898 the Academy of Forestry Sumarska akademija was founded as part of the Faculty of Philosophy which encompassed all technical studies In 1919 this school became the Faculty of Husbandry and Forestry In 1919 the School of Technology Tehnicka visoka skola was founded which was transformed into a university faculty in 1926 Also in 1919 the School of Veterinary Medicine Veterinarska visoka skola was founded it transformed into a university faculty in 1925 nbsp Great Hall of the UniversityIn the Faculty of Philosophy major reorganization ensued in the 1920s as mathematics pharmacy and other sciences started to split off first with the creation of separate mathematics and pharmaceutical departments in 1928 when the faculty was renamed into its current name Filozofski fakultet In 1926 the university was composed of seven faculties Theology Bogoslovni fakultet Law Pravnicki fakultet Medicine Lijecnicki fakultet Philosophy Mudroslovni fakultet Philosophy dept Filozofski odjel Pharmacy dept Farmaceutski odjel Husbandry and Forestry Gospodarsko sumarski fakultet Veterinary Medicine Veterinarski fakultet Technology Tehnicki fakultet Construction dept Građevni odsjek Engineering dept Strojarski odsjek Chemical engineering dept Kemijsko inzenjerski odsjek On 26 August 1936 a group of Macedonian students belonging to the MANAPO signed the Political Declaration an illegal document requesting political and social emancipation of Macedonians in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia 10 During the Independent State of Croatia 1941 1945 the university was known as the Croatian University Hrvatsko sveuciliste The individual departments of the Faculty of Philosophy became separate faculties in 1942 1946 when the Faculty of Sciences was formed and finally in 1963 In 1956 the Faculty of Technology was divided into four faculties Architecture Construction Geodesy Arhitektonsko građevinsko geodetski fakultet Electrical engineering Elektrotehnicki fakultet Mechanical engineering Shipbuilding Strojarsko brodograđevni fakultet Chemistry Food technology Mining Tehnoloski fakultet These eventually split up into the current layout In 1999 the University decided to implement European Credit Transfer System ECTS When Croatia signed to be a part of The Bologna declaration all of the universities in Croatia adopted this system of easily readable and comparable degrees University offers 160 undergraduate programmes ba bsc 22 integrated undergraduate graduate programmes 9 vocational undergraduate programmes 174 graduate programmes ma msc 1 vocational graduate programme 72 doctoral programmes PhD and 165 specialist postgraduate programmes Faculties editNatural sciences Faculty of ScienceEngineering Faculty of Architecture Faculty of Chemical Engineering and Technology Faculty of Civil Engineering Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing Faculty of Geodesy Faculty of Geotechnics in Varazdin Faculty of Graphic Arts Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture Faculty of Metallurgy in Sisak Faculty of Mining Geology and Petroleum Engineering Faculty of Textile Technology Faculty of Transport and Traffic SciencesBiomedical sciences Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry Faculty of Veterinary Medicine School of Dental Medicine School of MedicineBiotechnology Faculty of Agriculture Faculty of Food Technology and Biotechnology Faculty of ForestrySocial sciences Faculty of Economics and Business Faculty of Kinesiology Faculty of Law Faculty of Organization and Informatics in Varazdin Faculty of Political Science Faculty of Special Education and Rehabilitation Faculty of Teacher EducationHumanities Catholic Faculty of Theology Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences Faculty of Croatian Studies Faculty of Philosophy and Religious SciencesThe arts Academy of Dramatic Art Academy of Fine Arts Academy of MusicPhilosophy and Religious Sciences edit Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences nbsp Former namesFaculty of Philosophy of the Society of Jesus FFDI TypeJesuit CatholicEstablished1662 362 years ago 1662 ChancellorDalibor RenicDeanProf Ivan KoprekLocationJordanovac 110 HR 10 000 Zagreb CroatiaWebsiteFFRZFaculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences FFRZ is a part of the University of Zagreb Croatia It remains a work of the Society of Jesus and traces its origins to 1662 FFRZ in Zagreb began as a Jesuit school of philosophy on 6 November 1662 with the establishment of the Philosophy Department at Zagreb College which would become the University of Zagreb 11 The Faculty of Philosophy of the Society of Jesus FFDI closed in 1773 due to the suppression of the Society of Jesus and the Jesuit philosophy school in Zagreb did not reopen until 1937 when it offered a three year course leading to the licentiate in philosophy as it does today 12 On 31 July 1989 the Congregation for Catholic Education of the Holy See decreed that the Faculty of Philosophy could confer the baccalaureate licentiate and doctorate in philosophy 13 With a decision of 7 October 1992 the Ministry of Science and Technology entered FFDI into the register as a Scientific Research Organization in philosophy and it became a part of the Croatian Studies Department of the University of Zagreb On 8 December 2016 the Senate of the University of Zagreb determined that FFDI would become a faculty and equal component of the University under the title Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences FFRZ 14 12 Undergraduates may major in Philosophy and Religious Sciences Philosophy or Philosophy and Latin Language Graduate students may major in Philosophy or Religious Science FFRZ also offers post graduate studies 15 FFRZ has a formal relationship with Laudato TV to work together to promote and implement educational cultural and scientific activities in the Christian and humanistic atmosphere 16 nbsp Palace of the University and the Faculty of Law Republic of Croatia SquareIn 2017 there were two current research studies at the Faculty of Philosophy and Religious Sciences Practical ethics and commitment to the common good in times of crisis Is there a place for virtue in Croatian society Christian philosophy within the Croatian philosophy of the 20th century 17 On 5 May 2017 a symposium was held on Religions and Migration Displaced Persons and Refugees 18 The faculty is led by a chancellor and his deputy along with a dean and vice dean The chancellor is Arturo Sosa General Superior of the Society of Jesus based in Rome His deputy is Dalibor Renic Provincial Superior of the Croatian Province of the Society of Jesus based in Zagreb The dean is Prof Ivan Koprek 19 The Faculty Council is composed of all regular and extraordinary professors and the Faculty Conference includes all current lecturers student representatives and faculty officials 20 Rectors edit0 1 Matija Mesic 1874 75 0 2 Stjepan Spevec 1875 76 0 3 Anton Krzan 1876 77 0 4 Konstantin Vojnovic 1877 78 0 5 Franjo Maixner 1878 79 0 6 Franjo Ivekovic 1879 80 0 7 Aleksandar Bresztyenszky 1880 81 0 8 Franjo Markovic 1881 82 0 9 Feliks Suk 1882 83 10 Blaz Lorkovic 1883 84 11 Đuro Pilar 1884 85 12 Gustav Baron 1885 86 13 Franjo Vrbanic 1886 87 14 Tadija Smiciklas 1887 88 15 Antun Franki 1888 89 16 Luka Marjanovic 1889 90 17 Natko Nodilo 1890 91 18 Ivan Bujanovic 1891 92 19 Josip Pliveric 1892 93 20 Vinko Dvorak 1893 94 21 Antun Maurovic 1894 95 22 Franjo Spevec 1895 96 23 Armin Pavic 1896 97 24 Juraj Dockal 1897 98 25 Josip Silovic 1898 99 26 Đuro Arnold 1899 1900 27 Rudolf Vimer 1900 01 28 Franjo Vrbanic 1901 02 29 Vjekoslav Klaic 1902 03 30 Ivan Bujanovic 1903 04 31 Josip Pliveric 1904 05 32 Antun Heinz 1905 06 33 Antun Bauer 1906 07 34 Milivoj Klement Maurovic 1907 08 35 Gustav Janecek 1908 09 36 Josip Volovic 1909 10 37 Julije Rorauer 1910 11 38 Julije Domac 1911 12 39 Josip Pazman 1912 13 40 Edo Lovric 1913 14 41 Đuro Korbler 1914 15 42 Fran Barac 1915 16 43 Ernest Miler 1916 17 44 Julije Golik 1917 18 45 Ivan Angelo Ruspini 1918 19 46 Ladislav Polic 1919 20 47 Karlo Radonicic 1920 21 48 Vladimir Varicak 1921 22 49 Đuro Nenadic 1922 23 50 Stjepan Zimmerman 1923 24 51 Ladislav Polic 1924 25 52 Drago Perovic 1925 26 53 Ernest Miler 1926 28 54 Josip Belobrk 1928 32 55 Albert Bazala 1932 33 56 Đuro Stipetic 1933 35 57 Stanko Hondl 1935 37 58 Edo Lovric 1937 38 59 Andrija Zivkovic 1938 40 60 Stjepan Ivsic 1940 43 61 Bozidar Spisic 1943 44 62 Stjepan Horvat 1944 45 63 Andrija Stampar 1945 46 64 Grga Novak 1946 47 65 Andro Mohorovicic 1947 49 66 Marko Kostrencic 1949 50 67 Antun Barac 1950 51 68 Fran Bosnjakovic 1951 52 69 Teodor Varicak 1952 53 70 Zeljko Markovic 1953 54 71 Hrvoje Ivekovic 1954 56 72 Zoran Bujas 1956 58 73 Marijan Horvat 1958 60 74 Vladimir Serdar 1960 63 75 Slavko Macarol 1963 66 76 Jakov Sirotkovic 1966 68 77 Ivan Supek 1968 72 78 Predrag Vranicki 1972 76 79 Drago Grdenic 1976 78 80 Ivan Jurkovic 1978 82 81 Zvonimir Krajina 1982 86 82 Vladimir Stipetic 1986 88 83 Zvonimir Separovic 1988 90 84 Marijan Sunjic 1990 98 85 Branko Jeren 1998 2002 86 Tomislav Ivancic 2001 87 Helena Jasna Mencer 2002 06 88 Aleksa Bjelis 2006 14 89 Damir Boras 2014 22 90 Stjepan Lakusic 2022 Ivancic was elected rector in 2001 but resigned due to health reasons before his term started 21 Source List of rectors at the University of Zagreb websiteRankings editUniversity rankingsGlobal OverallARWU World 22 401 500 2019 CWTS World 23 422 2019 Regional OverallQS Emerging Europe and Central Asia 24 47 2022 As of 2020 the university ranked 801 1000 by QS 25 ranking 575 by USN 26 ranking 512 by CWUR 27 ranked 401 500 by ARWU 28 and 1001 by THE 29 Legacy editSince 1874 more than 200 000 students have received a bachelor s degree more than 18 000 a master s and more than 8 000 a doctorate from the University of Zagreb Notable alumni editIvana Zivkovic who served as United Nations Assistant Secretary General Assistant Administrator and Director of the Regional Bureau for Europe and the CIS of United Nations Development Programme and Director General for Economic Affairs and Development Cooperation of Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs Croatia Nives Botica Redmayne professor of accountingGallery edit nbsp Faculty of Architecture nbsp Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences nbsp Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Naval Architecture nbsp Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing nbsp School of Medicine nbsp Faculty of Science nbsp Faculty of Textile Technology nbsp Faculty of Veterinary Medicine nbsp Faculty of Political Science nbsp Faculty of Forestry nbsp Faculty of Transport and Traffic Sciences nbsp Faculty of Special Education and Rehabilitation nbsp Academy of Music nbsp Academy of Dramatic Arts nbsp Catholic Faculty of TheologySee also editBalkan Universities Network List of modern universities in Europe 1801 1945 List of universities in Croatia National and University Library ZagrebReferences edit a b http www unizg hr fileadmin rektorat O Sveucilistu Jucer danas sutra Poslovanje Financiranje 2019 SuZg Odluka Senata Godisnje financijsko izvjesce za 2019 pdf bare URL PDF http www unizg hr fileadmin rektorat Studiji studiranje Studiji Kvaliteta Upravljanje kvalitetom Samoanliza i dokumentacija za vanjsku neovisnu prosudbu pdf bare URL PDF Konecki Mario Konecki Mladen Homepage www unizg hr a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Thomas Liz Wright Malcolm 2011 Institutional Transformation to Engage a Diverse Student Body Emerald Group Publishing p 236 ISBN 9780857249036 a b Ruegg Walter European Universities and Similar Institutions in Existence between 1812 and the End of 1944 A Chronological List in Ruegg Walter ed A History of the University in Europe Vol 3 Universities in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries 1800 1945 Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 521 36107 1 p 685 Drago Roksandic 2017 Jugoslavenstvo prije Jugoslavije In Latinka Perovic Drago Roksandic Mitja Velikonja Wolfgang Hoepken Florian Bieber eds Jugoslavija u istorijskoj perspektivi Helsinki Federation for Human Rights Serbia pp 27 54 ISBN 978 86 7208 207 4 History of the University of Zagreb at public carnet hr Charle Christophe Patterns in Ruegg Walter ed A History of the University in Europe Vol 3 Universities in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries 1800 1945 Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 521 36107 1 p 41 Husinec Renata and Dejan Marencic n d Krizevci College of Agriculture Archived 2009 12 29 at the Wayback Machine Accessed April 13 2013 Ljubica Janceva Aleksandar Litovski 2017 Makedonija i Makedonci u Jugoslaviji uspostavljanje sopstvenog identiteta Macedonia and Macedonians in Yugoslavia Establishing Their Own Identity In Latinka Perovic Drago Roksandic Mitja Velikonja Wolfgang Hoepken Florian Bieber eds Jugoslavija u istorijskoj perspektivi Yugoslavia in Historical Perspective Helsinki Federation for Human Rights Serbia pp 149 171 ISBN 978 86 7208 207 4 Izdvojeno 7 11 2017 Dan Fakulteta filozofije i religijskih znanosti LaudatoTV in Croatian Archived from the original on 2017 12 01 Retrieved 2017 11 18 a b prekimaster O fakultetu www ffdi hr in Croatian Archived from the original on 2017 02 02 Retrieved 2017 11 18 Philosophers in Jesuit Education Missions Page www slu edu Archived from the original on 2016 08 19 Retrieved 2017 11 18 Konecki Mario Konecki Mladen Filozofski fakultet Druzbe Isusove postaje 34 sastavnica Sveucilista u Zagrebu www unizg hr in Croatian Retrieved 2017 11 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link prekimaster Poslijediplomski studij www ffdi hr in Croatian Retrieved 2017 11 18 Robi HRsvijet net Laudato TV ostvarila suradnju s Fakultetom filozofije i religijskih znanosti hrsvijet net in Croatian Retrieved 2017 11 18 prekimaster Znanstveni projekti www ffdi hr in Croatian Retrieved 2017 11 18 Religije i migracije prognanici i izbjeglice znanstveni simpozij Book Book in Croatian 2017 05 04 Retrieved 2017 11 18 Dr Ivan Koprek novi dekan Fakulteta filozofije i religijskih znanosti HRK Archived from the original on 2018 04 14 Retrieved 2017 11 18 prekimaster Uprava www ffdi hr in Croatian Retrieved 2017 11 18 http www unizg hr fileadmin rektorat O Sveucilistu Tijela sluzbe Senat Sjednice 2001 2002 zapisnik 2001 2002 20122001 pdf bare URL PDF Academic Ranking of World Universities 2019 http www shanghairanking com ARWU2019 html Archived 2019 08 15 at the Wayback Machine CWTS Leiden Ranking 2019 https www leidenranking com ranking 2019 list QS World University Rankings Emerging Europe amp Central Asia Retrieved 15 January 2023 University of Zagreb Top Universities 2015 07 16 Retrieved 2019 09 29 University of Zagreb Retrieved 2020 01 13 CWUR World University Rankings 2019 2020 cwur org Retrieved 2019 09 29 University of Zagreb Academic Ranking of World Universities 2020 Shanghai Ranking 2020 www shanghairanking com Retrieved 2020 09 04 University of Zagreb Times Higher Education THE 2019 09 09 Retrieved 2019 09 29 Further reading editRakovic Aleksandar 2013 Short Existence of the Faculty of Eastern Orthodox Theology at the University of Zagreb 1920 1924 PDF Teoloshki pogledi 46 3 951 956 External links editOfficial website 45 48 38 42 N 15 58 12 35 E 45 8106722 N 15 9700972 E 45 8106722 15 9700972 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of Zagreb amp oldid 1194763100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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