University Of cologne

University Of Cologne
Uniersity Of Cologne
The University of Cologne was established in 1388 as the fourth university in the Holy Roman Empire, after the Charles University of Prague (1348), the University of Vienna (1365) and the Karl University of Heidelberg (1386). The charter was signed by Pope Urban VI. The university began teaching on January 6, 1389. In 1798, the university was abolished by the French, who had invaded Cologne in 1794, because under the new French constitution, universities were abolished all over France.The last rector Ferdinand Franz  was able to preserve the university’s  now once more in 1919, the Prussian government endorsed a decision by the Cologne City Council to re-establish the university. On May 19, 1919, the Cologne Mayor Konrad Adenauer signed the charter of the modern university.At that point, the new university was located in  but relocated to its current campus in  on 2 November 1934. The old premises are now being used for the Cologne University of Applied Sciences.Initially, the university was composed of the Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Social Sciences (successor to the Institutes of Commerce and of Communal and Social Administration) and the Faculty of Medicine (successor to the Academy of Medicine). In 1920, the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Arts were added, from which latter the School of Mathematics and Natural Sciences was split off in 1955 to form a separate Faculty. In 1980, the two Cologne departments of the Rhineland School of Education were attached to the university as the Faculties of Education and of Special Education. In 1988, the university became a founding member of the Community of European Management Schools and International Companies today's Global Alliance in Management Education.The University is a leader in the area of economics and is regularly placed in top positions for law and commerce, both for national and international rankings.Over the centuries, scholars from Cologne have been among the most prominent in their fields, beginning with and his pupil Thomas Aquinas (both 13th century). Notable alumni of the 20th century include among others Kurt Alder (Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1950), Peter (Nobel Prize in Physics 2007), Heinrich  (Nobel Prize for Literature),Karl  (president of the Federal Republic of Germany 1979–1984), Gustav  (president of the Federal Republic of Germany 1969 to 1974),  (former president of the Hellenic Republic), and Erich Gutenberg(founder of modern German business studies).In 2005, the University enrolled 47,203 students, including 3,718 graduate students. In 2003, the number of post-doctoral students was 670.The number of international students was 6,157 in the Summer Semester of 2005. This amounts to approximately 13% of the total students. Those from developing countries made up about 60%, representing a total of 123 nations. The largest contingents came from Bulgaria (10.5%), Russia (8.8%), Poland (7.4%), China (6.2%) and Ukraine (5.7%).There are 508 professors at the university, including 70 women. In addition, the university employs 1,549 research assistants, with an additional 765 at the clinic, and 1,462 other assistants (3,736 at the clinic).The University of Cologne maintains twenty official partnerships[6] with universities from ten countries. Of these, the partnerships  I and Pennsylvania State are the oldest partnerships. In addition, Cologne has further with more than 260 other universities.