Viadrina European University
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Europa-Universität Viadrina (Viadrina European University) |
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Motto | Ex oriente lux (Light from the east) |
Established | 1506, closed 1811, refounded 1991 |
Type | State |
President | Gesine Schwan |
Faculty | 160 |
Students | 5,100 |
Location | Frankfurt (Oder), Brandenburg, Germany |
Campus | Urban, several locations |
Website | www.euv-ffo.de |
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Viadrina European University (German: Europa-Universität Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder), hence its frequent appearance as European University Viadrina Frankfurt (Oder) in English) is a university located at Frankfurt (Oder) in the state of Brandenburg. The city is on the Oder River, which marks the border between Germany and Poland. With 4,000 students — around 1,000 of whom come from Poland — and some 160 teaching staff, the Viadrina is one of Germany's smallest universities (only the University of Erfurt has fewer students).
The word "Viadrina," from Latin, means "belonging to, or situated at, the Oder River": it derives from Viadra, the Latin name for the Oder (the city of Frankfurt was known in Latin as Francofortum ad Viadrum).
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[edit] Historical Viadrina
The Alma Mater Viadrina was founded in 1506 by the Prince of Brandenburg, Joachim I, as the principal university of Brandenburg. It was organized into four faculties: law, theology, philosophy, and medicine. The university enjoyed an excellent reputation in Brandenburg and the surrounding regions, and its graduates — access to high positions in administration, politics, law and the church. One of its earliest Chancellors, Bishop Georg von Blumenthal (1490-1550) was a vigorous opponent of the Reformation and did his utmost to expel Lutheran dons such as Jodocus Willich.
In 1811 Viadrina University was moved to Breslau (now Wrocław) and merged with the University of Breslau, the Leopoldina, in order to be competitive with the newly founded University of Berlin (now Humboldt University). Some of the Viadrina professors did, however, accept positions in Berlin.
The old university building in Frankfurt was damaged in World War II and controversially demolished in the early 1960s. Only the arch of the main entrance has been preserved as a monument.
Famous students at the historical Viadrina included the brothers Alexander and Wilhelm von Humboldt, the philosopher Ulrich von Hutten, the musician Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, the theologian and political leader Thomas Müntzer, and the poet Heinrich von Kleist.
[edit] The new Viadrina
In 1991 the university was re-established as Viadrina European University. It currently comprises three faculties: Economics and Business Studies; Law; and Cultural Studies. A prime focus of the educational program is to attract students from throughout Europe in order to create a multi-national student body. Currently about 40 per cent of the students are foreigners (mostly Polish), a quite remarkable proportion compared with other German universities.
Viadrina European University maintains close cooperation with Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland. The two universities jointly operate the Collegium Polonicum, located just opposite the Viadrina on the Polish side of the Oder River.
Notable among the research institutions at Viadrina University is the Frankfurt Institute of Transformational Studies (FIT). The Institute is a substantial contributor to research on economies in transition.
The current president of the University, Professor Gesine Schwan, ran for President of Germany in 2004, being narrowly defeated by Horst Köhler.
[edit] Studying at Viadrina
The Viadrina European University currently offers the following study programs in English:
- Master of Business Informatics in cooperation with the Virtual Global University
- Bachelor of Business Administration
- Master of Business Administration