Full university
A full university (Latin: universitas litterarum ) is a university where the most basic scientific subjects can be studied. Classically, this was understood to mean at least the humanities (including philosophy / theology ), mathematics , law and medicine . Since the early modern period this repertoire is by the natural sciences , engineering sciences , as well as economic and social sciences have been supplemented so. If it is still organized in the traditional way, it has the appropriate faculties . As a rule, a full university has the right to carry out doctorates and habilitation degrees in all of these subjects . Due to the special development of the German higher education system with the early independence of the technical universities (TH) in the second half of the 19th century, engineering in Germany is not always seen as constitutive for a full university. The term is thus defined solely by the canon of subjects offered at a university and does not say anything about the quality of the individual subjects available.
The full university differs from such universities that are only specialized in a selection of subjects (for example medical universities , universities of teacher education , art universities , technical universities , etc.).
Germany
In particular, the many newly founded universities in the sixties and seventies strived for a long time, almost all of them, to become “comprehensive universities” in order to be regarded as equivalent to the traditional universities. In fact, however, many of the traditional universities are (no longer) comprehensive universities in the sense of the definition, as some of the subjects are missing.
While according to the "strict" definition, which also requires technical subjects, there are only six full universities, according to the definition of the term without a mandatory engineering faculty, the following full universities (including corresponding technical universities) exist in Germany:
- Baden-Württemberg
- Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg (including the technical faculty, but this only includes computer science and microsystems technology and not the classical engineering sciences)
- Heidelberg University
- Eberhard Karls University of Tübingen
- Bavaria
- Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg (including the technical faculty)
- Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich
- University of Regensburg
- Julius Maximilians University of Würzburg
- Berlin
- Hamburg
- Hesse
- Goethe University Frankfurt am Main
- Justus-Liebig university of Giessen
- Philipps University of Marburg
- Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania
- University of Greifswald - Germany's smallest comprehensive university
- University of Rostock (including technical faculties)
- Lower Saxony
- Georg-August-University Goettingen
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz University of Hanover (including technical faculties, but no medicine)
- North Rhine-Westphalia
- Ruhr University Bochum (including technical faculties)
- University of Bonn
- Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (no theology)
- University of Duisburg-Essen (including the Faculty of Engineering, but no law course)
- University of Cologne
- Westphalian Wilhelms University of Münster
- Rhineland-Palatinate
- Saarland
- Saarland University Saarbrücken (including some technical subjects in the natural science-technical faculty)
- Saxony
- Technical University of Dresden (despite the name full university)
- University of Leipzig
- Saxony-Anhalt
- Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (until 2006 including the Faculty of Engineering)
- Schleswig-Holstein
- Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel (including the technical faculty)
- Thuringia
Austria
In Austria , until the end of 2003, the universities in Vienna , Innsbruck and Graz were classic full universities (some with a focus, Vienna for example with only a narrow technical branch). Then, by law, the medical faculties nationwide were outsourced as separate universities, but these three universities are still regarded as full universities.
In Switzerland
- University of Basel
- University of Bern
- University of Friborg
- Université de Genève
- University of Lausanne
- Université de Neuchâtel
- University of Zurich
Universities in other countries
Other universities that come close to the ideal of a full university and which also teach in German are:
- University of Luxembourg (in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg )
- (rather restricted :) Free University of Bozen in South Tyrol / Italy, trilingual (German, English and Italian)
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ Greifswald University is headed by a woman for the first time. In: MOZ.de , January 25, 2013.
annotation
- ↑ Counted here: Erlangen-Nuremberg, Rostock, Bochum, Saarland, Dresden, Kiel. The exact delimitation depends on the breadth of the technical subjects required.