Short description: Public university in Bologna, Italy
University of Bologna
Alma Mater Studiorum – Università di Bologna
Seal
Latin: Universitas Bononiensis
Motto
Petrus ubique pater legum Bononia mater[1] (Latin)
Motto in English
St. Peter is everywhere the father of the law, Bologna is its mother
Type
Public research university
Established
c. 1088; 936 years ago (1088)
Academic affiliations
Coimbra Group European Universities Association Guild of European Research-Intensive Universities International Association of Universities Scholars at Risk Europaeum Una Europa Mediterranean Universities Union Utrecht Network
Rector
Giovanni Molari
Academic staff
2,917[2]
Administrative staff
2,965[2]
Students
90,291[2]
Undergraduates
47,253
Postgraduates
36,266
Doctoral students
4,239
Location
Bologna, others: Cesena, Forlì, Ravenna, and Rimini
The University of Bologna (Italian: Alma Mater Studiorum – Università di Bologna, abbreviated Unibo) is a public research university in Bologna, Italy. Founded in 1088 by an organised guild of students (studiorum), it is the oldest university in continuous operation in the world, and the first degree-awarding institution of higher learning. At its foundation, the word universitas was first coined.[3][4] The university's emblem carries the motto, Alma Mater Studiorum ("Nourishing mother of studies"), the date A.D. 1088.[5] With over 90,000 students, the University of Bologna is one of the largest universities in Europe.
The university saw the first woman to earn a university degree and teach at a university, Bettisia Gozzadini, and the first woman to earn both a doctorate in science and a salaried position as a university professor, Laura Bassi. The University of Bologna has had a central role in the sciences during the medieval age and the Italian renaissance, where it housed and educated Nicholas Copernicus as well as numerous other renaissance mathematicians.[6] It has educated a wide range of notable alumni, amongst them a large number of Italian scientists, prime ministers, supreme court judges, and priests.[7]
The University of Bologna has campuses in Cesena, Forlì, Ravenna and Rimini as well as branch centres abroad in Buenos Aires, Argentina, New York City , Brussels, and Shanghai.[8] It houses the fully funded boarding college Collegio Superiore di Bologna, the Bologna School of Advanced Studies,[9] the botanical gardens of Bologna, a large number of museums, libraries and archeological collections,[10] as well as the Bologna University Press.
Contents
1History
2Organization
3Affiliates and other institutions
3.1Il Mulino
3.2Collegio Superiore
4Notable people
4.1Alumni
4.2Faculty and staff
5Rankings and reputation
6Points of interest
7See also
8References
9External links
History
The entry of students in the Natio Germanica Bononiae, the nation of German students at Bologna; miniature of 1497.
The date of the University of Bologna's founding is uncertain. The university was granted a charter (Authentica habita) by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa in 1158, but in the 19th century, a committee of historians led by Giosuè Carducci traced the founding of the university back to 1088, which would make it the oldest continuously operating university in the world.[11][12][13] However, the development of the institution at Bologna into a university was a gradual process. Paul Grendler writes that "it is not likely that enough instruction and organization existed to merit the term university before the 1150s, and it might not have happened before the 1180s."[14]
The university arose around mutual aid societies (known as universitates scholarium) of foreign students called "nations" (as they were grouped by nationality) for protection against city laws which imposed collective punishment on foreigners for the crimes and debts of their countrymen. These students then hired scholars from the city's pre-existing lay and ecclesiastical schools to teach them subjects such as liberal arts, notarial law, theology, and ars dictaminis (scrivenery).[15] The lectures were given in informal schools called scholae. In time the various universitates scholarium decided to form a larger association, or Studium—thus, the university. The Studium grew to have a strong position of collective bargaining with the city, since by then it derived significant revenue through visiting foreign students, who would depart if they were not well treated. The foreign students in Bologna received greater rights, and collective punishment was ended. There was also collective bargaining with the scholars who served as professors at the university. By the initiation or threat of a student strike, the students could enforce their demands as to the content of courses and the pay professors would receive. University professors were hired, fired, and had their pay determined by an elected council of two representatives from every student "nation" which governed the institution, with the most important decisions requiring a majority vote from all the students to ratify. The professors could also be fined if they failed to finish classes on time, or complete course material by the end of the semester. A student committee, the "Denouncers of Professors", kept tabs on them and reported any misbehavior. Professors themselves were not powerless, however, forming collegia doctorum (professors’ committees) in each faculty, and securing the rights to set examination fees and degree requirements. Eventually, the city ended this arrangement, paying professors from tax revenues and making it a chartered public university.[16]
Bologna University Library
The university is historically notable for its teaching of canon and civil law;[17] indeed, it was set up in large part with the aim of studying the Digest,[18] a central text in Roman law, which had been rediscovered in Italy in 1070, and the university was central in the development of medieval Roman law.[19] Until modern times, the only degree granted at that university was the doctorate.
Bettisia Gozzadini earned a law degree in 1237, being one of the first women in history to obtain a university degree.[20] She taught law from her own home for two years, and in 1239 she taught at the university, becoming the first woman in history to teach at a university.[21]
In 1477, when Pope Sixtus IV issued a papal bull, authorizing the creation of Uppsala University in Sweden, the bull specified that the new university would have the same freedoms and privileges as the University of Bologna—a highly desirable situation for the Swedish scholars. This included the right of Uppsala to establish the four traditional faculties of theology, law (Canon Law and Roman law), medicine, and philosophy, and to award the bachelor's, master's, licentiate, and doctoral degrees.
Laura Bassi was born into a prosperous family of Bologna and was privately educated from the age of five.[22] Bassi's education and intellect was noticed by Prospero Lorenzini Lambertini, who became the Archbishop of Bologna in 1731 (later Pope Benedict XIV). Lambertini became the official patron of Bassi. He arranged for a public debate between Bassi and four professors from the University of Bologna on 17 April 1732.[23] In 1732, Bassi, aged twenty, publicly defended her forty-nine theses on Philosophica Studia[24] at the Sala degli Anziani of the Palazzo Pubblico. The University of Bologna awarded her a doctorate degree on 12 May.[25] She became the first woman to receive a doctorate in science, and the second woman in the world to earn a philosophy doctorate after Elena Cornaro Piscopia in 1678, fifty-four years prior. She was by then popularly known as Bolognese Minerva.[26][22] On 29 October 1732, the Senate and the University of Bologna granted Bassi's candidature, and in December she was appointed professor of natural philosophy to teach physics.[27][28] She became the first salaried woman lecturer in the world,[29] thus beginning her academic career. She was also the first woman member of any scientific establishment, when she was elected to the Academy of Sciences of the Institute of Bologna in 1732.[30][31] Bassi became the most important populariser of Newtonian mechanics in Italy.[32]
In 1971, the Graecist Benedetto Marzullo in company with Umberto Eco, Renato Barilli, Adelio Ferrero. instituted within the Faculty of Letters and Arts the DAMS (acronym of discipline delle arti, della musica e dello spettacolo, "Dicipline of Arts, Musics and Performance"). It was the first degree course of this type to be opened in Italy. Between December 26, 1982, and November 29, 1983, there occurred the DAMS murders (in Italian: Delitti del DAMS), dealing with four victims who were students or professors of the DAMS: Angelo Fabbri (a brilliant student of Umberto Eco), Liviana Rossi, the dancer Francesca Alinovi (who was stabbed for 47 times), and Leonarda Polvani.[33][34]
Organization
Area above Bologna's old city centre
Interior view of the Porticum and Loggia of its oldest College, the Royal Spanish College
Higher education processes are being harmonised across the European Community. Nowadays the university offers 101 different "Laurea" or "Laurea breve" first-level degrees (three years of courses), followed by 108 "Laurea specialistica" or "Laurea magistrale" second-level degrees (two years). However 11 other courses have maintained the previous rules of "Laurea specialistica a ciclo unico" or "Laurea magistrale a ciclo unico", with only one cycle of study of five years, except for medicine and dentistry, which require six years of courses. After the "Laurea" one may attain first-level Master (one-year diploma, similar to a postgraduate diploma). After second-level degrees are attained, one may proceed to second-level Master, specialisation schools (residency) or research doctorates (PhD).
The 11 Schools (which replace the existing 23 faculties) are:
School of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine
School of Economics, Management and Statistics
School of Engineering and Architecture
School of Foreign Languages and Literature, Interpreting and Translation
School of Law
School of Arts, Humanities, and Cultural Heritage
School of Medicine and Surgery
School of Pharmacy, Biotechnologies and Sport Sciences
School of Political Sciences
School of Psychology and Education Sciences
School of Sciences
The university is structured in 33 departments[35] (66 until 2012), organized by homogeneous research domains that integrate activities related to one or more faculty. A new department of Latin history was added in 2015.
The 33 departments are:
Architecture - DA
Cultural Heritage - DBC
Chemistry "Giacomo Ciamician" - CHIM
Industrial Chemistry "Toso Montanari" - CHIMIND
Arts - DARvipem
Pharmacy and Biotechnology - FaBiT
Classical Philology and Italian Studies - FICLIT
Philosophy and Communication Studies - FILCOM
Physics and Astronomy - DIFA
Computer Science and Engineering - DISI
Civil, Chemical, Environmental, and Materials Engineering - DICAM
Electrical, Electronic, and Information Engineering "Guglielmo Marconi" - DEI
Industrial Engineering - DIN
Interpreting and Translation - DIT
Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures - LILEC
Mathematics - MAT
Experimental Medicine, Diagnostic Medicine and Specialty Medicine - DIMES
Psychology - PSI
Agricultural Sciences - DipSA
Management - DiSA
Biological, Geological, and Environmental Sciences - BiGeA
Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences - DIBINEM
Education Studies "Giovanni Maria Bertin" - EDU
Agricultural and Food Sciences - DISTAL
Economics - DSE
Legal Studies - DSG
Medical and Surgical Sciences - DIMEC
Veterinary Medical Sciences - DIMEVET
Department for Life Quality Studies - QUVI
Political and Social Sciences - SPS
Statistical Sciences "Paolo Fortunati" - STAT
Sociology and Business Law - SDE
History and Cultures - DiSCi
Affiliates and other institutions
Il Mulino
In the early 1950s, some students of the University of Bologna were among the founders of the review "il Mulino". On 25 April 1951 the first issue of the review was published in Bologna.[36] In a short time, "il Mulino" became one of the most interesting reference points in Italy for the political and cultural debate and established important editorial relationships in Italy and abroad. Editorial activities evolved along with the review. In 1954, the il Mulino publishing house (It. Società editrice il Mulino) was founded, which today represents one of the most relevant Italian publishers. In addition to this were initiated research projects (focusing mostly on the educational institutions and the political system in Italy), that eventually led, in 1964, to the establishment of the Istituto Carlo Cattaneo.
Collegio Superiore
The Collegio Superiore is an excellence institution inside the University of Bologna, aimed at promoting students' merit through dedicated learning programmes.
The institution was founded in 1998 as Collegio d'Eccellenza. Together with the Institute for Advanced Study it is part of the Institute for Higher Study.
The Collegio Superiore offers an additional educational path to students enrolled in a degree programme at the University of Bologna, providing specialized courses as part of an interdisciplinary framework.
All students of the Collegio Superiore are granted a full-ride scholarship and additional benefits such as the assistance of a personal tutor and free accommodation at the Residence for Higher Study. In order to remain members of the Collegio Superiore students are required to maintain high marks in both their degree programme and the additional courses.
Beatrice Fraboni, professor of Physics of Matter, has been head of Collegio Superiore since 2019.[37]
Notable people
Pope Alexander VI
Petrarch
Carlo Goldoni
Guglielmo Marconi
Alumni
Adone Zoli, former Prime Minister of Italy.
Cardinal Alberto Bolognetti
Pope Alexander VI[38]
Álvaro de Figueroa, former Prime Minister of Spain .
Anna M. Borghi, Italian cognitive psychologist
Augusto Righi, pioneer in the study of electromagnetism[39][40]
Carlo Goldoni,[41] Italian playwright
Carlo Rovelli, Italian theoretical physicist
Carlo Severini[42]
Saint Charles Borromeo, archbishop of Milan[43]
Corrado Gini, Italian statistician, demographer and sociologist who developed the Gini coefficient/ratio.
Dante Alighieri,[44] Italian poet, writer and philosopher
Daria de Pretis, Italian jurist, Constitutional Judge of the Constitutional Court of Italy.
Diego Della Valle, chairman of the Italian leather goods company Tod's
Enzo Ferrari, Italian racing driver, engineer and entrepreneur
Erasmus of Rotterdam[45]
Fabrizio Zilibotti, Italian economist and Professor of International and Development Economics at Yale University.
Fawziya Abikar Nur, Minister for Health and Social Care - Somalia.
Gabriele Paleotti[46]
Gasparo Tagliacozzi, pioneer of plastic and reconstructive surgery[47][48][49]
Giacomo Matteotti[50][51]
Giovanni Pascoli[52][53]
Pope Gregory XIII (Ugo Boncompagni);[54][55]
Pope Gregory XV[56]
Gregorio Ricci-Curbastro, Italian mathematician and the inventor of tensor calculus.
Guglielmo Marconi,[57][58] Italian inventor and radio pioneer
Henry of Susa (Hostiensis);[59]
Pope Innocent IX[60]
Irnerius, founder of the School of Glossators[61]
Joaquín Chapaprieta, former Prime Minister of Spain .
Juan Fernando López Aguilar, former Minister of Justice - Spain .
Julius Caesar Aranzi, the pioneer human anatomists and surgeons.
Laura Bassi, the world's first woman to earn a university chair in a scientific field of studies[62][63]
Lazzaro Spallanzani,[64] Italian priest, biologist and physiologist
Leon Battista Alberti;[65]
Luigi Galvani;[66][67][68]
Manuel Olivencia, lawyer and academic;[69]
Mauro Moretti, former CEO and general manager of Leonardo S.p.A.
Marcello Malpighi;[70][71]
Michelangelo Antonioni;[72][73][74]
Nicolaus Copernicus, formulator of the heliocentric universal model;[75][76]
Cardinal Paolo Burali d'Arezzo;[77]
Paracelsus, founder of the discipline of toxicology;[78]
Patrizio Bianchi, Minister of Public Education in the Draghi Cabinet
Petrarch;[79]
Pico della Mirandola;[80][81]
Pier Luigi Nervi, Italian Structural engineer and architect of UNESCO Headquarters Paris (1950).
Pier Paolo Pasolini;[82][83]
Pierluigi Collina, Chairman of the FIFA referees committee
Piero Gnudi, Minister of Tourism and Sports in the Monti cabinet.
Pietro Mengoli;[84]
Remo Gaspari, Minister of Relationships with the Parliament and Minister of Public Function in the Bettino Craxi and Giulio Andreotti Cabinet.
Stefano Domenicali, CEO of Formula One Group, former CEO of Italian sports car manufacturer Automobili Lamborghini S.p.A. and Team Principal of Formula One team Scuderia Ferrari.
Archbishop Thomas Becket;[85]
Tommaso Perelli, Italian astronomer
Torquato Tasso;[86]
Ulisse Aldrovandi;[87][88]
Umberto Eco, Italian semiotician, philosopher and writer
Mihalj Šilobod Bolšić (1724–1787), Roman Catholic priest, mathematician, writer, and musical theorist primarily known for writing the first Croatian arithmetic textbook Arithmatika Horvatzka (published in Zagreb, 1758)
Faculty and staff
Notable former faculty include:[89]
11th century
Irnerius
12th century
Bulgarus
Gratian
Martinus Gosia
Patriarch Heraclius of Jerusalem
William of Tyre
13th century
Benvenutus Scotivoli
Bettisia Gozzadini
Guido Guinizelli
Henry of Susa (Hostiensis)
Paul, Dominican martyr
Sylvester Gozzolini
William of Saliceto
14th century
Manuel Chrysoloras
Giovanni de' Marignolli
Francesco Petrarca (also known as Petrarch)
Coluccio Salutati
15th century
Leon Battista Alberti
Nicolaus Copernicus
Lippo Bartolomeo Dardi
Yuriy Drohobych (also known as Georgius de Drohobycz)
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola
16th century
Ulisse Aldrovandi
Giovanni Antonio Magini
Camillo Baldi
Girolamo Cardano
Ignazio Danti
Giovanni Della Casa
Girolamo Maggi
Virgilio Malvezzi
Paracelsus
17th century
Giovanni Cassini
Niall Ó Glacáin
Marcello Malpighi
Pietro Mengoli
Lodovico Scapinelli
18th century
Laura Bassi
Luigi Galvani
Maria Gaetana Agnesi
Carlo Goldoni
19th century
Augusto Righi
Giacomo Ciamician
Giosuè Carducci
Giovanni Pascoli
Pellegrino Rossi
Francesco Selmi
20th century
Umberto Eco
Beppo Levi
Guglielmo Marconi
Pier Paolo Pasolini
Romano Prodi
21st century
Hamida Barmaki
Özalp Babaoğlu
Gabriella Campadelli-Fiume
Pier Cesare Bori
Augusto Barbera
Gualtiero Calboli[90]
Ivano Dionigi
Luciano Floridi
Rankings and reputation
University rankings
Global – Overall
ARWU World[91]
201-300 (2023)
CWUR World[92]
185 (2023)
CWTS World[93]
120 (2023)
QS World[94]
=154 (2024)
THE World[95]
=155 (2024)
USNWR Global[96]
122 (2022-23)
The 2022 QS World University Rankings ranked the University of Bologna 166th in the world and 71st (first in Italy) with reference to academic reputation. In another measurement by the same company, it was positioned among the world's top 100 universities for graduate employability (84th).[97]
In the 2021 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, it claimed the 167th place globally.[98] In the THE Impact Rankings of the same year, measuring the universities' commitment to sustainable development in compliance with the UN 2030 Agenda, Bologna took first place in Europe and sixth in the world.[99]
Nationally, in 2020 Bologna topped Italy's main ranking of large public universities (> 40,000 students) for the eleventh year in a row, produced by the Italian Center for Social Investment Studies.[100]
Points of interest
Orto Botanico dell'Università di Bologna
See also
Bologna
Bologna declaration
Bologna process
Coimbra Group (a network of leading European universities)
Collegio Superiore di Bologna (school of excellence of the University of Bologna)
List of Italian universities
List of medieval universities
Medieval university
Palazzo Poggi
Utrecht Network
References
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↑ 2.02.12.2"The University today: numbers and innovation"
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↑A University Built by the Invisible Hand, by Roderick T. Long. This article was published in the Spring 1994 issue of Formulations, by the Free Nation Foundation.
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↑Frize, Monique (2013), "Famous Women in Science in Laura Bassi's Epoch" (in en), Laura Bassi and Science in 18th Century Europe (Springer Berlin Heidelberg): pp. 137–162, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-38685-5_10, ISBN 978-3-642-38684-8
↑Monique Frize, Laura Bassi and Science in 18th Century Europe: The Extraordinary Life and Role of Italy's Pioneering Female Professor, Springer, p. 174.
↑Findlen, Paula (2013-08-29). "Laura Bassi and the city of learning" (in en-GB). https://physicsworld.com/a/laura-bassi-and-the-city-of-learning/.
↑Frize, Monique (2013). "Epilogue" (in en). Laura Bassi and Science in 18th Century Europe. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg. pp. 173–181. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-38685-5. ISBN 978-3-642-38684-8. https://cds.cern.ch/record/1566217.
↑"Laura Bassi | Italian scientist" (in en). https://www.britannica.com/biography/Laura-Bassi.
↑Findlen, Paula (1993). "Science as a career in Enlightenment Italy: The strategies of Laura Bassi" (in en). Isis84 (3): 441–469. doi:10.1086/356547.
↑TG2 Dossier Storie (in Italian). July 3, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2021.CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) (at minute 9:00)
↑Lea Polvani e i delitti del DAMS. YouTube (in Italian). Radio Caffè Criminale. Archived from the original on February 3, 2021.CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
↑List of the Departments of the University of Bologna
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↑Brundage, James A. (2014-06-11). Medieval Canon Law. Routledge. ISBN 9781317895343. https://books.google.com/books?id=THjJAwAAQBAJ&q=henry+of+susa+bologna&pg=PA58.
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↑"Marcello Malpighi - University of Bologna". https://www.unibo.it/en/university/who-we-are/our-history/famous-people-guests-illustrious-students/marcello-malpighi-1.
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↑Rutkowski, Boleslaw; Muszytowski, Marek; Ostrowski, Janusz (May 2011). "Nicolaus Copernicus: not only a great astronomer but also a physician". Journal of Nephrology24 Suppl 17 (Suppl. 17): S25–32. doi:10.5301/JN.2011.6490. ISSN 1724-6059. PMID 21614776.
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↑Copenhaver, Brian (2016), Zalta, Edward N., ed., Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (Fall 2016 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2016/entries/pico-della-mirandola/, retrieved 2019-04-26
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Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University of Bologna. Read more