University of Erfurt
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The University of Erfurt is one of the oldest universities in Germany.
| University of Erfurt | |
|---|---|
| President: | Dr. Wolfgang Bergsdorf |
| Year founded: | 1392 (refounded 1994) |
| Town, State: | Erfurt, (Thuringia) |
| No. of courses: | 30 |
| No. of faculties: | 4 |
| Matriculated students: | 4,003 (winter term 2004/2005) |
| Proportion of women: | over 70% |
| Staff: | 528 |
| Of whom scientific staff : | |
| Address: | Nordhäuser Str. 63 99089 Erfurt |
| Website: | www.uni-erfurt.de |
Contents |
[edit] History
The University of Erfurt was founded in 1392 as the third university in the territory which is now Germany; for some time it was the largest university in the country. When the town of Erfurt became part of Prussia in 1816 the university was closed.
In December 1993 the Thuringian state parliament voted to reestablish the university, at the same time as dissolving the nearby Suhl university which had been opened only in 1985. The university was officially refounded on january 1 1994. Lectures began in the winter term from 1999 to 2000. Shortly afterwards, the rector who had overseen the founding, Peter Glotz, a politician in the SPD party, left the university. The position was taken over by Wolfgang Bergsdorf, a friend of Bernhard Vogel, Thuringia's Minister-president.
In 2001, the Erfurt University of Pedagogy (Pädagogische Hochschule Erfurt) became part of the university. This had been founded in 1969 and had trained teachers since 1990.
On January 1 2003 a fourth faculty was added to the university in the form of the Catholic Theological Faculty, previously the Erfurt Philosophical and Theological Centre, Philosophisch-Theologisches Studium Erfurt.
In 2003 a chronic lack of financing meant that there were many redundancies and that vacancies were left unfilled: this led to student protests all over Thuringia. The university management and committees were reformed and the situation was stabilised.
Institutions of particular note are the Max Weber College for Cultural and Social Sciences and the Erfurt School of Public Policy (ESPP), which is partly financed by tuition fees. The Erfurt-Gotha Research Library houses the famous Amploniana collection of scripts from the Middle Ages.
[edit] University maxim
The University of Erfurt is thought of as a reformist university. Martin Luther once attended it in 1502, receiving his bachelor's degree. Its main focuses are multidisciplinarity, internationality and a strong mentoring system. All new courses lead to a modern Bachelor of Arts or Master's degree rather than the traditional German Diplom. This makes Erfurt one of the first German universities to completely implement the Bologna process.
An especially important faculty is that of Staatswissenschaften (Government Studies), the only one in Germany to offer integrated courses in economics, social sciences and law.
[edit] Courses
[edit] Diplom courses
- Catholic Theology
- Pedagogy (now closed)
[edit] B.A. and Masters courses
- Science of history
- Communication studies
- Literature
- Philosophy
- Religious studies
- Linguistics
- English language and literature
- German language and literature
- French language and literature
- Slavic languages and literature
- Law
- Social Sciences
- Economics
- Master of Public Policy
- Pedagogy
- Psychology of teaching and training
- Movement pedagogy
- Evangelic religious studies
- Art
- Mathematics for primary and secondary school teachers
- Music teaching
- Pedagogy of childhood
- Catholic religious studies
- Education management
- Psychology
- Primary school teaching
- Secondary school teaching for the Regelschule
[edit] Projects
In the summer semester of 2003, a project group was formed at the university to take part in the Model United Nations (MUN) in New York City in April 2004.

