University of Urbino

University of Urbino Carlo Bo
Università degli Studi di Urbino Carlo Bo
Logo of the University of Urbino
Latin: Studiorum Universitas Publica Urbinatensis[1]
Former name
Collegio dei Dottori di Urbino (1506)
Pubblico Studio di Urbino (1576)
Studio generale di Urbino (1671)
Università di Urbino (1671)
Libera Università Provinciale di Urbino (1862)
Università Libera di Urbino (1923)[2]
Motto
Urbino città campus
Motto in English
Urbino: a city campus
TypePublic
Established1506; 519 years ago (1506)
RectorGiorgio Calcagnini
Students13,876[3][4]
Undergraduates11,646[4][5]
Postgraduates2,230[4]
n/a
Location, ,
Italy
CampusWhole town, UNESCO World Heritage Site
AffiliationsUNIMED
Websitewww.uniurb.it

The University of Urbino Carlo Bo (Italian: Università degli Studi di Urbino Carlo Bo, UniUrb) is an Italian university located in Urbino, in the region of Marche, in north-eastern central Italy. The main campus occupies numerous buildings throughout the historic Urbino town center and the nearby countryside, with a branch campus in Fano. The university's enrollment in 2019 was 11,646 undergraduate students and 2,230 graduate students, with 858 full-time or part-time instructional and research faculty across various departments.[6] The University of Urbino is renowned for teaching and research in sports science, humanities, biology and computer science. Until 2006 it was a free university.[7]

History

[edit]

The University of Urbino was founded 519 years ago in 1506 by Guidobaldo da Montefeltro, the Duke of Urbino. One year later, the magistracy of Urbino was granted power to award doctorates in canon and civil law by papal bull from Pope Julius II.

Starting in the 1960s, under the guidance of Carlo Bo as Rector, the university succeeded in buying up numerous derelict buildings in the historic center of Urbino. The numerous buildings which have since been restored are used by the university as department centers, classrooms, and libraries.[8] It was under the long-lasting rectorship of professor Carlo Bo, distinguished humanist and Senator for Life, that the university enjoyed unprecedented growth in size and prestige, prompting the former president of the European Commission, Roy Jenkins, to state that "the University of Urbino is an incisive presence in contemporary thought, contributing in original ways to the cultural and intellectual life of Europe".[9] This was also the period in which architect Giancarlo De Carlo designed and built the University Halls of Residence [10] and redesigned and modernized several of the university's other buildings. In 2003, the university was named after Carlo Bo, after serving as rector for fifty-four years from 1947 until his death in 2001.

Organization

[edit]
Faculty of Education, designed by Giancarlo De Carlo. Photo by Paolo Monti, 1982.

Departments

[edit]

Until 2013 the university was divided into 11 faculties:

Following the approval of the so-called Gelmini reform in 2009, and starting from the 2013/2014 academic year, the faculty-based organisation was replaced by a department-based structure. It is currently composed of the following departments and institutes:

  • Department of Pure and Applied Sciences (DISPeA)
  • Department of Communication Sciences, Humanities and International Studies. Cultures, Languages, Literatures, Arts, Media (DISCUI)
  • Department of Economics, Society, Politics (DESP)
  • Department of Humanities (DISTUM)
  • Department of Law (DIGIUR)
  • Department of Biomolecular Sciences (DISB)
  • Superior Institute of Religious Sciences 'Italo Mancini' (ISSR)
  • Institute of Journalism (Ifg)

Ranking

[edit]
University rankings
Global – Overall
THE World[11]501-600 (2018)

Libraries

[edit]

The University offers to students and staff a number of libraries making up the University Library System, such as the Library for Modern and Contemporary European Literature from the charitable 'Carlo and Marise Bo' foundation.

Colleges

[edit]

The University does not have its own residence halls. However, a number of colleges and dormitories for University of Urbino students are owned and managed by the regional office for the right to academic education. They include four colleges (Vela, Tridente, Aquilone and Serpentine) and one female dormitory (Casa Studentessa) in Urbino, one college located in the scientific campus between Urbino and Fermignano, and a number of rented private accommodation blocks in Pesaro and Fano, paid for by the regional government.

Prizes

[edit]

The Commandino Medal is awarded by the University every year in recognition of extraordinary contributions in the history of science.[12]

The commission charged with awarding the Commandino medal is appointed by the Director of the International Study Center Urbino and Perspective. Scientific humanism from Piero and Leonardo to the Galilean revolution and the candidates are chosen according to their contributions to the history of science. It has been awarded annually since 2014, with no award being made in 2019. The 2021 and 2022 medals were awarded in 2022 and 2023. Awardees: Reviel Netz (Israel, 2014), William René Shea [fr] (Canada, 2015), Enrico Gamba (Italy, 2016), Roger Penrose (UK, 2017), Jürgen Renn (Germany, 2018), Monica Ugaglia (Italy, 2020), Victor Pambuccian (Romania, 2021), Karine Chemla (France, 2022).

The Dal Monte Medal is awarded by the University every year in recognition of contributions in the history of science by young researchers. It was inaugurated in 2022. Awardees: Vincenzo de Risi (Italy, 2022), Flavia Marcacci (Italy, 2023).

Notable people

[edit]

Alumni

[edit]

Faculty and staff

[edit]

19th century

[edit]

20th century

[edit]

21st century

[edit]

Points of interest

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Search". Internet Archive.
  2. ^ Ulrico Agnati, 1999. Per la storia romana della provincia di Pesaro e Urbino. Rome : L'erma di Bretschneider
  3. ^ Doctoral students not included.
  4. ^ a b c See http://anagrafe.miur.it/.
  5. ^ Of which 9,134 students in Laurea programmes and 2,512 in Laura magistrale a ciclo unico (5-6-year single-cycle degree) programmes.
  6. ^ "Persone".
  7. ^ "Statizzazione dell'Universita' non statale di Urbino".
  8. ^ "Urbino ha un nuovo "luogo dell'anima", inaugurata la Biblioteca di San Girolamo". Vivere Urbino (in Italian). Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  9. ^ "Orientation Booklet" (PDF). colfa.utsa.edu.
  10. ^ "University College in Colle dei Cappuccini – Atlante architettura contemporanea".
  11. ^ World University Rankings 2018
  12. ^ "Commandino Medal".
[edit]

43°43′19″N 12°38′13″E / 43.72194°N 12.63694°E / 43.72194; 12.63694