University of Siena
Università degli Studi di Siena | |
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The University of Siena (Italian: Università degli Studi di Siena, abbreviation: UNISI) in Siena, Tuscany, is the first publicly funded university as well as one of the oldest in Italy. Originally called Studium Senese, the institution was founded in 1240. It had around 16,000 students in 2022,[1] which is nearly one-third of Siena's total population of around 53,000. Today, the University of Siena is best known for its schools of law, medicine, and economics and management.
History
The early studium
The School of Humanities and Philosophy
On December 26, 1240,
One of the most notable maestri of the School of Medicine was
In 1321, the studium was able to attract a larger number or pupils due to a mass exodus from the prestigious University of Bologna when one of its students was sentenced to death by Bologna's magistrates for supposedly kidnapping a young woman. Partly at the instigation of their law lecturer Guglielmo Tolomei, the student body there unleashed a great protest at the Bolognese authority and Siena, supported by generous funding from the local commune, was able to accommodate the students resigning from the Studium Bolognese.
The university under changing states
The studium of Siena was eventually promoted to the status of "Studium Generale" by Charles IV, shortly after his coronation as Holy Roman Emperor in 1355.[5] This both placed the teachers and students under the safeguard of the imperial authority (protecting them from the local magistracy) and also meant that the licences (licentiae docendi) granted by the university were licences ubique docendi. These licences entitled the person receiving them to teach throughout Christendom.[6]
The Casa della Sapienza was built in the early 15th century as a center combining classrooms and housing for those enrolled in the Studium. It had been proposed by bishop Mormille in 1392, was completed twenty years later, and its first occupants took up residence in 1416. Room and board in 1416 cost fifty gold florins for a semester.[2]
By the mid-14th century, Siena had declined as a power in
In 1737, the Medici line became extinct and the rule of Tuscany passed to the French House of Lorraine. In this period, the Tuscan economist Sallustio Bandini, seemingly determined to "improve the intellectual stimulation of his native Siena" solicited scholarships from rich patrons for the university and also set up a large library, which he eventually bequeathed to the university.[7]
In 1808, when the Napoleonic forces occupied Tuscany, they eliminated the Studium Senese and the doors of the University were not opened again until after the defeat of Napoleon and the restoration of Ferdinand III as the Grand Duke of Tuscany.[2]
The university in the Risorgimento
During the
After the
The university in modern Italy
In 1892, the Minister of Public Education,
The 20th century witnessed the growth of the University of Siena, with the student population escalating from four hundred between the wars to more than 15,000 in the last few years.[1][2]
During the start of the academic year, on November 7, 1990 the Sienese academy celebrated its 750th anniversary.
Notable students, alumni and faculty
- John XXI, Professor of Medicine
- Cino da Pistoia (1270–1336/37), Professor of Law
- Antonio de Venafro (1459–1530), advisor to Pandolfo Petrucci, Ruler of the Republic of Siena
- Julius III, studied law at Siena
- Francesco Accarigi (c. 1557–1622), Professor of Civil Law
- Fabio Chigi, Pope Alexander VII
- Domenico Barduzzi (1847-1929), dermatologist and hydrologist
- Arrigo Solmi (1873-1944), Minister of Justice in the cabinet of Benito Mussolini
- Virginia Angiola Borrino (1880–1965), Professor of Medicine and the first woman to serve as head of a University Pediatric Ward in Italy[8][9]
- Piero Calamandrei (1889–1956), Professor at the Law school in Siena
- Carlo Rosselli (1899–1937), political leader, journalist, historian and anti-fascist activist
- Richard M. Goodwin (1913–1996), Professor, mathematician and economist
- Norberto Bobbio (1909–2004), Professor of Philosophy
- Frank Hahn (1925–2013), Professor of Economics, Director of the PhD program of the Economics Department
- Mauro Barni (1927-2017), Professor of Bioethics, Rector and Mayor of Siena
- Jean Blondel (born 1929), Professor of comparative politics
- Luigi Berlinguer (born 1932), Professor of Law, Rector and Minister of Education
- Samuel Bowles (born 1939), American economist, professor of Economics
- Steven Lukes (born 1941), British sociologist
- Antonio Tabucchi (1943–2012), Italian writer, Professor of Portuguese language and literature
- Paul Ginsborg (born 1945), British historian, Professor of Contemporary History
- Riccardo Francovich (1946-2007), archaeologist and professor of Medieval archaeology
- Desiderio Passali (born 1947), director of the ENT department and professor of otolaryngology
- Silvana Sciarra (born 1948), current President of the Constitutional Court of Italy
- Rino Rappuoli (born 1952), Italian Biologist
- Carlo Cottarelli (born 1954), economist and former director of the International Monetary Fund
- Gianna Nannini (born 1954), Italian pop singer
- Italian Archaeological School of Athens
- Yusuf Garaad Omar (born 1960), journalist and politician
- Antonio Giordano (born 1962), Professor of Pathology
- Carlo Bellieni (born 1962), associate professor of Pediatrics, bioethicist
- Domenico Prattichizzo (born 1965), Professor of Robotics and Automation
- Luigi Marattin (born 1979), politician and economist
Organization
Since 2012, after the general reform of Italian Universities ("Gelmini Act"), the University is composed of fourteen departments, grouped in four areas:
- Biomedical and Medical Sciences
- Department of Medical Biotechnologies
- Department of Molecular and Developmental Medicine
- Department of Medicine, Surgery and Neuroscience
- Economics, Law and Political Sciences
- Department of Economics and Statistics
- Department of Law
- Department of International Sciences
- Department of Business and Law
- Experimental Sciences
- Department of Biotechnology, Chemistry and Pharmacy
- Department of Information Engineering and Mathematics
- Department of Life Sciences
- Department of Physical Sciences, Earth and Environment
- Literature, History, Philosophy and the Arts
- Department of Philology and Literary Criticism
- Department of Social, Political and Cognitive Sciences
- Department of History and Cultural Heritage
Each department offers graduate and undergraduate courses.
Since 2014 the Department of Economics and Statistics and the Department of Business and Law merged their undergraduate and graduate courses into the School of Economics and Management (SEM).
Formerly, the University was composed of nine schools:
- The School of Economics
- The School of Engineering
- The School of Humanities and Philosophy
- The School of Humanities and Philosophy – Arezzo
- The School of Jurisprudence
- The School of Mathematical, Physical and Natural Sciences
- The School of Medicine and Surgery
- The School of Pharmacy
- The School of Political Science
This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information. (January 2021) |
Siena's campus is the city. The academy lives as an integral part of the urban fabric in both space and time. Thus there is an uneasy equilibrium between city and university, where 15,600 students live among the 53,000 Sienese. While the Sienese are proud of their native traditions, the more polyglot university prides itself on diversity, with which as the historian Guicciardini would put it, with an ambiguity possibly ironic, non havvi genio – there is no genius.
Recently, the University has returned historical buildings to the city, which are being made into apartments or used by the contradas. At the same time, it is thanks to the intervention of the University that many buildings which risked falling into ruin were saved, making institutions of study out of a part of the city patrimony that might have otherwise been lost. The Faculties of Engineering and Literature, for example, have found space for their departments in the large rooms of what was once the San Niccolò Psychiatric Hospital. The same holds true for the transformation of the former Convent of Santa Chiara into the first collegiate residence in Italy, reserved for those working towards a European postgraduate degree. The church of San Vigilio serves as university chapel.
New university buildings have even been built in the city centre such as the one that houses the Faculty of
Degree Courses
For the academic year 2022-23 the following degree courses are provided (medium of instruction in parentheses)
- Biotechnologies, Medicine, Dentistry, Health Professions
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Audioprothesic techniques (in Italian)
- Biomedical laboratory techniques (in Italian)
- Biotechnologies (in Italian)
- Cardiocirculatory and cardiovascular perfusion techniques (in Italian)
- Dental hygiene (in Italian)
- Dietistic (in Italian)
- Environment and the workplace prevention techniques (in Italian)
- Imaging and radiotherapy techniques (in Italian)
- Midwifery (in Italian)
- Nursing (in Italian)
- Orthoptic and ophthalmologic assistance (in Italian)
- Physiotherapy (in Italian)
- Speech and language therapy (in Italian)
- Graduate (2 years)
- Biotechnologies of human reproduction (in English)
- Genetic counsellors (in English)
- Health professions of rehabilitation sciences (in Italian)
- Medical biotechnologies (in English)
- Nursing and midwifery sciences (in Italian)
- Single cycle (6 years)
- Dentistry and dental prosthodontics (in English)
- Medicine and surgery (in Italian)
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Economics, Law, Political Sciences, Social Sciences
- Pre-university (1 year)
- Foundation Course of the School of Economics and Management (in English)
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Communication sciences (in Italian)
- Economics and banking (in Italian)
- Economics and business (in Italian)
- Economics and management (in English)
- Legal services (in Italian)
- Political sciences (in Italian)
- Social work (in Italian)
- Graduate (2 years)
- Communication strategies and techniques (in Italian)
- Economics (in English)
- Economics and management of financial institutions (in Italian)
- Economics for the environment and sustainability (in Italian)
- Finance (in English)
- International accounting and management (in English)
- International studies (in Italian and English)
- Language and mind: linguistics and cognitive studies (in English)
- Management and governance (in Italian)
- Public and cultural diplomacy (in English)
- Sciences of administrations (in Italian)
- Social sustainability and welfare management (in Italian)
- Statistics for sample surveys (in Italian)
- Single cycle (5 years)
- Law (in Italian)
- Pre-university (1 year)
- Environmental Sciences, Biology, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Geology
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Agribusiness (in Italian)
- Biological sciences (in Italian)
- Chemical sciences (in Italian)
- Geological sciences (in Italian)
- Natural and environmental sciences (in Italian)
- Graduate (2 years)
- Biodiversity, conservation and environmental quality (in English)
- Biology (in Italian and English)
- Chemistry (in English)
- Ecotoxicology and environmental sustainability(in Italian)
- Geological sciences and technologies (in Italian)
- Health biology (in Italian)
- Sustainable industrial pharmaceutical biotechnology (in English)
- Single cycle (5 years)
- Pharmaceutical chemistry and technology (in Italian)
- Pharmacy (in Italian)
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Physics, Engineering, Mathematics
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Computer and information engineering (in Italian)
- Engineering management (in Italian)
- Mathematics (in Italian)
- Physics and advanced technologies (in Italian)
- Graduate (2 years)
- Applied mathematics (in English)
- Artificial intelligence and automation engineering (in English)
- Electronics and communications engineering (in English)
- Engineering management (in English)
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Cultural Heritage, Education, Literature, Languages, History, Philosophy
- Undergraduate (3 years)
- Education (in Italian)
- History and cultural heritage (in Italian)
- Languages for intercultural and business communication (in Italian)
- Studies in literature and philosophy (in Italian)
- Graduate (2 years)
- Anthropology and visual studies (in Italian)
- Archaeology (in Italian)
- Classics (in Italian)
- Education sciences and educational consulting for organizations (in Italian)
- History and philosophy (in Italian)
- History of art (in Italian)
- Italian studies (in Italian)
- Language and mind: linguistics and cognitive studies (in English)
- Undergraduate (3 years)
Points of interest
- Orto Botanico dell'Università di Siena, the university's botanical garden
See also
- Coimbra Group (a network of leading European universities)
- List of medieval universities
- List of Italian universities
- Siena
- WebCrow
Notes and references
- ^ a b "Ministero dell'Università e della Ricerca, Portale dei dati dell'istruzione superiore". Retrieved 2023-04-06.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Short Story of University of Siena: 760 years of history". Università degli Studi di Siena. Archived from the original on 2008-03-09. Retrieved 2008-04-05.
- ^ de Ridder-Symoens, Universities in the Middle Ages. p93
- ^ Waley, Siena and the Sienese in the thirteenth century. p159
- ^ de Ridder-Symoens, Universities in the Middle Ages. p.97
- ^ de Ridder-Symoens, Universities in the Middle Ages. p36
- ^ Wahnbaeck, Luxury and public happiness. p96
- ^ D'Ajutolo, Luisa Longhena; Nasi, Bianca Teglio (2021). "Storia Dell'Associazione Italiana Donne Medico (AIDM) (1921 - 2001)" [History of the Italian Association of Medical Women (AIDM) (1921 - 2001)] (PDF). donnemedico.org. Italian Association of Medical Women. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
- ISBN 978-88-203-7934-6.
External links
- University of Siena Website (in Italian and English)
- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "University of Siena". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Bibliography
- de Ridder-Symoens, Hilde: ISBN 0-521-54113-1
- Waley, Daniel: Siena and the Sienese in the thirteenth century. Cambridge University Press, 1991 ISBN 0-521-40312-X
- Wahnbaeck, Till: Luxury and Public Happiness: Political Economy in the Italian Enlightenment Oxford University Press, 2004 ISBN 0-19-926983-1