Warsaw University of Life Sciences

Coordinates: 52°9′42″N 21°2′53″E / 52.16167°N 21.04806°E / 52.16167; 21.04806
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Warsaw University of Life Sciences – SGGW (WULS-SGGW)
Szkoła Główna Gospodarstwa Wiejskiego (SGGW)
COST, JEAN MONET, FAIR, TEMPUS
Websitewww.sggw.pl
University rankings
Regional – Overall
QS Emerging Europe and Central Asia[3]91 (2022)

The Warsaw University of Life Sciences (

Life Sciences
. Its Agriculture and Forestry and Veterinary Medicine have been ranked as top 41 and 51-70 in the world on QS top university ranking 2023.

History

On 23 September 1816 the School of Agronomy was founded at

Natolin were acquired in 1956 and used for development. In 1973 the faculties of agricultural technology and human nutrition were established. The Rector of the university has an office in the historic palace of Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz
, now known as "the rector's palace."

Campus

Rectorate of SGGW in the Palace of Krasiński
University campus
Limba Dormitory

The campus is located is the southernmost district of Warsaw, Ursynów. The campus has a historic part, with an 18th century palace, and a contemporary part where most of the faculty buildings and dormitories are situated. On 70-hectare main campus are located 12 dormitories, a modern library, a sports centre (with tennis courts, a sports hall and a swimming pool) a language centre, a veterinary clinic.[4]

Faculties[5]

  1. Agriculture and Ecology
  2. Animal Breeding, Bioengineering and Conservation
  3. Applied Informatics and Mathematics
  4. Biology and Biotechnology
  5. Civil and Environmental Engineering
  6. Economics
  7. Food Technology
  8. Forestry
  9. Horticulture
  10. Human Nutrition
  11. Sociology and Education
  12. Production Engineering
  13. Wood Technology
  14. Veterinary Medicine

Notable staff

Józef Mikułowski-Pomorski
  • Józef Mikułowski-Pomorski (1868–1935), politician, agricultural chemist; Minister of Religious and Public Enlightenment 1922–1923, 1926
Władysław Grabski

Rectors

  1. Józef Mikułowski-Pomorski (1918–1920)
  2. Tadeusz Miłobędzki (1920–1921)
  3. Stefan Biedrzycki (1921–1922)
  4. Wacław Dąbrowski (1922–1923)
  5. Jan Sosnowski (1923–1925)
  6. Zdzisław Ludkiewicz (1925–1926)
  7. Władysław Grabski (1926–1928)
  8. Józef Mikułowski-Pomorski (1928–1929)
  9. Stefan Biedrzycki (1929–1932)
  10. Jan Sosnowski (1932–1933)
  11. Marian Górski (1933–1936)
  12. Jan Miklaszewski (1936–1944)
  13. Franciszek Staff (1944–1947)
  14. Marian Górski (1947–1949)
  15. Antoni Kleszczycki (1949–1955)
  16. Kazimierz Krysiak (1955–1962)
  17. Antoni Kleszczycki (1962–1969)
  18. Zbigniew Muszyński (1969–1975)
  19. Henryk Jasiorowski (1975–1981)
  20. Maria Joanna Radomska (1981–1987)
  21. Wiesław Barej (1987–1990)
  22. Jan Górecki (1990–1996)
  23. Włodzimierz Kluciński (1996–2002)
  24. Tomasz Borecki (2002–2008)
  25. Alojzy Szymański (2008–2016)
  26. Wiesław Bielawski (2016–2020)
  27. Michał Zasada (since 2020)

Notes

  1. ^ Grażyna Majewska (29 May 2017). "Plan rzeczowo-finansowy na 2017 rok" (PDF). BIP SGGW. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  2. ^ Szkoły wyższe i ich finanse w 2018 roku, p. 68
  3. ^ "QS World University Rankings-Emerging Europe & Central Asia". Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  4. ^ "General information about university". sggw.pl. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  5. ^ "FACULTIS WULS-SGGW". Archived from the original on 2019-11-07.
  6. ^ Janusz Skodlarski (2016). Władysław Grabski jako ekonomista (1874–1938). Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego.

See also

52°9′42″N 21°2′53″E / 52.16167°N 21.04806°E / 52.16167; 21.04806