Difference between revisions of "Leipzig University"

From Wikispooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(unstub)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 10: Line 10:
 
|motto=Aus Tradition Grenzen überschreiten - Crossing Boundaries out of Tradition
 
|motto=Aus Tradition Grenzen überschreiten - Crossing Boundaries out of Tradition
 
}}
 
}}
'''Leipzig University''' (''Universität Leipzig''), in [[Leipzig]] in the [[Free State of Saxony]], [[Germany]], is one of the world's oldest [[University|universities]] and the [[List of universities in Germany#Universities by years of existence|second-oldest]] university (by consecutive years of existence) in Germany. The university was founded on 2 December 1409 by [[Frederick I, Elector of Saxony]] and his brother [[William II, Margrave of Meissen]], and originally comprised the four scholastic faculties. Since its inception, the university has engaged in teaching and research for over 600 years without interruption.
+
'''Leipzig University''' (''Universität Leipzig''), in [[Leipzig]] in the [[Saxony|Free State of Saxony]], [[Germany]], is one of the world's oldest [[University|universities]] and the second-oldest university (by consecutive years of existence) in Germany.
  
Famous alumni include [[Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz|Leibniz]], [[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|Goethe]], [[Leopold von Ranke]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], [[Robert Schumann]], [[Richard Wagner]], [[Tycho Brahe]], [[Georgius Agricola]], [[Angela Merkel]] and the nine [[Nobel laureates]] associated with the university.
+
Famous alumni include [[Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz|Leibniz]], [[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|Goethe]], [[Edward Teller]], [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], [[Hans-Dietrich Genscher]], [[Richard Wagner]], [[Tycho Brahe]], [[Georgius Agricola]], [[Angela Merkel]] and the nine [[Nobel laureates]] associated with the university.
 +
 
 +
After the German reunification in 1990-91, 7,000 of the 12,000 employees were laid off by the new (West) German government.<ref name=nach/>
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
Line 18: Line 20:
 
=== Founding and development until 1900 ===
 
=== Founding and development until 1900 ===
 
[[File:Leipzig - Universität.jpg|thumb|Leipzig University main building (1917). It was demolished by the socialist administration in 1968.]]
 
[[File:Leipzig - Universität.jpg|thumb|Leipzig University main building (1917). It was demolished by the socialist administration in 1968.]]
The university was modelled on the [[Charles University in Prague|University of Prague]], from which the German-speaking faculty members withdrew to Leipzig after the [[Jan Hus]] crisis and the [[Decree of Kutná Hora]]. The ''Alma mater Lipsiensis'' opened in 1409, after it had been officially endorsed by [[Pope Alexander V]] in his ''[[Bull of Acknowledgment]]'' on (9 September of that year). Its first rector was [[Johann von Münsterberg]]. From its foundation, the [[Paulinerkirche, Leipzig|Paulinerkirche]] served as the university church. After the [[Protestant Reformation|Reformation]], the church and the monastery buildings were donated to the university in 1544. In order to secure independent and sustainable funding, the university was endowed with the lordship over nine villages east of [[Leipzig]] (university villages). It kept this status for nearly 400 years until land reforms were carried out in the 19th century. During the [[Decline and modernization of the Ottoman Empire|decline]] and [[dissolution of the Ottoman Empire]] in the 19th and first decade of 20th century together with some other German universities Leipzig University turned into one of the centers of higher education for state administrations and elites of newly independent [[Balkan]] states ([[United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia|Romania]], [[Kingdom of Greece|Greece]], [[Principality of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]] and [[Principality of Serbia|Serbia]]) educating over 5,500 students from the region in 1859–1909 period.<ref>Pippidi, Adrei (2010). "The Development of an Administrative Class in South-East Europe". In Mungiu-Pippidi, Alina; Meurs, Wim Van (eds.). Ottomans Into Europeans: State and Institution-building in South Eastern Europe. New York & Chichester: Columbia University Press. pp. 111–134</ref>
+
The university was founded on 2 December 1409 by [[Frederick I, Elector of Saxony]] and his brother [[William II, Margrave of Meissen]], and originally comprised the four scholastic faculties. Since its inception, the university has engaged in teaching and research for over 600 years without interruption.
  
Like many European universities, the University of Leipzig was structured into colleges (''collegia'') responsible for organising accommodation and collegiate lecturing. Among the colleges of Leipzig were the Small College, the Large College, the Red College (also known as the New College), the College of our Lady and the Pauliner-College. There were also private residential halls (''bursen'', see English 'bursaries'). The colleges had jurisdiction over their members. The college structure was abandoned later and today only the names survive.
+
The university was modelled on the [[Charles University in Prague|University of Prague]], from which the German-speaking faculty members withdrew to Leipzig after the [[Jan Hus]] crisis and the [[Decree of Kutná Hora]]. The ''Alma mater Lipsiensis'' opened in 1409, after it had been officially endorsed by [[Pope Alexander V]] in his ''[[Bull of Acknowledgment]]'' on (9 September of that year). Its first rector was [[Johann von Münsterberg]].
 +
 
 +
During the decline and dissolution of the [[Ottoman Empire]] in the 19th and first decade of 20th century together with some other German universities Leipzig University turned into one of the centers of higher education for state administrations and elites of newly independent [[Balkan]] states ([[Romania]], [[Greece]], [[Bulgaria]] and [[Serbia]]) educating over 5,500 students from the region in 1859–1909 period.<ref>Pippidi, Adrei (2010). "The Development of an Administrative Class in South-East Europe". In Mungiu-Pippidi, Alina; Meurs, Wim Van (eds.). Ottomans Into Europeans: State and Institution-building in South Eastern Europe. New York & Chichester: Columbia University Press. pp. 111–134</ref>
  
 
During the first centuries, the university grew slowly and was a rather regional institution. This changed, however, during the 19th century when the university became a world-class institution of higher education and research. At the end of the 19th century, important scholars such as [[Bernhard Windscheid]] (one of the fathers of the German Civil Code) and [[Wilhelm Ostwald]] (viewed as a founder of modern [[physical chemistry]]) taught at Leipzig.
 
During the first centuries, the university grew slowly and was a rather regional institution. This changed, however, during the 19th century when the university became a world-class institution of higher education and research. At the end of the 19th century, important scholars such as [[Bernhard Windscheid]] (one of the fathers of the German Civil Code) and [[Wilhelm Ostwald]] (viewed as a founder of modern [[physical chemistry]]) taught at Leipzig.
 
[[File:Rotes Kolleg Leipzig.jpg|thumb|Formerly organized as a [[collegiate university]], the Red College of Leipzig University was established in the 16th century.]]
 
[[File:Rotes Kolleg Leipzig.jpg|thumb|Formerly organized as a [[collegiate university]], the Red College of Leipzig University was established in the 16th century.]]
 
Leipzig University was one of the first German universities to allow women to register as "guest students".<ref>Twellmann, Margrit; Abendroth, Wolfgang, eds. (1972). "Louise Otto Peters. Das erste Vierteljahrhundert. Marburger Abhandlungen zur Politischen Wissenschaft". Die deutsche Frauenbewegung 1843–1889 (in German) (1 ed.). Berlin: Hain. p. 112. ""Auf der Generalversammlung des Allgemeinen deutschen Frauenvereins 1873 dankt eine Referentin den Universitäten in Leipzig und Prag für die Zulassung der Frauen als Gasthörerinnen."</ref> At its general assembly in 1873, the {{ill|Allgemeiner Deutscher Frauenverein|de}} thanked the University of Leipzig and Prague for allowing women to attend as guest students. This was the year that the first woman in Germany obtained her JD, [[Johanna von Evreinov]].
 
  
 
Until the beginning of the [[Second World War]], Leipzig University attracted a number of renowned scholars and later [[Nobel Prize laureate]]s, including Paul Ehrlich, Felix Bloch, Werner Heisenberg and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga. Many of the university's alumni became important scientists.
 
Until the beginning of the [[Second World War]], Leipzig University attracted a number of renowned scholars and later [[Nobel Prize laureate]]s, including Paul Ehrlich, Felix Bloch, Werner Heisenberg and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga. Many of the university's alumni became important scientists.
Line 38: Line 40:
  
 
=== The university under the German Democratic Republic ===
 
=== The university under the German Democratic Republic ===
The university reopened after the war on 5 February 1946, but it was affected by the uniformity imposed on social institutions in the [[Soviet occupation zone]]. In 1948 the freely elected student council was disbanded and replaced by [[Free German Youth]] members. The chairman of the Student Council, [[Wolfgang Natonek]], and other members were arrested and imprisoned, but the university was also a nucleus of resistance. Thus began the Belter group, with flyers for free elections. The head of the group, [[Herbert Belter]], was executed in 1951 in Moscow. The [[East Germany|German Democratic Republic]] was created in 1949, and in 1953 for [[Karl Marx Year]] the university was renamed by its government the '''Karl Marx University, Leipzig''' after [[Karl Marx]]. In 1968, the partly damaged [[Augusteum (Leipzig)|Augusteum]], including Johanneum and Albertinum and the intact [[Paulinerkirche, Leipzig|Paulinerkirche]], were demolished to make way for a redevelopment of the university, carried out between 1973 and 1978. The dominant building of the university was the University Tower (now [[City-Hochhaus Leipzig]]), built between 1968 and 1972 in the form of an open book.
+
The university reopened after the war on 5 February 1946, but it was affected by the uniformity imposed on social institutions in the [[Soviet occupation zone]]. In 1948 the freely elected student council was disbanded and replaced by [[Free German Youth]] members. The chairman of the Student Council, [[Wolfgang Natonek]], and other members were arrested and imprisoned, but the university was also a nucleus of opposition. Thus began the Belter group, with flyers for free elections. The head of the group, [[Herbert Belter]], was executed in 1951 in Moscow. The [[East Germany|German Democratic Republic]] was created in 1949, and in 1953 the university was renamed by its government the '''Karl Marx University, Leipzig''' after [[Karl Marx]].
  
During this era, the university educated a large number of intellectuals from the [[global south]], often fleeing political persecution. Some of them, like [[Michelle Bachelet]], became future leaders.
+
During this era, the university educated a large number of intellectuals from the [[global south]], often fleeing political persecution. Some of them, like [[Michelle Bachelet]] from [[Chile]], became future leaders.
  
 
=== After the reunification of Germany ===
 
=== After the reunification of Germany ===
 
[[File:Leipzig University.JPG|thumb|Main building of Leipzig University since 2012, the [[Augusteum (Leipzig)|Augusteum]] at [[Augustusplatz]].]]
 
[[File:Leipzig University.JPG|thumb|Main building of Leipzig University since 2012, the [[Augusteum (Leipzig)|Augusteum]] at [[Augustusplatz]].]]
[[File:Bibliotheca Albertina.jpg|thumb|Leipzig's classicist university library, the Bibliotheca Albertina.]]
 
 
In 1991, following the [[reunification of Germany]], the university's name was restored to the original Leipzig University (''Alma mater lipsiensis''). The reconstruction of the University Library, which was heavily damaged during the war and in the [[East Germany|GDR]] barely secured, was completed in 2002.
 
In 1991, following the [[reunification of Germany]], the university's name was restored to the original Leipzig University (''Alma mater lipsiensis''). The reconstruction of the University Library, which was heavily damaged during the war and in the [[East Germany|GDR]] barely secured, was completed in 2002.
  
With the delivery of the [[City-Hochhaus Leipzig|University Tower]] to a private user, the university was forced to spread some faculties over several locations in the city. It controversially redesigned its historical centre at the [[Augustusplatz]]. In 2002, Behet Bonzio received the second prize in the architectural competition; a first prize was not awarded by the jury. A lobby with partial support of the provincial government called for the rebuilding of [[Paulinerkirche, Leipzig|St. Paul's Church]] and [[Augusteum (Leipzig)|Augusteum]]. This caused the resistance of the university leadership, the majority of the students and population of Leipzig. On 24 March 2004 a jury chose a design by Dutch architect [[Erick van Egeraat]], which was well received by almost all parties. He recalls the outer form of the St. Paul's Church (today called [[Paulinum (University of Leipzig)|Paulinum]]) and Augusteum, and abstracted the original building complex. Renovations began in the summer of 2005.
+
7,000 of the 12,000 employees were laid off by the new (West) German government.<ref name=nach>https://www.nachdenkseiten.de/?p=74186</ref>
  
In 2008 the university was able to prevail in the nationwide "Initiative of Excellence" of Germany and it was granted the graduate school "[[BuildMoNa]]: Leipzig School of Natural Sciences – Building with Molecules and Nano-objects".<ref>http://www.buildmona.de|title=Graduate School BuildMoNa</ref> In addition, the university was able to receive grants from the Saxon excellence initiative for the "Life" project – a project that tries to explore common diseases more effectively. Also in 2008 the [[Bach-Archiv Leipzig|"Bach Archive"]] was associated with the university. In 2009, the Leipzig University celebrated its 600th anniversary with over 300 scientific and cultural lectures and exhibitions,<ref>archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110719084528/http://www.sechshundert.de/index1_e.php?JavaScript=On</ref> reflecting the role of the university's research and teaching from its beginning.
+
In 2008 the university was able to prevail in the nationwide "Initiative of Excellence" of Germany and it was granted the graduate school "[[BuildMoNa]]: Leipzig School of Natural Sciences – Building with Molecules and Nano-objects".<ref>http://www.buildmona.de|title=Graduate School BuildMoNa</ref> In addition, the university was able to receive grants from the Saxon excellence initiative for the "Life" project – a project that tries to explore common diseases more effectively.  
  
 
==Notable alumni==
 
==Notable alumni==
[[File:Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Bernhard Christoph Francke.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Gottfried Leibniz]]]]
 
[[File:Angela Merkel (2008).jpg|thumb|150px|[[Angela Merkel]]]]
 
[[File:Goethecut.png|thumb|150px|[[Johann Wolfgang von Goethe]]]]
 
[[File:Portrait of Friedrich Nietzsche.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Friedrich Nietzsche]]]]
 
[[File:RichardWagner.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Richard Wagner]]]]
 
[[File:Felix Bloch, Stanford University.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Felix Bloch]]]]
 
[[File:Raila Amolo Odinga - World Economic Forum on Africa 2008 1.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Raila Odinga]]]]
 
 
 
* [[Theodore Dyke Acland]], English physician
 
* [[Theodore Dyke Acland]], English physician
 
* [[Georgius Agricola]], Saxon mining engineer and natural philosopher
 
* [[Georgius Agricola]], Saxon mining engineer and natural philosopher
Line 68: Line 61:
 
* [[Felix Bloch]], Swiss physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics
 
* [[Felix Bloch]], Swiss physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics
 
* [[Marc Bloch]], French historian
 
* [[Marc Bloch]], French historian
* [[John Bohnius]], German physician
 
 
* [[Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen]], American writer and scholar
 
* [[Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen]], American writer and scholar
 
* [[Tycho Brahe]], Danish astronomer
 
* [[Tycho Brahe]], Danish astronomer
Line 74: Line 66:
 
* [[Selig Brodetsky]], President of the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]]
 
* [[Selig Brodetsky]], President of the [[Hebrew University of Jerusalem]]
 
* [[Cai Yuanpei]], Chinese linguist
 
* [[Cai Yuanpei]], Chinese linguist
* [[James McKeen Cattell]], American psychologist
 
 
* [[Constantine I of Greece|Constantine I]], Greek monarch
 
* [[Constantine I of Greece|Constantine I]], Greek monarch
 
* [[William David Coolidge]], American physicist
 
* [[William David Coolidge]], American physicist
Line 80: Line 71:
 
* [[Georg Dohrn]], German conductor
 
* [[Georg Dohrn]], German conductor
 
* [[Carl H. Dorner]], American politician
 
* [[Carl H. Dorner]], American politician
* [[Ernst Christoph Dressler]], German composer and music theorist
 
 
* [[Émile Durkheim]], French sociologist
 
* [[Émile Durkheim]], French sociologist
* [[Friedrich Adolf Ebert]], Saxon librarian
 
* [[Johann Arnold Ebert]], Saxon writer and translator
 
* [[Wilhelm Ehmann]], musicologist, conductor, founder and director of the Herford School of Church Music
 
* [[Ephraim Emerton]], American medievalist historian
 
* [[John O. Evjen]], American theologian and church historian
 
* [[Gustav Fechner]], German psychologist
 
 
* [[Wilhelm Fuchs]] (1898–1947), Nazi SS officer and Holocaust perpetrator executed for war crimes
 
* [[Wilhelm Fuchs]] (1898–1947), Nazi SS officer and Holocaust perpetrator executed for war crimes
 
* [[Arnold Gehlen]], German philosopher and sociologist
 
* [[Arnold Gehlen]], German philosopher and sociologist
Line 93: Line 77:
 
* [[Kurt Albert Gerlach]], German sociologist
 
* [[Kurt Albert Gerlach]], German sociologist
 
* [[Johann Wolfgang Goethe]], German poet
 
* [[Johann Wolfgang Goethe]], German poet
* [[Woldemar Ludwig Grenser]], German obstetrician
 
 
* [[Otto von Guericke]], German scientist and politician
 
* [[Otto von Guericke]], German scientist and politician
* [[Gotthard Günther]], German-American philosopher
 
 
* [[Edith Hamilton]], American essayist and educator; first female student at the university together with her sister Alice
 
* [[Edith Hamilton]], American essayist and educator; first female student at the university together with her sister Alice
 
* [[Albert Hauck]], German theologian and church historian
 
* [[Albert Hauck]], German theologian and church historian
* [[Johann Adam Hiller]], Saxon composer
 
* [[Milton W. Humphreys]], American scholar
 
* [[Adolf Hurwitz]], German mathematician
 
 
* [[Edmund Husserl]], Austrian philosopher and mathematician
 
* [[Edmund Husserl]], Austrian philosopher and mathematician
 
* [[Ulrich von Hutten]], Hessian humanist and political leader
 
* [[Ulrich von Hutten]], Hessian humanist and political leader
Line 109: Line 88:
 
* [[Uwe Johnson]], German writer and translator
 
* [[Uwe Johnson]], German writer and translator
 
* [[Ernst Jünger]], German novelist and nationalist activist
 
* [[Ernst Jünger]], German novelist and nationalist activist
* [[Erich Kähler]], German mathematician
 
 
* [[Erich Kästner]], German satirist and children's writer
 
* [[Erich Kästner]], German satirist and children's writer
 
* [[Paul Kirchhoff]], German anthropologist and ethnohistorian
 
* [[Paul Kirchhoff]], German anthropologist and ethnohistorian
Line 129: Line 107:
 
* [[Sándor Márai]], Hungarian poet and novelist
 
* [[Sándor Márai]], Hungarian poet and novelist
 
* [[Emil Mattiesen]] (1875–1939), composer, pianist and philosopher
 
* [[Emil Mattiesen]] (1875–1939), composer, pianist and philosopher
* [[Thomas Mauksch]], Lutheran pastor and naturalist
 
 
* [[Angela Merkel]], German politician
 
* [[Angela Merkel]], German politician
* [[Walter Miller (philologist)|Walter Miller]], American philologist
 
* [[Thomas Müntzer]], Thuringian theologian and rebellion leader
 
* [[Carl Friedrich Naumann]], German mineralogist and geologist
 
 
* [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], German philosopher
 
* [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], German philosopher
 
* [[Novalis]], German writer and philosopher
 
* [[Novalis]], German writer and philosopher
Line 150: Line 124:
 
* [[Hans Ulrich von Schaffgotsch]], Silesian nobleman and general
 
* [[Hans Ulrich von Schaffgotsch]], Silesian nobleman and general
 
* [[Helmut Schelsky]], German sociologist
 
* [[Helmut Schelsky]], German sociologist
* [[Hans-Joachim Schulze]], German Bach scholar
 
 
* [[Kurt Schumacher]], German politician
 
* [[Kurt Schumacher]], German politician
 
* [[Robert Schumann]], German composer
 
* [[Robert Schumann]], German composer
Line 161: Line 134:
 
* [[Ernst Heinrich Weber]], German physician
 
* [[Ernst Heinrich Weber]], German physician
 
* [[Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker]], German physicist and philosopher
 
* [[Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker]], German physicist and philosopher
* [[Gustav Zeuner]], German physicist and engineer
+
 
* [[Caspar Ziegler]], jurist
 
  
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 +
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Latest revision as of 13:31, 13 July 2021

Group.png Leipzig University  
(UniversityWebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Uni Leipzig - Siegel.svg
MottoAus Tradition Grenzen überschreiten - Crossing Boundaries out of Tradition
Formation1409
HeadquartersLeipzig, Saxony, Germany
TypePublic
Before WW1 one of the centers of higher education for state administrations and elites of newly independent Balkan states.

Leipzig University (Universität Leipzig), in Leipzig in the Free State of Saxony, Germany, is one of the world's oldest universities and the second-oldest university (by consecutive years of existence) in Germany.

Famous alumni include Leibniz, Goethe, Edward Teller, Friedrich Nietzsche, Hans-Dietrich Genscher, Richard Wagner, Tycho Brahe, Georgius Agricola, Angela Merkel and the nine Nobel laureates associated with the university.

After the German reunification in 1990-91, 7,000 of the 12,000 employees were laid off by the new (West) German government.[1]

History

Memorial stone to the foundation of Leipzig University

Founding and development until 1900

Leipzig University main building (1917). It was demolished by the socialist administration in 1968.

The university was founded on 2 December 1409 by Frederick I, Elector of Saxony and his brother William II, Margrave of Meissen, and originally comprised the four scholastic faculties. Since its inception, the university has engaged in teaching and research for over 600 years without interruption.

The university was modelled on the University of Prague, from which the German-speaking faculty members withdrew to Leipzig after the Jan Hus crisis and the Decree of Kutná Hora. The Alma mater Lipsiensis opened in 1409, after it had been officially endorsed by Pope Alexander V in his Bull of Acknowledgment on (9 September of that year). Its first rector was Johann von Münsterberg.

During the decline and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire in the 19th and first decade of 20th century together with some other German universities Leipzig University turned into one of the centers of higher education for state administrations and elites of newly independent Balkan states (Romania, Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia) educating over 5,500 students from the region in 1859–1909 period.[2]

During the first centuries, the university grew slowly and was a rather regional institution. This changed, however, during the 19th century when the university became a world-class institution of higher education and research. At the end of the 19th century, important scholars such as Bernhard Windscheid (one of the fathers of the German Civil Code) and Wilhelm Ostwald (viewed as a founder of modern physical chemistry) taught at Leipzig.

Formerly organized as a collegiate university, the Red College of Leipzig University was established in the 16th century.

Until the beginning of the Second World War, Leipzig University attracted a number of renowned scholars and later Nobel Prize laureates, including Paul Ehrlich, Felix Bloch, Werner Heisenberg and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga. Many of the university's alumni became important scientists.

Nazi period

Under Nazi rule many degrees of Jews were cancelled.[3] Some were later reinstated as Karl-Marx University degrees by the GDR. Noteworthy Nazis, such as Max Clara (chair of anatomy) taught at the university and were appointed to positions with great authority.

The university was kept open throughout World War II, even after the destruction of its buildings. During the war the acting rector, Erich Maschke, described the continuation of the university in a memo on 11 May 1945, announcing the vote for a new rector:

Since 4 December 1943 a fixed determination not to abandon the Leipzig University in the most difficult hour of its more than five-hundred-year history has bonded the professors with each other and with the students. The special task of repairing the damage caused by air attacks has now broadened out to the more general duty to save the continuity of our university and preserve its substance, at the very least its indestructible kernel, through the crisis that has now reached its fullest stage. After the destruction of most of the buildings and the majority of its libraries, this kernel is represented by the professoriate alone. This is what must be preserved as the great repository of value in the university.[4]

By the end of the war 60 per cent of the university's buildings and 70 per cent of its books had been destroyed.

The university under the German Democratic Republic

The university reopened after the war on 5 February 1946, but it was affected by the uniformity imposed on social institutions in the Soviet occupation zone. In 1948 the freely elected student council was disbanded and replaced by Free German Youth members. The chairman of the Student Council, Wolfgang Natonek, and other members were arrested and imprisoned, but the university was also a nucleus of opposition. Thus began the Belter group, with flyers for free elections. The head of the group, Herbert Belter, was executed in 1951 in Moscow. The German Democratic Republic was created in 1949, and in 1953 the university was renamed by its government the Karl Marx University, Leipzig after Karl Marx.

During this era, the university educated a large number of intellectuals from the global south, often fleeing political persecution. Some of them, like Michelle Bachelet from Chile, became future leaders.

After the reunification of Germany

Main building of Leipzig University since 2012, the Augusteum at Augustusplatz.

In 1991, following the reunification of Germany, the university's name was restored to the original Leipzig University (Alma mater lipsiensis). The reconstruction of the University Library, which was heavily damaged during the war and in the GDR barely secured, was completed in 2002.

7,000 of the 12,000 employees were laid off by the new (West) German government.[1]

In 2008 the university was able to prevail in the nationwide "Initiative of Excellence" of Germany and it was granted the graduate school "BuildMoNa: Leipzig School of Natural Sciences – Building with Molecules and Nano-objects".[5] In addition, the university was able to receive grants from the Saxon excellence initiative for the "Life" project – a project that tries to explore common diseases more effectively.

Notable alumni


 

Alumni on Wikispooks

PersonBornNationalitySummaryDescription
Angela Merkel17 July 1954GermanPolitician
Deep state operative
German deep state operative who aggressively pushed COVID-19 vaccines.
Michael Meyen1967GermanAcademic
Andreas Umland1967GermanAcademicGerman academic mentioned in an Integrity Initiative document
Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.



References

  1. a b https://www.nachdenkseiten.de/?p=74186
  2. Pippidi, Adrei (2010). "The Development of an Administrative Class in South-East Europe". In Mungiu-Pippidi, Alina; Meurs, Wim Van (eds.). Ottomans Into Europeans: State and Institution-building in South Eastern Europe. New York & Chichester: Columbia University Press. pp. 111–134
  3. http://article.wn.com/view/2012/04/18/A_Jewish_Palestinians_quest_to_receive_his_degree_from_Nazi_/
  4. Universitätsarchiv Leipzig, Rectorate 50. Quoted in Grondin, Jean (2003). Hans-Georg Gadamer: A Biography. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 234.
  5. http://www.buildmona.de%7Ctitle=Graduate School BuildMoNa