University of Tartu


The University of Tartu is a public research university in Tartu, Estonia. It is the national university of Estonia, as well as the largest and oldest university in the country.
The university was founded in 1632 by Gustavus Adolphus, at the time the king of Sweden.
Currently, 15,573 students study at the university, of whom 1,435 are foreigners. Most of the curriculum is instructed in Estonian. There are also 30 programmes taught in English: three at the undergraduate level and 27 at the master's level, including the Erasmus Mundus programme in Excellence in Analytical Chemistry.
The historical buildings of the university are included in the European Heritage Label list as "embodiment of the ideas of a university in the Age of Enlightenment". The university is a member of the Coimbra Group and the Utrecht Network.
The mascot of the university is a blue bird called Tiksu.

History

Academia Gustaviana

The foundation act of the new university in Dorpat was signed on 30 June 1632 by King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden who was leading a military campaign in Germany at the time, a few months before his death in the Battle of Lützen. The first chancellor of the university was Baron Johan Skytte, the governor-general of the Swedish provinces of Livonia, Ingria, and Karelia.
The university founded in Tartu in 1632 was at the time the third oldest university in the entire Kingdom of Sweden, following the University of Greifswald in Swedish Pomerania and Uppsala University, and preceding the Academy of Åbo. A precursor to the academy had been a Jesuit grammar school Gymnasium Dorpatense, founded by Stefan Batory in 1583 and existing to 1601, when Tartu was under Polish–Lithuanian rule.
The first students matriculated between 20 and 21 April 1632. The opening ceremony of Academia Gustaviana took place on 15 October in the same year. The academy in Tartu functioned with philosophy, law, theology, and medical faculties enjoying the privileges of the University of Uppsala. After the outbreak of the Russo–Swedish war of 1656–1658, the university was moved from Tartu to Tallinn. It was closed down in 1665, only to be re-opened in Tartu again in 1690.
In the 17th century, the future outstanding Swedish scholars Urban Hiärne, Olof Verelius,, and others studied at the university. Among the academic staff were, professor of history and Georg Mancelius, professor of theology.

Academia Gustavo-Carolina

With the re-opening of the university in 1690 Tartu became a university town again. Academic staff of the new university included, professor of mathematics,, professor of rhetoric and poetry,, professor of medicine and Michael Dau, professor of philosophy as well as of rhetoric and poetry. Just under a decade after being reconstituted, as a result of the coalition against Sweden and the Great Famine of 1695–1697, the university moved from Tartu to Pernau and renamed Academia Pernaviensis. Eventually, Academia Gustavo-Carolina, which had opened in Pärnu on 28 August 1699, was closed as a result of the surrender of the city to the invading army of the Tsardom of Muscovy on 12 August 1710 during the Great Northern War. Albeit according to the terms of capitulation, the Russian tsar Peter I agreed to maintain the university in Pärnu, the university was closed for the following 92 years. It was able to reopen only in 1802, when its new charter was confirmed by Emperor Alexander I of Russia.

Universität Dorpat

The university was relaunched by the leaders of local Baltic German nobility and officially opened in April 1802. The charter of Universität Dorpat, the first German-speaking university in the entire Russian Empire, was confirmed by the reform-minded Tsar Alexander I of Russia.
Georg Friedrich Parrot was a prominent organiser and rector during the reopening of the university.
The language of instruction at the university was German from 1802 to 1893. During that time, Dorpat had a dual nature in that it belonged both to the set of German and Russian universities. Financially and administratively, the latter was more important; intellectually and regarding the professoriate and students, the former was more important. Among the 30 German-language universities, of which 23 were inside the German Empire, Dorpat was the 11th in size. In teaching, the university educated the local Baltic German aristocrats and professional classes, as well as staff, especially for the administration and health system of the entire Russian Empire. In scholarship, it was an international university; the time between 1860 and 1880 was its "golden age".
The freedom to be a half-German university ceased with the rise of nationalist tendencies in Russia, which held homogenization more important than retaining a bilingual university. Between 1882 and 1898, russification in language, appointments, etc., was imposed, with some exceptions. By 1898, when both the town and the university were renamed Yuryev, virtually all distinguished scholars from Germany had left. The University of Yuryev existed until 1918, when during part of the fall term, it was reopened, under German occupation, as Dorpat. Russian academic staff and students took refuge in Voronezh in Russia, giving rise to the foundation of Voronezh State University, which traces its own history back to the foundation of the University of Tartu and still holds several physical properties of the latter.

University of Tartu (1919–)

After Estonia became an independent country in 1918, the University of Tartu has been an Estonian-language institution since 1919. The university was named Ostland-Universität in Dorpat during the German occupation of Estonia in 1941–1944 and Tartu State University in 1940–1941 and 1944–1989, during the Soviet occupation. During Soviet rule, although Estonian remained the principal language of instruction, some courses were taught in Russian, with several Russian curricula. Estonia regained independence in 1991, and the full recovery of academic autonomy of the university can be dated to 1992 with the introduction of financial and academic strategic planning. Presently, no courses are taught in Russian.
The last decade has been marked by organizational and structural changes, as well as adaptations to various university models against the background of the Soviet and Baltic German past. Most recently, the university has been and is still being marked by the adaptation of the Bologna declaration in Estonia generally and Tartu specifically, leading to major changes in curricula and studies, as well as by strong organizational centralization attempts. Recent plans also include the abolition of the Chair system and of the faculties, which is supposed to lead to four large divisions under briefly serving deans and rector-appointed financial administrators.

Buildings

The university's four museums, botanical gardens, and sports facilities are, by and large, open to the general public. The university possesses 56 buildings, 11 of which are outside of Tartu; 31 of its buildings decorate the city as architectural monuments. In May 2023, the University of Tartu relaunched its that has 360-degree photos of over 160 locations in the university campus.
At the same time, numerous university buildings and student dormitories have been recently constructed or renovated, such as the Von Bock House. Many of the new buildings are built at Maarjamõisa, such as the Technology Institute, the Biomedical Center, the Chemistry building, and the new Physics building. The Delta building was built in the city center.

Research

Lectinology, the science of lectins, was founded at the University of Tartu in 1888 with the publication of Peter Hermann Stillmark's thesis about the isolation of ricin.
According to the university administration, the most remarkable recent research achievements have been in the fields of molecular and cell biology, laser medicine, materials science, laser spectroscopy, biochemistry, and psychology.
UT is the flagship of Estonian science, ranking in the top 1% of the world's most-cited universities and research institutions in these fields :
  • Biology and biochemistry
  • Chemistry
  • Clinical medicine
  • Engineering
  • Environment/ecology
  • Immunology
  • Geosciences
  • Materials science
  • Microbiology
  • Molecular biology and genetics
  • Neuroscience and behavior
  • Pharmacology and toxicology
  • Plant and animal science
  • Psychiatry and psychology
  • Social sciences, general.
UT accounts for 56% of Estonia's national research output. Also, more than half of the PhD theses in Estonia are defended at UT and over 2,000 high-level research articles are published annually. About 50 UT scientists are among the top 1% of the most-cited scientists in the world.
UT has excelled among the Baltic universities in winning European Research Council grants. The prestigious ERC grant has been awarded to Professor of Molecular Systems Biology Mart Loog, Professor of Nanomedicine Tambet Teesalu, and Professor of International Law Lauri Mälksoo.

Entrepreneurship

University of Tartu has contracts with 154 business partners in the amount of 10.2 million euros. UT is one of the largest development partners for the private and public sector in the Baltics. The university also works closely with international businesses such as Swedbank, The Linde Group, Pfizer, ABB Corporate Research, SUPER APPLI Inc, Eesti Energia Group, Telia AS, and many more.
UT has spun off more than 60 start-ups, including software companies Reach-U and Positium providing location-based solutions, biotechnology company Icosagen etc. The success story of the last 15 years is the technology for the ME-3 strain of Lactobacillus fermentum bacterium, allowing its use in the food industry. Student satellite ESTCube-1, developed collectively by UT staff and students, and successfully deployed into orbit in 2013, made Estonia the 41st space nation in the world. Scientists from UT and the Estonian University of Life Sciences have developed a new peat-based material that enables building inexpensive energy-efficient 3D-printed houses. The innovative robotic mannequin technology known as Rakuten Fits Me, a virtual dressing room, was originally developed in cooperation with researchers of UT Institute of Technology.
UT encourages its students and scholars to develop an entrepreneurial mindset and apply their knowledge to the economy. The university has set a goal to integrate entrepreneurship courses into every curriculum.