University of Orléans
The University of Orléans is a French university, in the Academy of Orléans and Tours. As of July 2015 it is a member of the regional university association Leonardo da Vinci consolidated University.
History
In 1230, when for a time the doctors of the University of Paris were scattered, a number of the teachers and disciples took refuge in Orléans; when pope Boniface VIII, in 1298, promulgated the sixth book of the Decretals, he appointed the doctors of Bologna and the doctors of Orléans to comment upon it.St. Yves studied civil law at Orléans, and Pope Clement V also studied there law and letters; by a papal bull published at Lyon, 27 January 1306, he endowed the Orléans institutes with the title and privileges of a university.
Twelve later popes granted the new university many privileges. In the 14th century it had as many as five thousand students from France, Germany, Lorraine, Burgundy, Champagne, Picardy, Normandy, Touraine, Guyenne and Scotland.
The current university was founded in 1960, after its medieval predecessor was closed down in 1793 and merged into the University of France in 1808.
Organisation
The university is organised into three Teaching and Research divisions :- Law, Economics and Management
- Literature, Languages and Human Sciences
- Science and Technology
- 4 University Institutes of Technology
- 1 Science of the Universe Observatory
- 1 National Higher Institute of Teaching and Education
- 1 School of Engineering
- 1 School of Kinesiology
Notable people
Faculty
Ancient
- Robert Joseph Pothier, lawyer.
- Daniel Jousse, lawyer.
Modern
- Pierre Roubertoux - behavioural geneticist.
- Jeanne Henriette Louis - professor emeritus of North American civilization
- Michel Cullin - political scientist
- Morinobu Endo - Japanese physicist and chemist
- Christian Renoux - historian and an activist for nonviolence
- Nikolay Nenovsky - Bulgarian economist, working in the fields of monetary theory and policy
- Emmanuel Trélat - mathematician
Alumni
Ancient
- Emo of Friesland - Frisian scholar and abbot
- Eustache Deschamps - poet
- Walter de Coventre - Scottish ecclesiastic
- Walter Forrester - Bishop of Brechin, Scotland
- Henry de Lichton - Scottish prelate and diplomat, Bishop of Moray and Bishop of Aberdeen
- Oliver King - Bishop of Exeter and Bishop of Bath and Wells
- Michel Bucy - Archbishop of Bourges
- John Calvin, influential French theologian, pastor and reformer during the Protestant Reformation
- Anne du Bourg - magistrate, Protestant martyr
- William Whittingham - English Puritan, translator of the Geneva Bible
- Claude Fauchet - historian, antiquary, and pioneering romance philologist
- Anselmus de Boodt - humanist, mineralogist, physician and naturalist
- François de Joyeuse - churchman and politician
- Jørgen Bjelke - Norwegian officer and nobleman
- Molière, French playwright and actor, considered to be one of the greatest masters of comedy in Western literature
- Pierre de Fermat, best known for his Fermat's principle for light propagation and his Fermat's Last Theorem in number theory
- St Ivo of Kermartin, patron of lawyers
- Étienne de Mornay, counsellor of Philippe IV le Bel
- Johannes Reuchlin
- Guillaume Budé - scholar and humanist
- Francis Bothwell, Procurator of the Scottish Nation at Orléans during 1513–1514, later a member of the Parliament of Scotland and a judge
- Étienne de La Boétie - writer, poet, political theorist
- Thomas Brooke alias Cobham - English nobleman, privateer, conspirator
- Agrippa d'Aubigné - poet, soldier, propagandist
- Mathieu Molé - statesman
- Théophraste Renaudot - physician, philanthropist, journalist
- Charles Perrault - author
- Johann Christoph Wagenseil - German historian, Orientalist, jurist and Christian Hebraist
- Anthonie Heinsius - Grand Pensionary of Holland
- Conrad von Reventlow - Grand Chancellor of Denmark
- Jean de La Bruyère - philosopher
- Jacques Pierre Brissot - leading member of the Girondins
- Jacques Paul Migne - theologian
- Jean-Eugène Robert-Houdin - watchmaker, magician and illusionist
- Alphonse Magnien - priest, theologian, academic administrator
Modern
- Michel Jébrak - geologist
- Ibni Oumar Mahamat Saleh politician and opposition leader Chad
- Thomas Boni Yayi - banker and politician, President of Benin
- Charles-Éric Lemaignen – politician LR, deputy mayor and president of Orléans
- François Bonneau educationalist, politician SP
- Norbert-Bertrand Barbe - art historian, semiologist, artist and writer
- Hussein Hajj Hassan - politician and minister of industry Lebanon
- Olivier Carré - independent politician; mayor of the city of Orléans
- Patrick Grant - Scottish fashion designer and businessman
- Jeannette Bougrab French lawyer and politician UMP
Recipients of honorary degree
- Isaac Ehrlich - economist
- Horst Möller - German contemporary historian
- Józef Dulak - Polish scientist and professor of biological sciences