University of Lisbon (1911–2013)
The University of Lisbon was a public university in Lisbon, Portugal. It was founded in 1911 after the fall of the Portuguese monarchy and was later integrated in the new University of Lisbon along with the former Technical University of Lisbon. The history of a university in Lisbon dates back to the 13th century.
History
The first Portuguese university school was founded in 1290 by King Dinis in Lisbon, and was called Studium Generale. In the following 247 years, this first university school was moved several times between Lisbon and Coimbra. In 1537, during the reign of João III, the university moved definitively to Coimbra. The entire university institution, including the teaching staff and all the books from its library, were moved to Coimbra where the University of Coimbra was definitively installed. Lisbon became a university city again in 1911 when the current University of Lisbon was founded, through the union of newly created and older schools, like the 19th century Polytechnic School, the Royal Medical School of Lisbon and the Letters Higher Studies.Faculties
Faculty of Law
The Faculty of Law was officially created by a Decree of March 22, 1911 as Faculdade de Ciências Económicas e Políticas, but was only installed in 1913, and was given its current designation later in 1918. It was originally located at the Valmor Building at the Campo dos Mártires da Pátria. It was transferred to its current campus at the University City in 1957-1958. A new building, housing the Faculty's library, was built in the late 1990s.The only graduation given is law, and the specialised post-graduate studies available include several branches of the same area.
Among the many graduates from the faculty of law are the former Presidents of Portugal Jorge Sampaio and Mário Soares, Prime Minister Marcelo Caetano, the President of the European Commission José Manuel Durão Barroso, Portuguese statesman, deputy, and professor Adriano Moreira and businessman and former Prime Minister Francisco Pinto Balsemão. Current President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa was a full professor there for many years, before his election in 2016. First Republic political leader and several times Prime Minister Afonso Costa was a teacher at the faculty and its founder and first dean. Television pundit and geopolitics expert Nuno Rogeiro and the writer and university professor Jaime Nogueira Pinto also studied there. Miguel Trovoada, former Prime Minister and President of São Tomé and Príncipe was also one of its students, as well as Francisca Van Dunem, currently the Portuguese Minister for Justice. João Vale e Azevedo, a lawyer and former chairman of SL Benfica, was also a student and an assistant lecturer at this faculty.
Faculty of Sciences
The Faculty of Sciences was created on April 19, 1911, by the transformation of the former Polytechnic School. From that date until 1985 it was established on the former Polytechnic School building. Those former installations are now used as a museum, now and then.Its current grounds comprise a built area of 75662 square meters, corresponding to 8 buildings which host the classrooms, offices, cafeterias, libraries, book shop and leisure areas. The faculty population, as of the 2009/2010 school year, consisted of :
- 3055 graduation students ;
- 418 Joint degree students
- 1008 M.Sc. students ;
- 412 Ph.D. students ;
- 388 teachers, about 95.3% hold a Ph.D. ;
- 22 hired research staff
- 186 non-teaching workers.
The faculty's campus also comprises the Instituto de Biofísica e Engenharia Biomédica , the Instituto de Oceanografia and the Instituto de Ciência Aplicada e Tecnologia .
There are 18 graduations available, in the following areas:
- Applied Mathematics
- * Fundamental Applications branch
- * Statistics and Operations Research branch
- Applied Statistics
- Biology
- * Environmental Biology branch
- * Cell biology and Biotechnology branch
- * Evolutionary and Developmental biology branch
- * Functional and Systems Biology branch
- * Molecular biology and Genetics branch
- Biochemistry
- Chemistry
- Computer Engineering — the Engineer title requires an additional 2-year Master programme, on one of the following:
- * Computer Architecture, Systems and Networks
- * Information systems
- * Interaction and Knowledge
- * Software Engineering
- Information and Communications Technology
- Energy and Environment
- Geographical Engineering
- Geology
- * Applied geology and Environment branch
- * Geology and Natural resources branch
- Health Sciences
- Maths
- Physics
- * Physics branch
- * Astronomy and Astrophysics branch
- * Computational Physics branch
- Meteorology, Oceanography and Geophysics
- Microbiology
- Physics Engineering
- Biomedical Engineering & Biophysics
- Technological Chemistry
Faculty of Medicine
The Faculty of Medicine is a leading medical school, having its origins in the 19th century when the Real Escola Médico-Cirúrgica de Lisboa was founded in the city. Santa Maria's Hospital, one of the biggest Portuguese hospitals, is the teaching hospital of the faculty, and share the same installations.António Damásio and Alexandre Carlos Caldas studied at this faculty, and Egas Moniz was a professor there.
Other noted personalities who studied at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Lisbon include:
- António Lobo Antunes,, Portuguese novelist.
- Joaquim Alberto Chissano,, second President of Mozambique. '
- João Lobo Antunes,, a prominent Portuguese Neurosurgeon.
- Jonas Savimbi,, a guerrilla, military leader and politician from Angola. '
- José Tomás de Sousa Martins, 19th century physician, noted for the esoteric cult-status achieved after his death.
- Agostinho Neto,, served as the first President of Angola.
- Maria Elisa,, journalist and television presenter.
- Carlos Caldas,, Chair of Cancer Medicine at the University of Cambridge.
Faculty of Letters
It remained on the grounds of the Superior Studies, an annex to the Academy of Science until 1957, when it changed to the current building, in the University City. In 1975, a new pavilion was built to accommodate the large influx of students who arrived after the democratization of Superior Education in Portugal, a consequence of the Carnation Revolution. The pavilion, theoretically provisional, still stands today. In 2001, two new buildings were finished: one to accommodate new classrooms and the Computer Room, and the Library Building, which is now the second biggest library in Portugal.
Although the faculty's graduation with most studies is modern languages and literatures , it also offers philosophy, history, African studies, Asian studies, European studies, cultural studies and classical studies. It is also the former home of the degree in psychology. In the mid-1980s a new Faculty of Psychology was created to accommodate it.
Notable professors at the faculty include the second President of the Portuguese Republic, Teófilo Braga, and writers Vitorino Nemésio and Urbano Tavares Rodrigues.
The poet Fernando Pessoa was a former student, though only attended for less than a year. Fialho Gouveia, a noted Portuguese television presenter, attended the Romance Philology course at the Faculdade de Letras but dropped out in order to follow a successful career in radio and television. The writer Luiz Pacheco was a student at FLUL before dropping out. The actress Alexandra Lencastre and Moonspell frontman Fernando Ribeiro also attended the philosophy course but did not graduate. Famous musician and composer Fernando Lopes-Graça also dropped out of FLUL. Football player and manager Artur Jorge graduated by FLUL after has been a student at the University of Coimbra's FLUC.
Research
The Instituto de Medicina Molecular of the University of Lisbon, a research institute in molecular medicine, is one of the most noted biosciences research institutions in Portugal.The Instituto Geofisico do Infante Dom Luiz exists since 1853 and is a research and operational unit that maintains the longest meteorological series of Portugal. Research is organized and funded through CGUL, the leading Portuguese geophysical research unit, and Associated Laboratory of the Portuguese Ministry of Science and Technology.
Researchers of LaSIGE, a research laboratory for large-scale information systems, have received several honors, namely an IBM Scientific Award, an Order of Engineers distinction and a place among the eight finalists of the Descartes Prize.
Instituto de Ciências Sociais (Institute of Social Sciences)
The Instituto de Ciências Sociais, an associated state laboratory, is a university institution devoted to research and advanced training in the social sciences.The ICS focuses its research on five main subject areas: the formation of the contemporary world; the study of citizenship and democratic institutions; the problems of sustainability, linking the environment, risk and space; social changes and individual action in the context of the family, lifestyles and schooling; and issues concerning identity, migration and religion. The main subjects represented at the institute are social and cultural anthropology, political science, economics, human geography, history, social psychology and sociology.
The independent Social Science Research Group was founded by Adérito Sedas Nunes in 1962. It became an autonomous institute of the University of Lisbon in 1982 and acquired the status of associated state laboratory in 2002.
The central activities of the ICS include: publishing research in book form and in articles in Portuguese and international journals of reference; advanced education to the level of master's degrees and doctorates; maintaining a dialogue with the international scientific community; and spreading knowledge in the wider community—an increasingly important activity to ensure the necessary interaction between science and citizenship.
Análise Social, Portugal's oldest and most prestigious peer-reviewed social science journal, together with the ICS's own publishing house, Imprensa de Ciências Sociais are the most visible manifestations of the institute's activities.
The ICS is located at the University of Lisbon campus in a central area of the city next to the national library. Its new offices, opened in 2003, were especially designed for the institute's research activities and postgraduate courses. The Library, which has 40,000 books and subscribes to 313 periodicals, is also home to the fast-growing Social History Archive.
Currently, the institute has about 70 researchers and 100 postgraduate students and is engaged in about 200 research projects. Nearly 70 per cent of its activities are financed from its own funds, which are obtained competitively.