The old university was split into three separate entities during the 1970s, before they merged back together in 2009. The University of Strasbourg is currently composed of 35 academic faculties, schools and institutes, plus 71 research laboratories spread over six campuses, including the historic site in the
Neustadt.
Throughout its existence, Unistra alumni, faculty, or researchers have included 18 Nobel laureates, one Fields Medalist and a wide range of notable individuals in their respective fields. Among them are
Goethe, statesman
Robert Schuman, historian
Marc Bloch and several chemists such as
Louis Pasteur.
History
The university emerged from a
LutheranhumanistGerman Gymnasium, founded in 1538 by
Johannes Sturm in the
Free Imperial City of Strassburg. It was transformed to a university in 1621 (
German: Universität Straßburg) and elevated to the ranks of a royal university in 1631. Among its earliest university students was Johann Scheffler who studied medicine and later converted to Catholicism and became the mystic and poet
Angelus Silesius.[4]
The Lutheran German university still persisted even after the annexation of the city by
King Louis XIV in 1681 (one famous student was
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in 1770/71), but mainly turned into a French speaking university during the
French Revolution.
The university was refounded as the German Kaiser-Wilhelm-Universität in 1872, after the
Franco-Prussian war and the annexation of
Alsace-Lorraine to Germany provoked a westwards exodus of Francophone teachers. During the
German Empire the university was greatly expanded and numerous new buildings were erected because the university was intended to be a showcase of German against French culture in Alsace. In 1918, Alsace-Lorraine was returned to France, so a reverse exodus of Germanophone teachers took place.
Following a national reform of higher education, these universities merged on 1 January 2009, and the new institution became one of the first French universities to benefit from greater autonomy.[5]
The university campus covers a vast part near the center of the city, located between the "Cité Administrative", "Esplanade" and "Gallia" bus-tram stations.
Modern architectural buildings include: Escarpe, the Doctoral College of Strasbourg, Supramolecular Science and Engineering Institute (ISIS), Atrium, Pangloss, PEGE (Pôle européen de gestion et d'économie) and others. The student residence building for the Doctoral College of Strasbourg was designed by London-based
Nicholas Hare Architects in 2007. The structures are depicted on the main inner wall of the Esplanade university restaurant, accompanied by the names of their architects and years of establishment.
The administrative organisms, attached to the university (Prefecture; CAF, LMDE, MGEL—health insurance; SNCF—national French railway company; CTS—Strasbourg urban transportation company), are located in the "Agora" building.
The Gallia building, formerly Germania, seat of the Regional Student's Service Centre
^Paterson, Hugh Sinclair; Exell, Joseph Samuel (October 1870). "Angelus Silesius: Physician, Priest and Poet".
The British & Foreign Evangelical Review. Vol. XIX. London: James Nisbet & Co. pp. 682–700, based in large part on Kahlert, August (Dr.). Angelus Silesius: Ein literar-historiche Untersuchung (Breslau: s.n., 1853).{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (
link)