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Sorbonne University

Coordinates:48°51′4″N2°20′26″E / 48.85111°N 2.34056°E /48.85111; 2.34056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public university in Paris, France
This article is about the university established in 2018. For other uses, seeSorbonne (disambiguation).

Sorbonne University


MottoCréateurs de futurs depuis 1257(French)
Motto in English
Creators of futures since 1257
TypePublic research non-profit coeducational higher education institution
Established
Academic affiliations
Chancellery of the Universities of Paris
Udice Group
EUA
4EU+ Alliance
LERU
UNICA
TPC
Endowment€900 million
Budget€1 billion (2021)
PresidentNathalie Drach-Temam
Academic staff
6,400
Administrative staff
3,600[1]
Students55,600 (2019)
Location
21 Rue de l'École de Médecine 75006 Paris
,
France
CampusLatin Quarter; Clignancourt; Jussieu; Institut de Géographie; Malesherbes
World Ranking35 (ARWU)
ColorsBlue  and  Red
NicknameSorbonne
Websitesorbonne-universite.fr
Map
Chapel of the main Sorbonne building

Sorbonne University (French:Sorbonne Université) is apublicresearch university located in Paris, France. The institution's legacy reaches back to theMiddle Ages in 1257 when theCollege of Sorbonne was established byRobert de Sorbon as aconstituent college of theUniversity of Paris, one of the first universities in Europe. Its current iteration was formed in 2018 by the merger ofParis-Sorbonne University (Paris IV) and theUniversité Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI).

Sorbonne University is one of the most sought after universities by students and researchers from France, Europe, and theFrench speaking countries. Most notably,Marie Skłodowska-Curie, who came fromPoland in 1891 and joined the Faculty of Sciences of theUniversity of Paris, was also the first woman to become a professor at the Sorbonne. Marie Curie and her husbandPierre Curie are considered the founders of the modern-dayFaculty of Science and Engineering of Sorbonne University. As of 2021, its alumni and professors have won 33 Nobel Prizes, sixFields Medals, and oneTuring Award.[2]

History

[edit]

College of Sorbonne

[edit]
Main article:College of Sorbonne

Robert de Sorbon (1201–1274), chaplain toKing Louis IX (Saint Louis), observed the difficulties experienced by poor "schoolchildren" in achieving the rank of doctor. In February 1257, he had a house (domus) officially established which he intended for a certain number of secular clergy who, living in common and without concern for their material existence, would be entirely occupied with study and teaching. This house was named thecollege of Sorbonne.

The old slogan of the establishment, "Sorbonne University, creators of futures since 1257", refers to this date. The college of Sorbonne was closed along with all the other colleges of the formerUniversity of Paris in 1793.

The college of Sorbonne was located on the site of the currentSorbonne building, shared between Sorbonne University andPanthéon-Sorbonne University.

Faculty of Humanities of Paris, "the Sorbonne"

[edit]
Main article:University of Paris Faculty of Humanities

Based at theSorbonne, the University of Paris Faculty of Humanities (commonly known as theSorbonne because of its location) was created by the decree of 17 March 1808 on the organisation of theImperial University of France.[3][4]

Under theBourbon Restoration, the faculty welcomed an average of 1,000 to 1,500 students a year, rising to 2,000 under theJuly Monarchy. But the number of teaching staff remained limited: between 1809 and 1878, only 51 professors taught at the Faculty of Humanities.[4]

Following the promulgation of laws on 28 April 1893, giving civil personality to the bodies formed by the union of several faculties of an academy, and 10 July 1896, giving the name of university to the bodies of faculties, the newUniversity of Paris was created in 1896 through the merger of the Faculty of Science, theFaculty of Humanities, theFaculty of Law, the Faculty of Medicine, the Faculty of Protestant Theology (created in 1877 and transformed into a free faculty in 1905), and theÉcole supérieure de pharmacie. It was inaugurated on 19 November 1896 by its president,Félix Faure.

Faculty of Sciences of Paris

[edit]

The Faculty of Sciences in Paris was opened in 1811 following the creation of theImperial University of France, and was housed in theCollège du Plessis, in theLatin Quarter of Paris.[4]

In 1826, the faculty moved to theSorbonne. It remained there until 1962, when it moved to theJussieu Campus. The Jussieu campus is now the main site of theSorbonne University Faculty of Science and Engineering.[5] At the same time, in 1927 it opened asatellite campus atOrsay, in the south of Paris, which would later become the currentParis-Saclay University, as well as a satellite campus atOrléans in 1960.[6]

Splitting of the University of Paris

[edit]

In 1971, the University of Paris, including its humanities and science faculties, split into several interdisciplinary universities. Some, including theUniversity of Paris-Sorbonne, retained the name "Sorbonne" and premises in the historic centre of the University of Paris, which had until then been mainly devoted to the faculties of Humanities and Sciences.

TheUniversity of Paris-VI, later renamed as "UPMC", is created from the majority of the teaching and research units of the Faculty of Sciences of Paris (the others joining the universities of Paris-VII Denis Diderot (nowUniversité Paris Cité),Paris-Saclay University in Orsay,Paris-XII andParis-XIII in Villetaneuse) and part of the units of theFaculty of Medicine of Paris (the others joining the universities of Paris-V René Descartes (nowUniversité Paris Cité), Paris-VII Denis Diderot andParis-XIII).

Reunification of the University of Paris-Sorbonne and UPMC

[edit]

In 2010, some of the direct successors of the faculties of the University of Paris created theSorbonne Universities Association. The following universities, members of theuniversity system, decided to merge into Sorbonne University in 2018:

  • Paris-Sorbonne University (Paris IV) (1971–2017), formerly a constituent part of the faculty of humanities of the University of Paris.
  • Université Pierre et Marie Curie (UPMC or Paris VI) (1971–2017), formerly a constituent part of the faculty of sciences and of the school of medicine of the University of Paris.

At the same time, the Sorbonne Universities Association was renamed the Sorbonne University alliance; it includes the following institutions for academic cooperation:[7]

As part of the reforms of French Higher Education, on 19 March 2018, the international jury called by the French Government for the "Initiative d'excellence" (IDEX) confirmed the definite win of Sorbonne University. Consequently, Sorbonne University won an endowment of 900 Million euros with no limit of time. This is the first higher education institution in Paris region to win such an endowment. The university was established by a decree issued 21 April 2017, taking effect 1 January 2018.[8]

Faculties

[edit]

Sorbonne University has three faculties: Arts and Humanities, Science and Engineering, and Health Sciences.[9]

Arts and humanities

[edit]

The Sorbonne University Faculty of Arts and Humanities provides studies in arts, languages, letters, and human and social sciences, and is the largest in France. Fields such as history, geography, languages, linguistics, musicology, philosophy, classical and modern literature, foreign literature and civilisations, and the history of art and archaeology are part of this faculty.[10]

Science and engineering

[edit]
Main article:Sorbonne Faculty of Science and Engineering

TheSorbonne Faculty of Science and Engineering is a major research institution in France. It can be considered the successor in direct line to the Faculty of Science of theUniversity of Paris with theParis-Saclay Faculty of Sciences.[11]

It has 79 laboratories in the Paris region, most in association with theCentre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS). Some of the most notable institutes and laboratories include theInstitut Henri Poincaré (Mathematics),Institut d'astrophysique de Paris (Astrophysics),LIP6 (Informatics / Computer Science),Institut des systèmes intelligents et de robotique (Robotics),Institut de mathématiques de Jussieu – Paris Rive Gauche (foundations of Mathematics, shared withUniversity Paris Cité) and theLaboratoire Kastler-Brossel (Quantum Physics, shared withPSL University).[11]

Health sciences

[edit]
Main article:AP-HP Sorbonne University Hospital Group

The Sorbonne University Faculty of Health Sciences, in association with theGreater Paris University Hospitals (AP-HP), manages theAP-HP Sorbonne University Hospital Group (Hôpital Charles-Foix,Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital,Hôpital Fondation Rothschild,Hôpital Saint-Antoine,Hôpital Tenon,Hôpital Armand-Trousseau,Hôpital de La Roche-Guyon) and theQuinze-Vingts National Ophthalmology Hospital, promoting multidisciplinary research, and training doctors and other health professionals.[12]

Law (external tuition)

[edit]

There is no law school as such in Sorbonne University. In 1971, most of the law professors from theFaculty of Law and Economics of the University of Paris decided to restructure it as a university, calledPanthéon-Assas University Paris (after the two main campuses of the Paris Law Faculty:place du Panthéon andrue d’Assas campuses).[13] Panthéon-Assas now provides legal studies for Sorbonne University as an independent university.

Another law school, thePanthéon-Sorbonne University School of Law (also a spin-off of theFaculty of Law and Economics of the University of Paris) also exists in Paris, but has no connection with Sorbonne University.

Campuses

[edit]
Sorbonne University is located in Paris
Catalan Studies Centre
Catalan Studies Centre
Clignancourt Centre
Clignancourt Centre
Malesherbes Centre
Malesherbes Centre
Slavic Studies Centre
Slavic Studies Centre
Molitor Centre
Molitor Centre
Batignolles Centre
Batignolles Centre
Astrophysics Institute
Astrophysics Institute
Sorbonne University Faculty of Arts & Humanities (yellow), Faculty of Science (cyan) and Faculty of Health Sciences (red) campuses within Paris

Main campuses

[edit]

Sorbonne

[edit]
Further information:Sorbonne (building) andChancellerie des Universités de Paris

Sorbonne University's historical campus is in the historic centralSorbonne building, located at 47 rue des Écoles, in the historicLatin Quarter university campus. The building is the undivided property of the 13 successor universities of the University of Paris, managed by theChancellerie des Universités de Paris.[14] Besides the monuments of the Cour d'Honneur, theSorbonne Chapel and theGrand Amphithéâtre,[15] the building houses the Sorbonne University Faculty of Arts and Humanities, the Academy of Paris Rectorat, theChancellerie des Universités de Paris, and part of the universitiesPanthéon-Sorbonne,Sorbonne Nouvelle,Paris Cité and theÉcole Nationale des Chartes as well as theÉcole Pratique des Hautes Études that are constituent schools ofPSL University.[16]

Before the 19th century, the Sorbonne occupied several buildings. The chapel was built in 1622 by the then-Provisor of the University of Paris,Cardinal Richelieu, during the reign ofLouis XIII. In 1881, politicianJules Ferry decided to convert the Sorbonne into one single building. Under the supervision of Pierre Greard, Chief Officer of the Education Authority of Paris, Henri-Paul Nénot constructed the current building from 1883 to 1901 that reflects a basic architectural uniformity. The integration of the chapel into the whole was also Nénot's work with the construction of acour d'honneur. The Sorbonne building is generally reserved for undergraduate students in their third year and graduate students in certain academic disciplines. Only students in Semitic studies, regardless of level, take all their classes at the Sorbonne campus.

TheSorbonne Library

TheSorbonne Library is an inter-university library of thePanthéon-Sorbonne University,Sorbonne Nouvelle University, Sorbonne University,Paris Cité University, under the administration ofPanthéon-Sorbonne.[17] It is open exclusively to undergraduate students in their third year and graduate students. With the former archives of the now-defunct University of Paris, 2,500,000 books, 400,000 of them ancient, 2,500 historical manuscripts, 18,000 doctoral dissertation papers, 17,750 past and current French and international periodicals and 7,100 historical printing plates, the Sorbonne Library is the largest university library in Paris and was entirely refurbished in 2013.

TheSorbonne University Library's Arts and Humanities Department (French:Pôle Lettres de la Bibliothèque de Sorbonne Université), part of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, offers its students and teaching staff access to 18 libraries and thematic collections. The catalog includes 600,000 books, 350,000 e-books, 60,000 issues of online periodicals and 165 databases.

Pierre and Marie Curie (formerly Jussieu)

[edit]
Further information:Jussieu Campus andSorbonne Faculty of Science and Engineering

The largest of Sorbonne University's campuses isJussieu Campus, officially named "Pierre and Marie Curie Campus". It houses theSorbonne University Faculty of Science and Engineering and itsSorbonne Polytechnic School, Sorbonne Center for Artificial Intelligence, Sorbonne Institute for Environmental Transition, the Institute of Health Engineering (IUIS) and the Institute of Computing and Data Sciences (ISCD). The first buildings are from 1957. The main part of the campus, the "Grill d'Albert", was built in 1964, and was completely refurbished from 1996 to 2016.[18]

Within theSorbonne University Library, it houses 6 university libraries, including an important research library in mathematics andcomputer science.

Entrance of the Pitié-Salpêtrière University Hospital in Paris.

Pitié-Salpêtrière

[edit]
Main articles:Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital andAP-HP Sorbonne University Hospital Group

The Pitié-Salpêtrière Campus is home to Sorbonne University Faculty of Health Sciences and its Department of Medical Studies. It is located at thePitié-Salpêtrière Hospital and University Center (CHU), founded in 1657 in the 13th arrondissement of Paris. All undergraduate and graduate medical students study on this campus. Postgraduate courses are held at theCordeliers Convent on theLatin Quarter campus.

The hospital campus also houses the Sorbonne Health Simulation Department, the Paris Brain Institute and the Institute of Cardiometabolism and Nutrition (IHU-ICAN). The campus is also home to theAP-HP Sorbonne University Hospital Group.

Secondary campuses

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Clignancourt and Malesherbes

[edit]

Two other campuses are the Clignancourt and Malesherbes centers of the Sorbonne University Faculty of Arts and Humanities. Undergraduate students in their first and second years of study in Philosophy, History, Geography,Musicology, English and Spanish take their classes at the Clignancourt center. TheClignancourt Library contains 78,000 works, 210 French and international periodicals and 800 educational DVDs.

Undergraduate students in their first and second years of study inFrench literature, French language,Latin, andAncient Greek take their classes at the Malesherbes center. All undergraduate students in these academic disciplines study in the central Sorbonne building in their third year. Undergraduate and graduate students inGerman studies,Slavic studies,Italic studies andRomanian studies, regardless of level, take all of their classes at the Malesherbes center. The Malesherbes center also hosts three research centers inItalian culture, the cultures and literature of central Europe and the Balkans and the Germanic, Nordic and Dutch centers. TheMalesherbes Library contains 200,000 works specializing in the study of foreign languages and cultures and 1,200 past and current French and international periodicals. More than 50,000 doctoral dissertations are available for public viewing.

Michelet

[edit]
Main article:Institut d'Art et d'Archéologie

UndergraduateArt History andArcheology students of the Sorbonne University Faculty of Arts and Humanities take their classes at theInstitut d'Art et d'Archéologie, located at the main entrance of theJardin du Luxembourg. Constructed by architect Paul Bigot between 1925 and 1930, the Mesopotamian-style building was classified as a national historic building in 1996. It hosts theMichelet Library that contains 100,000 volumes of work on art history and archeology with 100 French and international periodicals. Only 10,000 of the art history and archeology works are open to students, the others requiring special authorization of usage. Graduate Art History and Archeology students take their courses at the Institut National de l'Histoire de l'Art in the Galerie Colbert, a partnered national institution of the university.

Maison de la Recherche

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TheMaison de la Recherche campus is the central building for doctoral studies that hosts the history and geography departments. It houses theSerpente Library that has 55,000 works and 292 past and current French and international periodicals. All doctoral dissertations since 1 January 1986 have been stored at the Serpente Library.

Other campuses in Paris

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[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(December 2017)

Both theInstitut d'Urbanisme et d'Aménagement and theInstitut d'Études Hispaniques in theLatin Quarter campus host third year and graduate students of Geography and Iberian and Latin American studies. TheMarcel Bataillon Library houses theInstitut d'Études Hispaniques' collection of 25,000 works on Iberian and Latin-American culture. Catalan studies take place at theCentre d'Études Catalanes in theMarais.

The Sorbonne University also includes the Saint-Antoine Campus for the study of medicine ; theCordeliers Convent, Curie and Raspail campuses for sciences studies.

Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi

[edit]
Main article:Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi

An exclusive international agreement between Sorbonne and the government ofAbu Dhabi was signed on 19 February 2006, starting plans to bring Sorbonne University to Abu Dhabi. Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi (SUAD) was established on 30 May 2008 on Reem Island by a decree of the ruler of Abu Dhabi of theUnited Arab Emirates. All programs are taught in the French language except for the Bachelor of Physics and most of the masters programmes, that are taught in English . An intensive French language programme is offered for one or two-year(s) to students who do not meet the French language requirement for registration. The establishment of the university demonstrates the keenness of Abu Dhabi to create an international hub in culture and education, having also signed a contract with theLouvre in 2007 to create theLouvre Abu Dhabi, and withNew York University in 2007 to createNew York University Abu Dhabi. SUAD is jointly governed by the Abu Dhabi Education Council (ADEC) and by SUAD's board of trustees, with six members, three of whom are appointed by the home Sorbonne University and the other three appointed by the Abu Dhabi Executive Council. The president of SUAD is the president of Sorbonne University in Paris, currently Prof Nathalie Drach-Temam. Academic programmes are offered at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels in the social sciences, humanities, law and sciences.

Academics and rankings

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Rankings and reputation

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Sorbonne University is consistently ranked in the top universities in Europe and the world. The first recognition of its existence as an integrated university came in 2018, when it appeared on the CWUR World University Rankings 2018–2019 in 29th place globally and 1st place in France.[19]

University rankings
Global – Overall
ARWU World[20]43 (2022)
CWUR World[21]38 (2022–2023)
CWTS World[22]97 (2022)
QS World[23]59 (2024)
Reuters World[24]56 (2019)
THE World[25]75 (2024)
USNWR Global[26]56 (tie) (2024–25)
National – Overall
ARWU National[20]2 (2022)
CWTS National[22]1 (2020)
CWUR National[27]3 (2021–22)
QS National[23]3 (2021)
THE National[25]3 (2021)

In theAcademic Ranking of World Universities 2020, Sorbonne University is ranked in range 39 globally and 3rd in France.[20]

In the Times Higher Education European Teaching Rankings 2024, Sorbonne University was ranked in fourth place in France.[28]

In theTimes Higher Education World Reputation Rankings 2019, Sorbonne University was ranked in range 51–60 globally and 2nd in France.[29]

The 2021QS World University Rankings[30] ranked Sorbonne University 83rd overall in the world and 3rd in France. Individual faculties at Sorbonne University also featured in the rankings.

Before the merger ofParis-Sorbonne University andPierre and Marie Curie University, both had their own rankings in the world.

Its founding predecessor Paris-Sorbonne University was ranked 222 in the world by theQS World University Rankings 2015. Byfaculty, it was ranked 9 in modern languages, 36 in arts andhumanities (1st in France), and 127 insocial sciences and management (5th in France).[31] By academic reputation, it was ranked 80 (2nd in France), according to the QS World University Rankings, and 2nd in overall highest international reputation of all academic institutions in France, according to theTimes Higher Education 2015.[32][33] In 2014 Paris-Sorbonne ranked 227 in the world, according to theQS World University Rankings, 115 for Social Sciences and Management, 33 for Arts and Humanities.[33]

Pierre and Marie Curie University was often ranked as the best university in France.[34] In 2014 UPMC wasranked 35th in the world, 6th in Europe and 1st in France by theAcademic Ranking of World Universities.[35] It was ranked 4th in the world in the field of mathematics by the same study. The 2013QS World University Rankings[36] ranked the university 112th overall in the world and 3rd in France. In 2013, according toUniversity Ranking by Academic Performance (URAP),[37]Université Pierre et Marie Curie is ranked first university in France, and 44th in the world. UPMC is a member ofSorbonne University Association.[38]

International partnerships

[edit]

Sorbonne students can study abroad for a semester or a year at partner institutions such asMcGill University,University of Toronto,King's College London, andUniversity of Warwick.

Organization

[edit]

Members have worked on several projects to strengthen the relations between them and potentially create a new international institution. The most famous projects are :

  • the "Sorbonne College" (Collège des Licences de la Sorbonne) for bachelor's degrees,
  • the "Sorbonne Faculty of Arts and Humanities", "Sorbonne Faculty of Health" and the "Sorbonne Faculty of Sciences" for graduate students,
  • and the "Sorbonne Doctoral College" (Collège doctoral de la Sorbonne) for PhD students.

The Sorbonne College

[edit]

Since 2014, the Sorbonne College for bachelor's degrees ("Collège des Licences de la Sorbonne") has been coordinating the academic projects of Sorbonne University withPanthéon-Assas University, the law school of the Sorbonne University Group which has not merged into the Sorbonne University and remained independent. It also offers cross-institutional academic courses in many fields, allowing students to graduate from both institutions. For example, some cross-institutional bachelor's degrees ("double licences") are proposed to students in :

  • Science and History (Sorbonne)
  • Science and Musicology (Sorbonne)
  • Science and Philosophy (Sorbonne)
  • Science and Chinese (Sorbonne)
  • Science and German (Sorbonne)
  • Law and History (Panthéon-Assas / Sorbonne)
  • Law and Art History (Panthéon-Assas / Sorbonne)
  • Law and Science (Panthéon-Assas / Sorbonne)
  • History and Media (Sorbonne / Panthéon-Assas)[39]

As it is the case in the Anglo-American university system, Sorbonne University proposes a major-minor system, that is currently being deployed at the university.[40]

Sorbonne University, in partnership with INSEAD, also offers all of its alumni and PhD students a professionalizing course in business management to complete their curriculum.

The Doctoral College

[edit]
Sorbonne University's graduation ceremony, May 2011

Since 2010, every PhD student is being delivered an honorary diploma labeled Sorbonne University. This diploma highlights and gathers the skills of the doctors and researchers from the institutions that form Sorbonne University.

The Sorbonne Doctoral College, created in 2013, coordinates the activities of the 26 doctoral schools. Since 2014, it has developed cross-disciplinary PhDs between the different members of theSorbonne University Association.

Sorbonne University's doctoral schools
Doctoral schoolFields
Énergie, matière, universChimie physique & chimie analytique de Paris centre
Physique et chimie des matériaux
Chimie moléculaire de Paris centre
Astronomie et astrophysique
Sciences de la Terre et physique de l'univers
Physique en Ile-de-France
Modélisation et ingénierieInformatique, télécommunications & électronique
Sciences mathématiques de Paris centre
Sciences mécaniques, acoustique, électronique et robotique
Terre vivante et environnementSciences de l’environnement
Géosciences, ressources naturelles et environnement
Sciences de la nature et de l'homme : écologie et évolution
Vie et santéCerveau, cognition, comportement
Santé publique & sciences de l’information biomédicale
Physiologie, physiopathologie et thérapeutique
Complexité du vivant
Histoire-GéographieÉcole doctorale de géographie de Paris
Histoire de l’art et archéologie Paris-Sorbonne
Histoire moderne et contemporaine
Mondes anciens et médiévaux
Langues, lettres et civilisationsLittératures françaises et comparée
Civilisations, cultures et sociétés
Concepts et Language

Since 2011, Sorbonne University celebrates its graduates in a formal ceremony where every PhD graduate wears a scholar uniform.[41]

Research

[edit]

To strengthen the influence of its research infrastructures at the international level,Sorbonne University has developed several research programs aiming at reinforcing or exploring new fields of study. This innovative cross-disciplinary approach was embodied with the creation of four new academic positions gathering several establishments of the group:[42]

  • A Department of Digital Humanities, exploring the use of digital technologies in the social science
  • A Department of Polychromatic Studies of Societies, associating architecture, anthropology, chemical physics, literature and art history
  • A Department of Digital Health, exploring biomedical tools
  • A Department of 3D Craniofacial Reconstruction

Sorbonne University has formed several partnerships enabling bilateral research programswith academic institutions such as theChina Scholarship Council or the Brazilian foundation FAPERJ.

Sorbonne University is a member of theLeague of European Research Universities, which gathers 23 European universities such asCambridge andOxford.[43]

Collections

[edit]

Scientific collections

[edit]

The Sorbonne University houses eight notable scientific collections that are open to researchers.[44] Some collections are open to the public as noted.

  • Minerals – over 1500 minerals on display in 24 cases, open to the public
  • Physics experiments models – models built by professors from the Sorbonne and UPMC to demonstrate different principles of physics
  • Zoology – teaching collection of stuffed specimens, skeletal mounts, fluid parts, anatomical casts and insect boxes
  • Paleontology – research collection of fossil invertebrates
  • G. Lippmann collection – Research collection of 46 photographic plates created byGabriel Lippmann in his studies of photography and the physics of light
  • Charcot Library – Research collection of the personal library of neurologistJean-Martin Charcot
  • Paleobotany – Research collection ofFossil plants
  • Musée Dupuytren – moved fromCordeliers, will be open to the public occasionally, features wax anatomical items and preserved specimens illustrating diseases and malformations.

Recent Nobel, Fields and Turing laureates

[edit]

Notable alumni

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^"Sorbonne University | Arts and Humanities, Medicine, Science and Engineering". 17 September 2018. Archived fromthe original on 17 September 2018. Retrieved15 January 2022.
  2. ^"Awards and recognition".Sorbonne Universite. Archived fromthe original on 9 July 2019. Retrieved9 July 2019.
  3. ^George Weisz,The emergence of modern universities in France, 1863–1914 (Princeton University Press, 2014).
  4. ^abc"The Sorbonne in the 19th century – La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris".La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris. Retrieved9 January 2025.
  5. ^Sabine Delanes, « Le campus de Jussieu », dans Christian Hottin (dir.),Universités et grandes écoles à Paris : les palais de la science, Paris 1999ISBN 2-913246-03-6.
  6. ^Journal officiel de la République française (JORF) (14 April 1966)."Décret n°66–235 du 14 avril 1966 constituant une université à Orléans"(pdf).legifrance.gouv.fr (in French). Retrieved22 August 2024.
  7. ^"Association Sorbonne-Universités".Association Sorbonne-Universités. Archived fromthe original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved1 January 2018.
  8. ^"Décret n° 2017-596 du 21 avril 2017 portant création de l'université Sorbonne-Université".Journal officiel de la République française. 23 April 2017.Archived from the original on 1 October 2020. Retrieved5 August 2017.
  9. ^"Faculties".Sorbonne université. Paris.Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved13 February 2023.
  10. ^"Faculty of Arts and Humanities".Sorbonne université. Paris. 29 May 2020.Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved13 February 2023.
  11. ^ab"Faculty of Science and Engineering".Sorbonne université. Paris. 29 May 2020.Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved13 February 2023.
  12. ^"Faculty of Medicine".Sorbonne université. Paris. 29 May 2020.Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved13 February 2023.
  13. ^"French National Agency of Evaluation of Higher education institutions, p.65"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved3 April 2018.
  14. ^"Légifrance".www.legifrance.gouv.fr.Archived from the original on 24 February 2011. Retrieved5 August 2017.
  15. ^Base Mérimée:Sorbonne (La), Ministère français de la Culture.(in French)
  16. ^"The Sorbonne today – La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris".La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris.Archived from the original on 4 May 2018. Retrieved21 April 2018.
  17. ^"Convention de la BIS".bibliotheque.sorbonne.fr (in French).Archived from the original on 4 March 2021. Retrieved5 February 2021.
  18. ^"Le campus rénové de l'UPMC, ou l'autre visage de l'université | Focus Campus". 30 September 2016. Archived fromthe original on 30 September 2016. Retrieved15 January 2022.
  19. ^"Sorbonne University Ranking | CWUR World University Rankings 2018–2019".cwur.org.Archived from the original on 12 June 2019. Retrieved7 December 2019.
  20. ^abc"ARWU World University Rankings 2022 | Academic Ranking of World Universities 2022 | Top 500 universities | Shanghai Ranking – 2022".www.shanghairanking.com.Archived from the original on 15 August 2019. Retrieved16 October 2022.
  21. ^"Center for World University Rankings 2022–2023".Archived from the original on 12 October 2021. Retrieved16 October 2022.
  22. ^ab"CWTS Leiden Ranking 2022".Archived from the original on 22 June 2022. Retrieved16 October 2022.
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References

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