The three main global university rankings (ARWU,THE, andQS) place the University of Edinburgh within their respective top 40.[10][11][12] It is a member of several associations of research-intensive universities, including theCoimbra Group,League of European Research Universities,Russell Group,Una Europa, andUniversitas 21.[13] In thefiscal year ending 31 July 2024, the university had a total income of £1.386 billion, with £365.2 million from research grants and contracts. It has thethird-largest endowment in the UK, behind onlyCambridge andOxford.[3] The university occupies five main campuses in the city of Edinburgh, which include many buildings of historical and architectural significance, such as those in theOld Town.[14]
Edinburgh is thefourth-largest university in the United Kingdom by total enrolment and receives over 66,000 undergraduate applications per year, making it the fifth-most popular university in the UK by application volume.[15][16] In 2021, Edinburgh had the seventh-highest averageUCAS points among British universities for new entrants. The university maintains strong links to theroyal family, withPrince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, serving as its chancellor from 1953 to 2010, andAnne, Princess Royal, holding the position since March 2011.[17]
Robert Rollock, Regent (1583–1586) and first principal (1586–1599) of the University of Edinburgh
In 1557, BishopRobert Reid ofSt Magnus Cathedral onOrkney made awill containing an endowment of 8,000merks to build a college in Edinburgh.[20] Unusually for his time, Reid's vision included the teaching ofrhetoric andpoetry, alongside more traditional subjects such asphilosophy.[20] However, the bequest was delayed by more than 25 years due to the religious revolution that led to theReformation Parliament of 1560.[20] The plans were revived in the late 1570s through efforts by theEdinburgh Town Council, first minister of EdinburghJames Lawson, andLord ProvostWilliam Little.[2] When Reid's descendants were unwilling to pay out the sum, the town council petitioned KingJames VI and hisPrivy Council. The King brokered a monetary compromise and granted aroyal charter on 14 April 1582, empowering the town council to create a college of higher education.[20][21][22] A college established by secular authorities was unprecedented innewly Presbyterian Scotland, as all previous Scottish universities had been founded throughpapal bulls.[23]
Main buildings of King James' College in 1647, lying in a double courtyard on the lower leftFrontispiece to earliest laureation (graduation) register (1587)
NamedTounis College (Town's College), the university opened its doors to students on 14 October 1583, with an attendance of 80–90.[2] At the time, the college mainly coveredliberal arts anddivinity.[24][25] Instruction began under the charge of a graduate from theUniversity of St Andrews, theologianRobert Rollock, who first served as Regent, and from 1586 as principal of the college.[26] Initially Rollock was the sole instructor for first-year students, and he was expected to tutor the 1583 intake for all four years of their degree in every subject. The first cohort finished their studies in 1587, and 47 students graduated (or 'laureated') with anM.A. degree.[26] When King James VI visited Scotland in 1617, he held adisputation with the college's professors, after which he decreed that it should henceforth be called the "Colledge[sic] of King James".[27][28] The university was known as bothTounis College andKing James' College until it gradually assumed the name of the University of Edinburgh during the 17th century.[24][29]
After the deposition of KingJames II and VII during theGlorious Revolution in 1688, theParliament of Scotland passed legislation designed to root outJacobite sympathisers amongst university staff.[30] In Edinburgh, this led to the dismissal of PrincipalAlexander Monro and several professors and regents after a government visitation in 1690. The university was subsequently led by PrincipalGilbert Rule, one of the inquisitors on the visitation committee.[30]
"You are now in a place where the best courses upon earth are within your reach... Such an opportunity you will never again have. I would therefore strongly press on you to fix no other limit to your stay in Edinborough than your having got thro this whole course. The omission of any one part of it will be an affliction & loss to you as long as you live."
The late 17th and early 18th centuries were marked by a power struggle between the university and town council, which had ultimate authority over staff appointments, curricula, and examinations.[32] After a series of challenges by the university, the conflict culminated in the council seizing the college records in 1704.[32] Relations were only gradually repaired over the next 150 years and suffered repeated setbacks.
In 1708 the PrincipalWilliam Carsatres restructured the University, abolishingthe regenting system and establishing a Dutch style system of Professors. The newly created Chairs, such as that ofGreek and Humanity, were offered to the existing Regents.[33] The university expanded by founding a Faculty of Law in 1707, a Faculty of Arts in 1708, and a Faculty of Medicine in 1726.[34] In 1762, ReverendHugh Blair was appointed by KingGeorge III as the firstRegius Professor of Rhetoric and Belles-Lettres.[35] This formalised literature as a subject and marks the foundation of the English Literature department, making Edinburgh the oldest centre of literary education in Britain.[36]
During the 18th century, the university was at the centre of theScottish Enlightenment.[37] The ideas of theAge of Enlightenment fell on especially fertile ground in Edinburgh because of the university's democratic and secular origin; its organization as a single entity instead of loosely connected colleges, which encouraged academic exchange; its adoption of the more flexible Dutch model of professorship, rather than having student cohorts taught by a single regent; and the lack of land endowments as its source of income, which meant its faculty operated in a more competitive environment.[38] Between 1750 and 1800, this system produced and attracted key Enlightenment figures such as chemistJoseph Black, economistAdam Smith, historianWilliam Robertson, philosophersDavid Hume andDugald Stewart, physicianWilliam Cullen, and early sociologistAdam Ferguson, many of which taught concurrently.[38] By the time theRoyal Society of Edinburgh was founded in 1783, the university was regarded as one of the world's preeminent scientific institutions,[39] andVoltaire called Edinburgh a "hotbed of genius" as a result.[40]Benjamin Franklin believed that the university possessed "a set of as truly great men, Professors of the Several Branches of Knowledge, as have ever appeared in any Age or Country".[41]Thomas Jefferson felt that as far as science was concerned, "no place in the world can pretend to a competition with Edinburgh".[42]
In 1785,Henry Dundas introduced theSouth Bridge Act in theHouse of Commons; one of the bill's goals was to useSouth Bridge as a location for the university, which had existed in a hotchpotch of buildings since its establishment. The site was used to constructOld College, the university's first custom-built building, by architectWilliam Henry Playfair to plans byRobert Adam.[43] During the 18th century, the university developed a particular forte in teachinganatomy and the developing science ofsurgery, and it was considered one of the best medical schools in the English-speaking world.[44] Bodies to be used fordissection were brought to the university's Anatomy Theatre through a secret tunnel from a nearby house (today's College Wynd student accommodation), which was also used by murderersBurke and Hare to deliver the corpses of their victims during the 1820s.[45][46]
TheEdinburgh snowball riots of 1838 also known as the 'Wars of the Quadrangle' occurred when University of Edinburgh students engaged in what started as a snowball fight in "a spirit of harmless amusement" before becoming a two-day 'battle' atOld College with localEdinburgh residents onSouth Bridge which led to the Lord Provost calling from the 79th regiment to be called fromEdinburgh Castle to quell the disturbance. This was later immortalised in a 92-page humorous account written by the students entitledThe University Snowdrop and then later, in 1853, in a landscape by English artist,Samuel Bough.[47][48][49]
Snowballing Outside Edinburgh University (1853) -Samuel Bough
After 275 years of governance by the town council, theUniversities (Scotland) Act 1858 gave the university full authority over its own affairs.[32] The act established governing bodies including a university court and a general council, and redefined the roles of key officials like the chancellor, rector, and principal.[50]
TheEdinburgh Seven were the first group of matriculated undergraduate female students at any British university.[51] Led bySophia Jex-Blake, they began studying medicine at the University of Edinburgh in 1869. Although the university blocked them from graduating and qualifying as doctors, their campaign gained national attention and won them many supporters, includingCharles Darwin.[52] Their efforts put the rights of women to higher education on the national political agenda, which eventually resulted in legislation allowing women to study at all Scottish universities in 1889. The university admitted women to graduate in medicine in 1893.[53][54] In 2015, the Edinburgh Seven were commemorated with a plaque at the university,[55] and in 2019 they were posthumously awarded with medical degrees.[56]
Towards the end of the 19th century, Old College was becoming overcrowded. After a bequest from SirDavid Baxter, the university started planning new buildings in earnest. SirRobert Rowand Anderson won the public architectural competition and was commissioned to design new premises for theMedical School in 1877.[57] Initially, the design incorporated acampanile and a hall for examination and graduation, but this was seen as too ambitious. The new Medical School opened in 1884, but the building was not completed until 1888.[58] After funds were donated by politician and brewerWilliam McEwan in 1894, a separate graduation building was constructed after all, also designed by Anderson.[59] The resultingMcEwan Hall onBristo Square was presented to the university in 1897.[60]
DuringWorld War I, the Science and Medicine buildings had suffered from a lack of repairs or upgrades, which was exacerbated by an influx of students after the end of the war.[67] In 1919, the university bought the land of West Mains Farm in the south of the city for the development of a new satellite campus specialising in the sciences.[68] On 6 July 1920, KingGeorge V laid the foundation of the first new building (now called theJoseph Black Building), housing theDepartment of Chemistry.[67] The campus was namedKing's Buildings in honour of George V.
New College onThe Mound was originally opened in 1846 as aFree Church of Scotland college, later of theUnited Free Church of Scotland.[69] Since the 1930s it has been the home of the School of Divinity. Prior to the 1929 reunion of theChurch of Scotland, candidates for the ministry in the United Free Church studied at New College, whilst candidates for the Church of Scotland studied in the university's Faculty of Divinity.[70] In 1935 the two institutions merged, with all operations moved to the New College site in Old Town.[71] This freed up Old College forEdinburgh Law School.[72]
ThePolish School of Medicine was established in 1941 as a wartime academic initiative. While it was originally intended for students and doctors in thePolish Armed Forces in the West, civilians were also allowed to take the courses, which were taught in Polish and awarded Polish medical degrees.[73] When the school was closed in 1949, 336 students had matriculated, of which 227 students graduated with the equivalent of anMBChB and a total of 19 doctors obtained a doctorate orMD.[74] A bronze plaque commemorating the Polish School of Medicine is located in the Quadrangle of the old Medical School in Teviot Place.[75]
On 10 May 1951, theRoyal (Dick) Veterinary College, founded in 1823 byWilliam Dick,[76] was reconstituted as theRoyal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies and officially became part of the university.[77] It achieved full faculty status as Faculty of Veterinary Medicine in 1964.
By the end of the 1950s, there were around 7,000 students matriculating annually, more than doubling the numbers from the turn of the century.[79] The university addressed this partially through the redevelopment ofGeorge Square, demolishing much of the area's historic houses and erecting modern buildings such as40 George Square,Appleton Tower and theMain Library.[80]
On 1 August 1998, theMoray House Institute of Education, founded in 1848, merged with the University of Edinburgh, becoming its Faculty of Education. Following the internal restructuring of the university in 2002, Moray House became known as theMoray House School of Education.[81] It was renamed the Moray House School of Education and Sport in August 2019.[82]
In April 2008, theRoslin Institute – ananimal sciences research centre known for cloningDolly the sheep – became part of the Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies.[95] In 2011, the school moved into a new £60 million building on the Easter Bush campus, which now houses research and teaching facilities, and a hospital for small and farm animals.[96][97]
Edinburgh College of Art, founded in 1760, formally merged with the university's School of Arts, Culture and Environment on 1 August 2011.[98][99] In 2014, theZhejiang University-University of Edinburgh Institute (ZJE) was founded as an international joint institute offering degrees in biomedical sciences, taught in English.[100] The campus, located inHaining, Zhejiang Province, China, was established on 15 March 2016.[101]
In 2018, the University of Edinburgh was a signatory to the £1.3 billionEdinburgh and South East Scotland City Region Deal, in partnership with the UK and Scottish governments, six local authorities and all universities and colleges in the region.[104] The university committed to delivering a range of economic benefits to the region through theData-Driven Innovation initiative.[105] In conjunction withHeriot-Watt University, the deal created five innovation hubs: the Bayes Centre, Edinburgh Futures Institute, Usher Institute, Easter Bush, and one further hub based at Heriot-Watt, the National Robotarium. The deal also included creation of the Edinburgh International Data Facility, which performs high-speed data processing in a secure environment.[106][107]
In September 2020, the university completed work on theRichard Verney Health Centre at its central area campus on Bristo Square. The facility houses a health centre and pharmacy, and the university's disability and counselling services.[108] The university's largest expansion in the 2020s was the conversion of some of the historic Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh buildings in Lauriston Place, which had been vacated in 2003 and partially developed into theQuartermile. The £120 million project created a home for theEdinburgh Futures Institute (EFI), an interdisciplinary hub linking arts, humanities, and social sciences with other disciplines in the research and teaching of complex, multi-stakeholder societal challenges.[109][110] The EFI officially opened its doors to the public on 4 June 2024.[111]
Edinburgh has several historical links to other universities, chiefly through its influential Medical School and its graduates, who established and developed institutions elsewhere in the world.
Princeton University: had its academic syllabus and structure reformed along the lines of the University of Edinburgh and other Scottish universities by its sixth presidentJohn Witherspoon, an Edinburgh theology graduate.[120][121]
Main locations of the University of Edinburgh. Easter Bush is located 7 miles south of the city.
The university has five main sites in Edinburgh:[123]
Central Area
King's Buildings
BioQuarter
Easter Bush
Western General
The university is responsible for several significant historic and modern buildings across the city, includingSt Cecilia's Hall, Scotland's oldest purpose-builtconcert hall and the second oldest in use in theBritish Isles;[124] Teviot Row House, the oldest purpose-builtstudents' union building in the world;[63] and the restored 17th-century Mylne's Court student residence at the head of theRoyal Mile.[14]
Pollock Halls, adjoiningHolyrood Park to the east, is the university's largest residence hall for undergraduate students in their first year. The complex houses over 2,000 students during term time and consists of ten named buildings with communal green spaces between them.[126] The two original buildings,St Leonard's Hall andSalisbury Green, were built in the 19th century, while the majority of Pollock Halls dates from the 1960s and early 2000s. Two of the older houses in Pollock Halls were demolished in 2002, and a new building, Chancellor's Court, was built in their place and opened in 2003. Self-catered flats elsewhere account for the majority of university-provided accommodation. The area also includes the John McIntyre Conference Centre opened in 2009, which is the university's premier conference space.[127]
The Holyrood campus, just off theRoyal Mile, used to be the site forMoray House Institute for Education until it merged with the university on 1 August 1998.[81] The university has since extended this campus.[128] The buildings include redeveloped and extended Sports Science, Physical Education and Leisure Management facilities at St Leonard's Land linked to the Sports Institute in thePleasance.[129] The £80 million O'Shea Hall at Holyrood was named after the former principal of the university SirTimothy O'Shea and was opened byPrincess Anne in 2017, providing a living and social environment for postgraduate students.[130] The Outreach Centre, Institute for Academic Development (University Services Group), and Edinburgh Centre for Professional Legal Studies are also located at Holyrood.[131][132][133]
The King's Buildings campus is located in the south of the city. Most of the Science and Engineering College's research and teaching activities take place at the campus, which occupies a 35-hectare site. It includes theAlexander Graham Bell Building (for mobile phones and digital communications systems),James Clerk Maxwell Building (the administrative and teaching centre of theSchool of Physics and Astronomy and School of Mathematics),Joseph Black Building (home to theSchool of Chemistry),Royal Observatory,Swann Building (the Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell Biology),Waddington Building (the Centre for Systems Biology at Edinburgh),William Rankine Building (School of Engineering's Institute for Infrastructure and Environment), and others.[134] Until 2012, the KB campus was served by three libraries: Darwin Library, James Clerk Maxwell Library, and Robertson Engineering and Science Library. These were replaced by the Noreen and Kenneth Murray Library opened for the academic year 2012/13.[135][136] The campus also hosts the National e-Science Centre (NeSC),Scotland's Rural College (SRUC), Scottish Institute for Enterprise (SIE), Scottish Microelectronics Centre (SMC), and Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre (SUERC).
The BioQuarter campus, based in the Little France area, is home to the majority of medical facilities of the university, alongside the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. The campus houses the Anne Rowling Regenerative Neurology Clinic,Centre for Regenerative Medicine, Chancellor's Building,Euan MacDonald Centre, and Queen's Medical Research Institute, which opened in 2005.[84] The Chancellor's Building has two large lecture theatres and a medical library connected to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh by a series of corridors.
The Easter Bush campus, located seven miles south of the city, houses the Jeanne Marchig International Centre for Animal Welfare Education,Roslin Institute, Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, and Veterinary Oncology and Imaging Centre.[96]
The Western General campus, in proximity to theWestern General Hospital, contains the Biomedical Research Facility, Edinburgh Clinical Research Facility, and Institute of Genetics and Cancer (formerly the Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine).
Modern architecture at the University of Edinburgh
The University Court is the university's governing body and thelegal person of the university, chaired by therector and consisting of the principal,Lord Provost of Edinburgh, and ofAssessors appointed by the rector, chancellor,Edinburgh Town Council, General Council, andSenatus Academicus. By the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889, it is a body corporate, with perpetual succession and a common seal. All property belonging to the university at the passing of the Act was vested in the Court.[141] The present powers of the Court are further defined in the Universities (Scotland) Act 1966, including the administration and management of the university's revenue and property, the regulation of staff salaries, and the establishment and composition of committees of its own members or others.
The General Council consists ofgraduates,academic staff, current and former University Court members. It was established to ensure that graduates have a continuing voice in the management of the university. The Council is required to meet twice per year to consider matters affecting the wellbeing and prosperity of the university. The Universities (Scotland) Act 1966 gave the Council the power to consider draft ordinances and resolutions, to be presented with anannual report of the work and activities of the university, and to receive an auditedfinancial statement.[142] The Council elects the chancellor of the university and three Assessors on the University Court.
TheSenatus Academicus is the university's supreme academic body, chaired by the principal and consisting of the professors, heads of departments, and a number ofreaders,lecturers and other teaching and research staff.[143] The core function of theSenatus is to regulate and supervise the teaching and discipline of the university and to promote research. TheSenatus elects four Assessors on the University Court. TheSenatus meets three times per year, hosting a presentation and discussion session which is open to all members of staff at each meeting.
The university's three most significant officials are its chancellor, rector, and principal, whose rights and responsibilities are largely derived from the Universities (Scotland) Act 1858.
The office ofchancellor serves as the titular head and highest office of the university. Their duties include conferring degrees and enhancing the profile and reputation of the university on national and global levels.[144] The chancellor is elected by the university'sGeneral Council, and a person generally remains in the office for life. Previous chancellors include formerprime ministerArthur Balfour and novelist SirJ. M. Barrie.[144]Princess Anne has held the position since March 2011 succeedingPrince Philip.[17] She is also Patron of the university's Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies.
Theprincipal is responsible for the overall operation of the university in achief executive role.[145] The principal is formally nominated by the Curators of Patronage and appointed by the University Court. They are the President of theSenatus Academicus and a member of the University Courtex officio.[145] The principal is also automatically appointed vice-chancellor, in which role they confer degrees on behalf of the chancellor. Previous principals include physicist SirEdward Appleton andreligious philosopherStewart Sutherland. The current principal isnephrologistSir Peter Mathieson, who has held the position since February 2018.[146]
In 2002, the university was reorganised from its ninefaculties into three 'Colleges'.[149] While technically not acollegiate university, it comprises the Colleges ofArts, Humanities and Social Sciences (CAHSS),Science & Engineering (CSE) andMedicine & Vet Medicine (CMVM). Within these colleges are 'Schools', which either represent one academic discipline such as Informatics or assemble adjacent academic disciplines such as the School of History, Classics and Archaeology. While bound by College-level policies, individual Schools can differ in their organisation and governance. As of 2021, the university has 21 schools in total.[150]
The College took on its current name of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences in 2016 after absorbing the Edinburgh College of Art in 2011.[151] CAHSS offers more than 280 undergraduate degree programmes, 230 taught postgraduate programmes, and 200 research postgraduate programmes.[152][153] Twenty subjects offered by the college were ranked within the top 10 nationally in the 2022Complete University Guide.[154] It includes the oldest English Literature department in Britain,[36] which was ranked 7th globally in the 2021QS Rankings by Subject in English Language & Literature.[155] The college hosts Scotland'sESRCDoctoral Training Centre (DTC), the Scottish Graduate School of Social Science. The college is the largest of the three colleges by enrolment, with 26,130 students and 3,089 academic staff.[156][6]
Old Surgical Hospital inDrummond Street, once part of theRoyal Infirmary, today houses the university's Institute of Geography.
In the 16th century, science was taught as "natural philosophy" in the university. The 17th century saw the institution of the University Chairs of Mathematics and Botany, followed the next century by Chairs of Natural History, Astronomy, Chemistry and Agriculture. It was Edinburgh's professors who took a leading part in the formation of theRoyal Society of Edinburgh in 1783.Joseph Black, Professor of Medicine and Chemistry at the time, founded the world's first Chemical Society in 1785.[166] The first named degrees of Bachelor and Doctor of Science was instituted in 1864, and a separate Faculty of Science was created in 1893 after three centuries of scientific advances at Edinburgh.[166] TheRegius Chair in Engineering was established in 1868, and the Regius Chair in Geology in 1871. In 1991 the Faculty of Science was renamed the Faculty of Science and Engineering, and in 2002 it became the College of Science and Engineering. The college has 11,745 students and 2,937 academic staff.[156][6]
In the financial year ending 31 July 2024, the University of Edinburgh had a total income of £1.386 billion (2022/23 – £1.341 billion) and total expenditure of £1.014 billion (2022/23 – £1.181 billion).[3] Key sources of income included £527.2 million from tuition fees and education contracts (2022/23 – £513.7 million), £208.7 million from funding body grants (2022/23 – £210.9 million), £365.2 million from research grants and contracts (2022/23 – £339.5 million), £62.7 million from investment income (2022/23 – £42.2 million) and £25 million from donations and endowments (2022/23 – £55.7 million).[3]
At year end, Edinburgh had endowments of £580.4 million (2023 – £559.8 million) and total net assets of £3.003 billion (2023 – £2.615 billion). It holds thethird-largest endowment of any university in the UK.[3]
As part of the university's support for researchers,[169] each College has Research Staff Societies that includepostdoc societies, and organisations specific to each school.[170] Cross-curricula Research Networks bring together researchers working on similar topics.[171]
Staff Pride Network banner Pride Edinburgh parade, 2024.[172]
Independently of the College hierarchy, aligned with the university'sEDI policy,[173] eight Staff Networks bring together and represent diverse staff groups:[174]
In November 2024, Principal Mathieson warned staff of impending redundancies, citing "a multi-million pound increase to our salary bill" he said had been created by theLabour administration's National Insurance hike.[189] Following Mathieson's announcement of £140 million in cuts on 25 February 2025,[190] the UCU said that 59% of its members had turned out for a consulative ballot, with 75% willing to strike, and a further 10% prepared towork to rule including refusing to cover for absent colleagues.[191] Mathieson'sannual salary package exceeding £418,000 and comparable remunerations of other university executive staff also fell under heavy criticism in light of cuts staff were being asked to absorb.[192]
In 2021, the University of Edinburgh had the seventh-highest average entry standards amongst universities in the UK, with new undergraduates averaging 197UCAS points, equivalent to just above AAAA inA-level grades.[197] It gave offers of admission to 33% of its 18 year old applicants in 2022, the fourth-lowest amongst theRussell Group.[201]
In 2022, excluding courses withinEdinburgh College of Art, the most competitive courses for Scottish applicants were Oral Health Science (9%), Business (11%), Philosophy & Psychology (14%), Social Work (15%), and International Business (15%).[202] For students from the rest of the UK, the most competitive courses were Nursing (5%), Medicine (6%), Veterinary Medicine (6%), Psychology (8%), andPolitics, Philosophy and Economics (10%).[203] For international students, the most competitive courses were Medicine (5%), Nursing (7%), Business (11%), Politics, Philosophy andEconomics (12%), and Sociology (13%).[204]
For the academic year 2019/20, 36.8% of Edinburgh's new undergraduates wereprivately educated, the second-highest proportion among mainstream British universities, behind onlyOxford.[205] As of August 2021, it has a higher proportion of female than male students with a male to female ratio of 38:62 in the undergraduate population, and the undergraduate student body is composed of 30% Scottish students, 32% from the rest of the UK, 10% from the EU, and 28% from outside the EU.[6]
At graduation ceremonies, graduates are being 'capped' with theGeneva bonnet, which involves the university's principal tapping them on the head with the cap while they receive their graduation certificate.[206] The velvet-and-silk hat has been used for over 150 years, and legend says that it was originally made from cloth taken from the breeches of 16th-century scholarsJohn Knox orGeorge Buchanan.[207] However, when the hat was last restored in the early 2000s, a label dated 1849 was discovered bearing the name of Edinburgh tailor Henry Banks, although some doubt remains whether he manufactured or restored the hat.[206][208] In 2006, a university emblem that had been taken into space by astronaut and Edinburgh graduatePiers Sellers was incorporated into theGeneva bonnet.[209]
Pre-dating the university by three years, Edinburgh University Library was founded in 1580 through the donation of a large collection by Clement Litill, and today is the largest academic library collection in Scotland.[210][211] TheBrutalist style eight-storey Main Library building inGeorge Square was designed by SirBasil Spence. At the time of its completion in 1967, it was the largest building of its type in the UK, and today is acategory A listed building.[212] The library system also includes many specialised libraries at the college and school level.[213]
The university offers students the opportunity to study abroad at around 300 partner institutions in nearly 40 countries worldwide, with most partner universities being located in Europe, North America, and Asia.[214]
University-wide exchanges are open to most, but not all, students on undergraduate degrees in the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences, and the College of Science and Engineering; most students in the College of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine are not eligible for exchanges.[215] Students will normally go abroad in their third year.[215] The list of partner institutions is shown as follows (part of):[216]
In the 2021Research Excellence Framework (REF), which evaluated work produced between 2014 and 2021, Edinburgh ranked 4th by research power and 15th by GPA amongst British universities.[224] The university fell four places in GPA when compared to the 2014 REF, but retained its place in research power.[225] 90 per cent of the university's research activity was judged to be 'world leading' (4*) or 'internationally excellent' (3*), and five departments – Computer Science, Informatics, Sociology, Anthropology, and Development Studies – were ranked as the best in the UK.[226]
In the 2015THE Global Employability University Ranking, Edinburgh ranked 23rd in the world and 4th in the UK for graduate employability as voted by international recruiters.[227] A 2015 government report found that Edinburgh was one of only two Scottish universities (along withSt Andrews) that some London-based elite recruitment firms considered applicants from, especially in the field of financial services and investment banking.[228] WhenThe New York Times ranked universities based on the employability of graduates as evaluated by recruiters from top companies in 20 countries in 2012, Edinburgh was placed at 42nd in the world and 7th in Britain.[229]
The disparity between Edinburgh's research capacity,endowment and international status on the one hand, and its ranking in national league tables on the other, is largely due to the impact of measures of 'student satisfaction'.[234] Edinburgh was ranked last in the UK for teaching quality in the 2012National Student Survey,[235] with the 2015Good University Guide stating that this stemmed from "questions to do with the promptness, usefulness and extent of academic feedback", and that the university "still has a long way to go to turn around a poor position".[236] Edinburgh improved only marginally over the next years, with the 2021Good University Guide still ranking it in the bottom 10 domestically in both teaching quality and student experience.[237] Edinburgh was ranked 122nd out of 128 universities for student satisfaction in the 2022Complete University Guide, although it was ranked 12th overall.[238] The 2024Guardian University Guide ranked Edinburgh 14th overall, but 50th out of 120 universities in teaching satisfaction, and lowest among all universities in satisfaction with feedback.[239]
In the 2022Complete University Guide, 32 out of the 49 subjects offered by Edinburgh were ranked within the top 10 in the UK, with Asian Studies (4th), Chemical Engineering (4th), Education (2nd), Geology (5th), Linguistics (5th), Mechanical Engineering (5th), Medicine (5th), Music (5th), Nursing (1st), Physics & Astronomy (5th), Social Policy (5th), Theology & Religious Studies (4th), and Veterinary Medicine (2nd) within the top 5.[238] The 2021THE World University Rankings by Subject ranked Edinburgh 10th worldwide in Arts and Humanities, 15th in Law, 16th in Psychology, 21st in Clinical, Pre-clinical & Health, 22nd in Computer Science, 28th in Education, 28th in Life Science, 43rd in Business & Economics, 44th in Social Sciences, 45th in Physical Sciences, and 86th in Engineering & Technology.[240] The 2023QS World University Rankings by Subject placed Edinburgh at 10th globally in Arts & Humanities, 23rd in Life Sciences & Medicine, 36th in Natural Sciences, 50th in Social Sciences & Management, and 59th in Engineering & Technology.[241] According toCSRankings, computer science at Edinburgh was ranked 1st in the UK and 36th globally, and Edinburgh was the best innatural language processing (NLP) in the world.[242]
The Pleasance, one of EUSA's main buildings, is a theatre, bar, sports and recreation complex.
Edinburgh University Students' Association (EUSA) consists of thestudents' union and thestudents' representative council. EUSA's buildings includeTeviot Row House,The Pleasance,Potterrow Student Centre,Kings Buildings House, as well as shops, cafés and refectories across the various campuses. Teviot Row House is considered the oldest purpose-built student union building in the world.[63][243] Most of these buildings are operated asEdinburgh Festival Fringe venues during August. EUSA represents students to the university and the wider world, and is responsible for over 250 student societies at the university. The association has fivesabbatical office bearers – a president and four vice presidents. EUSA is affiliated with theNational Union of Students (NUS).
The University of Edinbrugh is home tothe Diagnostic Society of Edinburgh which was founded in 1787. It claims to be the oldest student debating society in the UK. The society is indirectly associated with the university through the students union as an unincorporated society.
TheEdinburgh University Music Society (EUMS) is a student-run musical organisation, which is Scotland's oldest student's musical society; it can be traced back to a concert in February 1867.[245] It performs three concert series throughout the year whilst also undertaking a programme of charity events and education projects.[246]
The student-runBedlam Theatre, home to the Edinburgh University Theatre Company
The Edinburgh Studio Opera (formerly Edinburgh University Opera Club) is a studentopera company in Edinburgh. It performs at least one fully staged opera each year.[251] The Edinburgh University Savoy Opera Group (EUSOG) is an opera andmusical theatre company founded by students in 1961 to promote and perform the comic operettas of SirWilliam Gilbert and SirArthur Sullivan, collectively known asSavoy Operas after the theatre in which they were originally staged.[252]
The Edinburgh University Footlights are a musical theatre company founded in 1989 and produce two large scale shows a year.[253][254] One of the founders is the Theatre Producer Colin Ingram.[255] Theatre Parodok, founded in 2004, is a student theatre company that aims to produce shows that are "experimental without being exclusive". They stage one large show each semester and one for the festival.[256]
The Student is a fortnightlystudent newspaper. Founded in 1887 by writerRobert Louis Stevenson, it is the oldest student newspaper in the United Kingdom.[257] Former writers of the newspaper include politiciansGordon Brown,Robin Cook, andLord Steel of Aikwood.[258][259] It has been independent of the university since 1992, but was forced to temporarily fold in 2002 due to increasing debts. The newspaper won a number of student newspaper awards in the years following its relaunch.[257]
The Journal was an independent publication, established in 2007 by three students and former writers forThe Student. It was also distributed to other higher education institutions in the city, such asHeriot-Watt University,Edinburgh Napier University, andTelford College. It was the largest such publication in Scotland, with a print run of 10,000 copies. Despite winning a number of awards for its journalism, the magazine folded in 2015 due to financial difficulties.[260]
FreshAir, launched on 3 October 1992, is an alternative musicstudent radio station. The station is one of the oldest surviving student radio stations in the UK, and won the "Student Radio Station of the Year" award at the annualStudent Radio Awards in 2004.[261]
In September 2015, the Edinburgh University Student Television (EUTV) became the newest addition to the student media scene at the university, producing a regular magazine-style programme, documentaries and other special events.[262]
Edinburgh University Mountaineering Club at thecairn onCiste Dhubh, 1964
Student sport at Edinburgh consists of clubs covering the more traditionalrugby,football,rowing andjudo, to the more unconventionalkorfball,gliding andmountaineering. In 2021, the university had over 65 sports clubs run by Edinburgh University Sports Union (EUSU).[263]
The Scottish Varsity, known as the "world's oldest varsity match", is a rugby match played annually against theUniversity of St Andrews dating back over 150 years.[264] Discontinued in the 1950s, the match was resurrected in 2011 and was staged in London at the home ofLondon Scottish RFC. It is played at the beginning of the academic year, and since 2015 has been staged atMurrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh.[265]
Protests, demonstrations and occupations are regular occurrences at the university.[272][273][274] The activist group People & Planet took over Charles Stewart House in 2015 and again in 2016 in protest over the university's investment in companies active in arms manufacturing or fossil fuel extraction.[275][276] In May 2015, a security guard was charged in relation to the occupations.[277]
Edinburgh University student Gaza protest, Old College Quad encampment, May 2024.
In May 2024,student activists set up a protest camp in the Old College Quad, with some also beginning ahunger strike,[278] and demanded divestment from companies they alleged supported theIsraeli invasion of the Gaza Strip. The campaign, backed by more than 600 staff and thestudents' union,[279] specifically targeted the university's investments inAlphabet Inc. andAmazon, and its relationship with investment firmBlackRock.[280] In response, Principal Mathieson emphasized that the university would respect peaceful protest rights, while also defending its investment practices.[281] The university subsequently established a working group to review its investment policies related to "armaments and controversial weapons"[282][283] and launched a consultation on ethical investing principles. The protest camp was dismantled in June.[284]
There are three student-runco-operatives associated with the University:Edinburgh Student Housing Co-operative (ESHC), providing affordable housing for 106 students;[285] the Hearty Squirrel Food Cooperative, providing local, organic and affordable food to students and staff;[286] and the SHRUB Coop, a swap and re-use hub aimed at reducing waste and promotingsustainability.[287] Of these, only the Hearty Squirrel Co-operative operates on campus.ESHC is based on the Bruntsfield Links south of the University's central campus, and hosts students from all three city universities and Edinburgh College. The SHRUB co-operative was formed partly by University of Edinburgh students but is now run by interested members from across Edinburgh. The co-operatives form part of theStudents for Cooperation network.[288]
Max Born,Tait Professor of Natural Philosophy at Edinburgh from 1936 to 1953, was awarded theNobel Prize in Physics in 1954.[368]Peter Higgs, faculty at Edinburgh since 1960 and Emeritus Professor after 1996, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2013.[369]
In the following table, the number following a person's name is the year they received the Nobel prize. In particular, a number with an asterisk (*) means the person received the award while they were working at the university (includingemeritus staff).A name underlined implies that this person has been listed previously (i.e., multiple affiliations).
Many ofArthur Conan Doyle's works drew inspiration from his mentors at the university.Joseph Bell, a lecturer and surgeon famous for drawing conclusions from minute observations, became the archetype for Conan Doyle's fictional detectiveSherlock Holmes.William Rutherford, Conan Doyle's physiology professor provided the template forProfessor Challenger, the protagonist of his science fiction workThe Lost World (1912). Edinburgh is also Challenger'salma mater in the books.
Dr. Fu Manchu, a fictional supervillain created bySax Rohmer in 1912, stated that "I am a doctor of philosophy from Edinburgh, a doctor of law fromChrist's College, a doctor of medicine fromHarvard. My friends, out of courtesy, call me 'Doctor'."[e] In 2010, Fu Manchu's connections with the University where he supposedly obtained a doctorate were investigated in a mockumentary byMiles Jupp (also an Edinburgh alumnus) forBBC Radio 4.[413][414]
The historical filmChariots of Fire (1981) is based on the story of Olympic runner and Edinburgh graduateEric Liddell, and includes scenes filmed outside ofAssembly Hall, New College.[416] Liddell is played byIan Charleson, who is also an Edinburgh alumnus.
In the American television showNCIS (2003–present), the chief medical examiner,Dr. Donald "Ducky" Mallard studied medicine at Edinburgh.Ari Haswari, the show's main antagonist for the first two seasons, also studied medicine at Edinburgh.[417]
In the novelOne Day (2009), the lead characters Dexter and Emma both graduated from Edinburgh. A feature film based on the book, also titledOne Day and starringAnne Hathaway andJim Sturgess was released in August 2011, with some scenes filmed at the university.[418] ANetflix adaptation of the movie started production in 2021, with filming occurring in the grounds ofOld College in 2022.[419]
The thriller television seriesClique (2017–2019) produced byBBC Three focuses on two students at the university. The series was shot largely on location in Edinburgh, includingThe Meadows,Old College, andPotterrow.[421][422]
^HESA numbers given here are significantly lower than those reported by the university, since HESA does not include non-graduating and visiting students, postgraduates writing up, and online learning students living abroad.[6]
^Includes those who indicate that they identify asAsian,Black,Mixed Heritage,Arab or any other ethnicity except White.
^Calculated from the Polar4 measure, using Quintile1, in England and Wales. Calculated from theScottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) measure, using SIMD20, in Scotland.
^abcde"Factsheet of Student Figures"(PDF). Strategic Planning, The University of Edinburgh. 11 August 2021.Archived(PDF) from the original on 14 August 2021. Retrieved14 August 2021.
^Mijers, Esther (2012).'News From the Republick of Letters': Scottish Students, Charles Mackie and the United Provinces, 1650–1750. Leiden; Boston.: Brill. pp. 111-6.
^"Our history". The University of Edinburgh.Archived from the original on 11 August 2021. Retrieved11 August 2021.
^"Faculty of Divinity". The University of Edinburgh.Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved17 August 2021.
^Brown, Stewart J. (1 July 1996). "The Disruption and the Dream: The Making of New College 1843–1861". In Wright, David F.; Badcock, Gary D. (eds.).Disruption to Diversity: Edinburgh Divinity 1846-1996. Edinburgh: Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 29–50.ISBN978-0567085177.Archived from the original on 14 August 2021. Retrieved19 August 2021.
^"John Witherspoon".The Presidents of Princeton University. Princeton University. 26 November 2013.Archived from the original on 21 March 2021. Retrieved20 June 2021.
^"Industrial Action 2023/24".The University of Edinburgh. 7 September 2023.Archived from the original on 28 September 2023. Retrieved12 September 2023.
^Oakeley, Edward Murray (1 January 1904).The Life of Sir Herbert Stanley Oakeley (1st ed.). University of California Libraries.ISBN0217800548.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
^"History". Edinburgh University Music Society.Archived from the original on 27 August 2021. Retrieved27 August 2021.
^"Charles Darwin (1809–1882)". The University of Edinburgh. 2 February 2016.Archived from the original on 17 November 2021. Retrieved17 November 2021.
^Mann, Rosemary (7 June 2019)."Darwin in Edinburgh 1825–1827". National Museum of Scotland.Archived from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved8 December 2021.
Haynes, Nick; Fenton, Clive B. (2017).Building Knowledge: An Architectural History of the University of Edinburgh. Historic Environment Scotland.ISBN9781849172462.