Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw

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Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw
Uniwersytet Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego
w Warszawie
UKSW-Warsaw-logo.jpg
Latin: Universitas Cardinalis Stephani Wyszyński Varsoviae
Motto"Soli Deo"
TypeUniversity
Established3 September 1999
RectorRyszard Czekalski
Academic staff
785[1]
Administrative staff
1.100[1]
Students19 000[2]
Address
ul. Dewajtis 5
01-815
, ,
52°17′42″N 20°57′35″E / 52.29500°N 20.95972°E / 52.29500; 20.95972Coordinates: 52°17′42″N 20°57′35″E / 52.29500°N 20.95972°E / 52.29500; 20.95972
AffiliationsEuropean University Association
Erasmus Programme
[3]
Websitewww.uksw.edu.pl

Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University in Warsaw (Polish: Uniwersytet Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego w Warszawie) is a state university in Warsaw. It was founded in 1999, and it is named after Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński of Poland.[4] It offers religious studies at the faculties of theology, Canon law and Christian philosophy under the patronage of Archbishop of Warsaw issuing permits (missio canonica) to academic staff at those faculties. The secular studies with particular sensitivity to Christian values fall under the Ministry of Education.[5]

History[]

The university traces its history to Warsaw Theological Academy (Akademia Teologii Katolickiej), created by the Polish communist government after it had closed down the theology departments at University of Warsaw and Jagiellonian University. The academy did not receive full acceptance from Roman Catholic Church in Poland until the fall of communist authorities in 1989 removed state control over the institution. In 1999 the academy was transformed into the current university.

The university consists of two main campuses in Warsaw's Bielany district. The old one at the (Dewajtis Street) and the new one in the neighborhood (Wóycickiego Street), which mostly houses arts and humanities faculties.

Faculties[]

Auditorium Maximum at the Wóycickiego Street
Auditorium Maximum at the Wóycickiego Street
  • Faculty of Theology
  1. Institute of Theology: theology, missiology, religious studies
  2. Institute of Medial Education and Journalism: medial education and journalism, journalism and social communication
  3. Theological Institute of Radom: theology
  • Faculty of Canon Law
  1. Canon law
  • Faculty of Family Studies
  1. Institute of Family Studies: family studies
  • Faculty of Christian Philosophy
  1. Institute of Philosophy: philosophy
  2. Institute of Psychology: psychology
  3. Institute of Ecology and Bioethics: ecology
  • Faculty of History and Social Sciences
  1. Institute of History: history, history of early Christian literature, musicology
  2. Institute of Archeology: archeology
  3. Institute of Political Science: political science, european studies
  4. Institute of Sociology: sociology, economics, social work
  5. Institute of History of Art: history of art
  • Faculty of Law and Administration
  1. Law, administration, international relations
  • Faculty of Humanistic Sciences
  1. Institute of Polish Philology: Polish philology, cultural studies, classical philology
  • Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences
  1. Mathematics, computer science and econometry, physics, chemistry, macrofaculty (mathematics, chemistry, physics), computer science
  • Faculty of Biology and Environmental Sciences
  1. Biology, environmental engineering
  • Faculty of Pedagogy
  1. Pedagogy

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b UKSW dziś Archived July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ O Uniwersytecie
  3. ^ Program MOST ksztalcenie.uksw.edu.pl; "The program, which has been operating for 15 years, allows to study at one of the almost 30 best academic centers in Poland".
  4. ^ Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University history, homepage. Archived 2012-05-02 at the Wayback Machine (in Polish)
  5. ^ Rzecznik Uniwersytetu (2003-10-08). "Powstanie Uniwersytetu Kardynała Stefana Wyszyńskiego i jego szczególny charakter". Historia UKSW (in Polish). Biuletyn Informacji Publicznej. Retrieved September 24, 2012.

External links[]

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