UNIVERSITY OF ROME LA SAPIENZA

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'University of Rome ''La Sapienza''' (Italian ''Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza"'') is the largest European university and the most ancient of Rome's three public universities [1]. In Italian, ''Sapienza'' means "wisdom" or "knowledge".

Contents
History
Organization
Faculties
Research centers & major research groups
Famous scholars from ''La Sapienza''
Sciences
Physicists
Humanities
''La Sapienza'' Alumni
See also
External links

History


Church of Sant'Ivo alla Sapienza, by Borromini, originally a chapel of the ''La Sapienza'' see.

''La Sapienza'' was founded in 1303 by Pope Boniface VIII, as a ''Studium'' for ecclesiastical studies more under his control than the universities of Bologna and Padua.
In 1431, Pope Eugene IV introduced a new tax on wine, in order to raise funds for the university; the money was used to buy a palace that later hosted the Sant'Ivo church, "''La Sapienza''."
According to the Catholic Encyclopaedia, the university "remained closed during the entire pontificate of Clement VII".[2] In 1870, ''La Sapienza'' stopped being the papal university and became the university of the capital of Italy. In 1935, the new university campus, planned by Marcello Piacentini, was completed.
In the academic year 2006/7 [3], ''La Sapienza'' has 21 faculties to its 138,000 students and is the largest university in Western Europe. It has many locations in Rome, but is mainly situated in the Città Universitaria, near Termini Station.

Organization


Faculties

The statue of Minerva in ''la Sapienza''

The university is divided into 21 faculties:

★ 1st Faculty of Architecture Ludovico Quaroni

★ 2nd Faculty of Architecture Valle Giulia

★ Faculty of Communication Sciences

★ Faculty of Economics

★ Faculty of Engineering

★ Faculty of Humanities

★ Faculty of Law

★ Faculty of Literature and Philosophy

★ Faculty of Mathematical, Physical and Natural Studies

★ 1st Faculty of Medicine and Surgery

★ 2nd Faculty of Medicine and Surgery

★ Faculty of Oriental Studies

★ Faculty of Pharmacy

★ Faculty of Philosophy

★ Faculty of Political Sciences

★ 1st Faculty of Psychology

★ 2nd Faculty of Psychology

★ Faculty of Sociology

★ Faculty of Statistics

★ School for Aerospace Engineering

★ School for Library and Archive Studies
Research centers & major research groups

Former logo of the University of Rome


Centro Ricerche Aerospaziali, responsible for the Italian rocket program, based on San Marco platform

SPES - Development Studies, research centre on Development studies at La Sapienza [[4]]
Famous scholars from ''La Sapienza''

Sciences


Lucio Bini and Ugo Cerletti, psychiatrists

Corrado Böhm, computer scientist

Daniel Bovet, pharmacologist, Nobel prize winner

Benedetto Castelli, mathematician

Andrea Cesalpino, physician and botanist

Federigo Enriques, mathematician

Maria Montessori, physician and paedagogist

Vito Volterra, mathematician
Physicists


Via Panisperna boys:


Enrico Fermi, Nobel Prize winner;


Edoardo Amaldi


Oscar D'Agostino


Ettore Majorana


Bruno Pontecorvo


Franco Rasetti


Emilio G. Segrè, Nobel prize winner

Giovanni Battista Beccaria

Marcello Conversi

Giovanni Ciccotti

Giovanni Jona-Lasinio

Francesco Guerra

Luciano Maiani

Giorgio Parisi

Nicola Cabibbo, President of the Pontifical Academy Of Sciences
Humanities


Luigi Ferri, philosopher

Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina, jurisconsult;

Umberto Cassuto, Hebrew language and Bible scholar

Carlo Innocenzio Maria Frugoni, poet

Count Angelo de Gubernatis, orientalist

Santo Mazzarino, leading historian of ancient Rome and ancient Greece

Giuseppe Tucci, orientalist

Mario Liverani, orientalist

Paolo Matthiae, director of the archeological expedition of Ebla

Marcel Danesi, language scientist

Giuliano Amato, law professor and twice Prime Minister of Italy

Diego Laynez, second general of the Society of Jesus;

Giulio Mazzarino, politician and cardinal
''La Sapienza'' Alumni


Severino Antinori, embryologist

Sergio Balanzino, ambassador

Bernardo Bertolucci, director

Maurizio Cheli, astronaut

Domenico Comparetti, classic literature scholar

Gabriele D'Annunzio, poet

Carlo Fea,

Massimiliano Fuksas, architect

Romaldo Giurgola, architect

Umberto Guidoni, astronaut

Antonio Monda, film director

Luca di Montezemolo, CEO

Scott O'Dell, novelist

Crescenzio Cardinal Sepe, cardinal

Abdirashid Ali Shermarke, president of Somalia

Leopold Saverio Vaccaro, (honorary degree recipient), noted surgeon

See also







ESDP-Network

List of Italian universities

External links



University of Rome ''La Sapienza'' Website

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