Jump to content

Aarhus University: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 56°10′N 10°12′E / 56.167°N 10.200°E / 56.167; 10.200
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
→‎Faculties: added para on faculty of medicine
→‎History: header
Line 31: Line 31:
==History==
==History==
[[Image:Aarhus Universitet - hovedbygnings bagside.jpg|thumb|left|Rear view of the main building]]
[[Image:Aarhus Universitet - hovedbygnings bagside.jpg|thumb|left|Rear view of the main building]]

===Early developments===
Aarhus University was founded on September 11, 1928 as Universitetsundervisningen i Jylland ("University Studies in [[Jutland]]") with a budget of 33,000 [[Danish krone|Dkr]] and an enrollment of 64 students, which rose to 78 during the first semester. The university was founded as a response to the increasing number of students at [[University of Copenhagen]] after [[World War I]]. Classrooms were rented from the Technical College and the teaching corps consisted of one professor of philosophy and four associate professors of Danish, English, German, and French. Along with Universitets-Samvirket ("The University Association") which consisted of representatives of Aarhus' businesses, organisations, and institutions, the municipality of Aarhus had fought since 1921 to have Denmark's next university located in the city.<ref name="au-history"> {{cite web | url = http://www.au.dk/en/about/profile/history/history/ | title = History of The University of Aarhus | accessdate = 2012-07-08 | last = Trefzer | first = Sandra | author = Aarhus University | date = 3 Okt 2011 | publisher = Aarhus University}}</ref><ref name="DSD-au"> {{cite web | url = http://www.denstoredanske.dk/index.php?title=Erhverv%2C_karriere_og_ledelse/P%C3%A6dagogik_og_uddannelse/Danske_universiteter/Aarhus_Universitet | title = Aarhus Universitet | accessdate = 2012-07-08 | author = Gyldendal | work = Den Store Danske | publisher = [[Gyldendal]] | language = Danish}}</ref>
Aarhus University was founded on September 11, 1928 as Universitetsundervisningen i Jylland ("University Studies in [[Jutland]]") with a budget of 33,000 [[Danish krone|Dkr]] and an enrollment of 64 students, which rose to 78 during the first semester. The university was founded as a response to the increasing number of students at [[University of Copenhagen]] after [[World War I]]. Classrooms were rented from the Technical College and the teaching corps consisted of one professor of philosophy and four associate professors of Danish, English, German, and French. Along with Universitets-Samvirket ("The University Association") which consisted of representatives of Aarhus' businesses, organisations, and institutions, the municipality of Aarhus had fought since 1921 to have Denmark's next university located in the city.<ref name="au-history"> {{cite web | url = http://www.au.dk/en/about/profile/history/history/ | title = History of The University of Aarhus | accessdate = 2012-07-08 | last = Trefzer | first = Sandra | author = Aarhus University | date = 3 Okt 2011 | publisher = Aarhus University}}</ref><ref name="DSD-au"> {{cite web | url = http://www.denstoredanske.dk/index.php?title=Erhverv%2C_karriere_og_ledelse/P%C3%A6dagogik_og_uddannelse/Danske_universiteter/Aarhus_Universitet | title = Aarhus Universitet | accessdate = 2012-07-08 | author = Gyldendal | work = Den Store Danske | publisher = [[Gyldendal]] | language = Danish}}</ref>



Revision as of 18:13, 11 July 2012

Aarhus University
Aarhus Universitet
Seal of Aarhus University
Seal of Aarhus University
Latin: Universitas Aarhusiensis
MottoSolidum petit in profundis (Latin)
Motto in English
Seek a firm footing in the depths
TypePublic university
Established1928
EndowmentDKK 6,196,000,000 ($1.03B USD) (2012)
RectorLauritz Broder Holm-Nielsen
Students34,129 (2011)[1]
Undergraduates17,504
Postgraduates16,395
Location,
AffiliationsEUA
Websitewww.au.dk/en
Logo of Aarhus University

Aarhus University (Danish: Aarhus Universitet, abbreviated AU) is a public university located in Aarhus, Denmark. Founded in 1928, it is Denmark's second largest university with 34,129 students as of 2011.

Denmark's first professor of sociology was a member of the faculty of Aarhus University (Theodor Geiger, from 1938–1952),[2] and in 1997 Professor Jens Christian Skou received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his discovery of the sodium-potassium pump.[3] In 2010 Dale T. Mortensen, a Niels Bohr Visiting Professor at Aarhus University, received the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences together with his colleagues Peter Diamond and Christopher Pissarides.[4]

History

Rear view of the main building

Early developments

Aarhus University was founded on September 11, 1928 as Universitetsundervisningen i Jylland ("University Studies in Jutland") with a budget of 33,000 Dkr and an enrollment of 64 students, which rose to 78 during the first semester. The university was founded as a response to the increasing number of students at University of Copenhagen after World War I. Classrooms were rented from the Technical College and the teaching corps consisted of one professor of philosophy and four associate professors of Danish, English, German, and French. Along with Universitets-Samvirket ("The University Association") which consisted of representatives of Aarhus' businesses, organisations, and institutions, the municipality of Aarhus had fought since 1921 to have Denmark's next university located in the city.[5][6]

In 1929, the municipality of Aarhus gave the university an undulating site.[6] The design of the university buildings and 12 ha campus area was assigned to architects C.F. Møller, Kay Fisker and Povl Stegmann who won the architectural competition in 1931. The first buildings housed the Departments of Chemistry, Physics and Anatomy and were opened on September 11, 1933, the same year the name Aarhus University was first used. The construction of the buildings was funded solely by donations which totaled 935,000 Dkr and the buildings covered an area of 4,190m2.[7] One of the most generous contributors was De Forenede Teglværker i Aarhus ("The United Tilworks of Aarhus") led by director K. Nymark. Forenede Teglværker decided to donate 1 million yellow bricks and tiles worth c. 50,000 Dkr and later decided to extend the donation to all bricks needed to construct the building.[8]

The inauguration was celebrated in a tent on campus and attended by King Christian X, Queen Alexandrine, their son Crown Prince Frederick and Prime Minister Stauning together with 1000 other invited guests.[9] On 23 April, 1934, Aarhus University was given permission to hold examinations by the king and on 10 October 1935, Professor Dr. phil. Ernst Frandsen was appointed the first rector of the university.[10] Since 1939, C. F. Møller Architects has been responsible for building activities of the university which today has a floor area of 246,000m2 in the University Park alone and a series of buildings outside the Park with a total floor area of 59,000m2.[5]

Faculties

From 1928, Aarhus University offered courses in languages and philosophy, but the students were unable to finish their studies without going to the University of Copenhagen for their final examinations. By request of the Ministry of Education, the Teachers' Association made a draft of how to conduct the final examinations in the humanistic subjects in Aarhus and in the draft, the Association proposed that the faculty was named the Humanistic Faculty by analogy with the corresponding faculties in Uppsala, Lund, and Turku. After negotiations between the faculties in Aarhus and Copenhagen, the King declared on 8 May, 1935 that the final university examinations could be held at the Philosophical Faculty in Copenhagen as well as at the Humanistic Faculty in Aarhus. This was the first final examinations Aarhus University was allowed to hold, but on 24 July, 1936 the King granted the Humanistic Faculty the right to hold examinations for the magister degree and in 1940 for the PhD.[5][11]

Aarhus University had offered courses in basic medical subjects from 1933 and on 10 October 1935 the Faculty of Medicine was formally established.[12] The establishment of a Faculty of Medicine in Aarhus was met with some opposition from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Copenhagen. The professors thought that the state should not establish a new Faculty until the shortcomings of the old one had been solved. In the end, the professors agreed to sign a recommendation for the new Faculty as long as improvements to the old one were not delayed.[13] By 1953, the Faculty of Medicine had been fully built, complete with lectures, professorship chairs, final exams, research facilities and the hospitals of Aarhus had been expanded to meet the demands of clinical training.[14] In 1992, the Faculty of Medicine merged with the dental school and changed its name to Faculty of Health Sciences.[5]

The main building and the air strike during World War II

Memorial in the main building to honour the ten victims of the 1944 air strike and the two workers killed during construction in 1941.

In 1936, the university board acknowledged that with nearly 500 students and an expected continuous rise in the numbers, it was time to consider an expansion. As the chairman of the university said: “There are people who expect that this university will have 3,000 enrolled students at some point in the future. I almost said that I don't hope for that to happen – but if it should, we will need a special administrations building.” The solution was not an administration building, as this was not to be built until 1964. Instead a new main building was planned, containing both the different subject areas as well as the administration. As something all new in Denmark, this building was to be organized according to 'the principle of institutes', meaning that teaching and research were to take place in certain rooms with their own library and study for the professor.

The construction of the building took place during the German occupation of Denmark (1940–45), which affected the process in more than one way. No state funds had been involved in the construction of the first university building and a second building for physiology, biochemistry, and a high voltage laboratory, but because of circumstances during the occupation necessitating an extra effort towards creating employment, the state contributed more than eighty percent of the total expenses. In 1943 the Gestapo set up its regional headquarters in the five student halls of residence on campus. Fearing that the same would happen to the new main building, its completion was delayed. On October 31, 1944, the Royal Air Force bombed the Gestapo's headquarters, also killing ten civilian workers. The air strike on the University of Aarhus took place in a heavily populated area and the campus was surrounded by three hospitals. To avoid civilian casualties, the RAF prepared with several months of intense training on a model of the campus. The architect C. F. Møller was present in the main building during the air strike but survived and was later dug free from the rubble.

The reconstructed main building opened on September 11, 1946, housing not only humanities, theology, economics and law, and the university administration, but also the main hall, lobby, cantina, and rooms for student organisations and clubs.

Campus

The University Park
The University Park

The main campus is centrally located in Aarhus. This location is a special feature of the university, because the short distances between different faculties and schools give students the feeling of being a student at an entire university, and not just at their own faculty or department.[15][according to whom?]

The campus master plan competition was won in 1931 by the collaborative scheme of Danish architects – Kay Fisker, C.F. Møller, and Poul Stegmann in collaboration with landscape architect C.Th. Sørensen. The design includes a wide variety of buildings over a large space, but each building is composed of the same yellow brick and roofing tile, giving the whole campus a unified look. Construction commenced in 1932 and has continued into the 21st century. The original main building was one of the first Danish functionalist public buildings and has been included in the Ministry of Culture's canon of Danish architecture; it is acknowledged as one of the twelve most meaningful architectural works in the cultural history of Denmark. C.F. Møller and his company have continued as architects of the campus ever since.[16] The main buildings of the university are placed in and around a beautiful hilly landscape, The University Park, which has been expanded throughout the years. In a harmonic interplay with the hilly park, the yellow buildings form a beautiful campus, which has received international recognitions.

Aarhus University also has a small campus in Copenhagen, where the university's programmes in education and pedagogic are taught.[17] In the city of Herning there is also a small campus where a few of the university's business, engineering and technology programmes are taught, the AU Herning division[18].

Organisation and administration

The university is governed by the University Board which has 11 members: six members recruited outside the university form the majority of the board, two members are appointed by the academic staff, one member is appointed by the technical/administrative staff, and two members are appointed by the university students.[19] The rector is appointed by the university board. The rector in turn appoints deans and deans appoint heads of departments. There is no faculty senate and faculty is not involved in the appointment of rector, deans, or department heads. Hence the university has no faculty governance.

Main academic areas

Since January 1, 2011, the university has been organised into four major main academic areas:[20]

Academics

As of October 1, 2011, more than 34,000 students were enrolled in Aarhus University.[21] Each year more than 1000 international exchange students come to Aarhus University to study for one or two terms. In 2009 close to 3000 international students were enrolled in full degree programmes.[22] Aarhus University is an international university with a large proportion of students at the post-baccalaureate level: over half of its students are enrolled in Master's degree and PhD programmes. In 2011, 59 of the university's 113 Master's degree programmes were taught in English.[23] Talent development of young researchers has been identified as one of the university’s core activities.[24] This means that highly qualified students have the option of starting their PhD studies before completing their Master's degree. The university's flexible doctoral programmes allow talented students to enroll in a combined Master's/PhD programme either right after completing the Bachelor's degree (the 3+5 track) or one year into their Master's degree programme (the 4+4 track).[25] Since 2006 the number of PhD students has risen from approximately 1000 to approximately 1700 in 2010.[26]

International Centre

The International Centre maintains international partnerships and combines a wide range of services for exchange students, international full-degree students, PhD’s and visiting scholars. The International Centre is often the first stop for foreign students at Aarhus University, since the centre offers advice on finding housing and living in Denmark. In general students are very satisfied with the services offered by international centre.[27]


AU Summer University

Starting in 2011 all summer courses offered by Aarhus University for Bachelor's, Master's and PhD students will be gathered together and expanded to provide more diversity in a new framework: AU Summer University. In the summer of 2011 more than 80 courses were offered within the fields of humanities, theology, social sciences, health sciences, natural sciences, agricultural sciences, business and educational sciences. Summer courses are open to both Danish and international students.[28]

Degree programmes

Department of Mathematics
Department of Physics and Astronomy
Department of Computer Science
Lakeside Lecture Theatre

Aarhus University offers both undergraduate and graduate programmes in the following fields[29]:

  • Biology
  • Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian
  • Chemistry
  • Chinese
  • Classical Archaeology
  • Classical Philology
  • Cognitive Semiotics
  • Comparative Religion
  • Computer Science
  • Czech
  • Dentistry
  • Digital Design
  • Economics
  • Ethnography
  • European Studies
  • Geology
  • History
  • History of Ideas
  • Hungarian
  • Information Studies
  • IT/IT Product Development
  • Japanese
  • Latin
  • Law
  • Linguistics
  • Management
  • Mathematical Economics
  • Mathematics
  • Media Studies
  • Medicine
  • Medieval and Renaissance Archaeology
  • Modern Languages
  • Molecular Biology
  • Nanotechnology
  • Nordic Language and Literature
  • Philosophy
  • Physics and Astronomy
  • Political Science
  • Prehistoric Archaeology
  • Psychology
  • Religious Studies
  • Russian
  • Scandinavian Studies
  • Semitic Philology
  • Sports Science
  • Theology
  • The Religious Roots of Europe

Cheminova controversy and academic freedom at AU

Aarhus University is the owner of the chemical manufacturer Cheminova, who controversially has been selling the methyl parathion pesticide to Brazil farmers.[30]

In 2009, senior researcher Mette Jensen emailed her colleagues at AU, asking whether they thought Cheminova should stop selling the controversial pesticides. For this, the university threatened her with dismissal.[31]

The university's Pro-Vice-Chancellor Søren E. Frandsen denies that the university had made any mistakes or threatened the freedom of speech and academic freedom of its staff.[32]

Major research centres

Aarhus University is home to 15 Centres of Excellence supported by the Danish National Research Foundation[33] and a considerable number of major research centres. These centres are widely acknowledged for their pioneering work within basic research.[according to whom?] The 15 Centres of Excellence are:[34]

  • Centre for Membrane Pumps in Cells and Disease (PUMPKIN)
  • Centre for Insoluble Protein Structures (INSPIN)
  • Centre for Geomicrobiology
  • Centre for Materials Crystallography (CMC)
  • Centre for DNA Nanotechnology
  • Centre for Functionally Integrative Neuroscience (CFIN)
  • Centre on Autobiographical Memory Research (CON AMORE)
  • Centre for Massive Data Algorithmics (MADALGO)
  • The Water and Salt Research Centre
  • Centre for Carbonate Recognition and Signaling (CARB)
  • Centre for Research in Econometric Analysis of Time Series (CREATES)
  • Centre for Oxygen Microscopy and Imaging (COMI)
  • Centre for mRNP Biogenesis and Metabolism
  • Centre for Quantum Geometry of Moduli Spaces (QGM)
  • Centre for the Theory of Interactive Computation

Some of the university's other major research centres include MindLab and iNANO.

MINDlab

MINDLAB was established with a DKK 120 million grant awarded by the Danish Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation. At MINDLab neuroscientists, psychologists, biologists, statisticians and researchers from other fields work together to understand the brain, its disorders, and its development through physical and social interactions – and vice versa. By placing different fields of inquiry under the same roof, creating structured information systems, making expensive equipment available and in other ways facilitating multidisciplinary knowledgesharing, MINDLab has started producing unique research results.[specify]

iNANO

The Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Center (founded in 2002 by Professor Flemming Besenbacher) offers a degree programme in nanoscience with an interdisciplinary curriculum covering a broad spectrum of introductory, advanced, and specialised courses, aimed at providing the student with a sufficiently broad basis to conduct interdisciplinary research within nanoscience and at the same time achieve disciplinary depth and specialised skills in selected areas. Hence, the programme encompasses physics, chemistry, biology, molecular biology, mathematics, and computer science.

Student life

The State and University Library on the University Park campus (Statsbiblioteket)

The compact campus in Aarhus provides a unique and dynamic study environment which also influences the social environment.[according to whom?] Students from different fields meet in the numerous Friday bars, in the Student House Aarhus and at concerts in the University Park and around the rest of the city. The Friday bars are a good opportunity for students to meet up and enjoy a drink together. Every Friday around noon, each department sets up a small bar in a canteen or classroom where beers and non-alcoholic drinks are served. The university also has a number of libraries, some of which are open around the clock. Almost every department has its own library, but the main library is the State and University Library. It has an extensive electronic journal database which students and staff can access either at the library or from home.[35] Aarhus University Sports (AUS) is open to all university students and organises a wide range of activities from badminton, to fencing and chess.

Student organisations

The largest student organisations at Aarhus University are the Student Union (Studenterrådet) and Studenterlauget. The Student Union represents the main student body at Aarhus University while Studenterlauget is a mainly social organisation at Aarhus School of Business. The Student Union has both student seats on the university board.[36] The Student Union also arranges annual concerts and seminars, and publishes the student magazine Delfinen (The Dolphin).

There are political students organisations at the university, the largest of which include the Social-Democratic Students (Frit Forum), Conservative Students (Konservative Studenter), and Liberal Students (Liberale Studerende). The Conservative Students union publishes the student magazine Critique. The Liberal Students union publishes the leaflet Minerva.

Clubs and societies

Aarhus University offers many activities and services for foreign and Danish students.

Aarhus Student House (Studenterhus Århus)

Aarhus University offers a free membership in Aarhus Student House to all exchange students. This is the meeting place for international and Danish students in Aarhus. Aarhus Student House organises social and cultural activities throughout the year, ranging from parties to road trips, to language classes, to weekly international nights (a popular dinner club).[37][38]

Like many other university towns, Aarhus has a bustling nightlife. From Irish pubs to jazz cafés, you can probably find a café or bar to fit your taste. Down by the canal, in the pedestrian zone, there are a number of bars and cafés, or you might choose to visit one of the ’Friday bars’ organized by students at the university. You may also want to check out the Aarhus Culture Guide for concert listings as bars often serve as musical venues. In addition the city of Aarhus also offers a variety of cultural experiences. For a complete listing of the activities and events, visit: www.visitaarhus.dk

Aarhus University Sports (AUS)

AUS is the official sports club of Aarhus University, and is open to all university students. It is an umbrella organisation consisting of 14 independent member clubs, which host a wide range of activities, from badminton to fencing to chess. In addition, AUS also offers independent activities such as indoor soccer tournaments, a well equipped gym and skiing trips.[39]

Dale's Cafe

Dale’s Café is a meeting place for international students and the university’s PhD students that opened in 2011. The café offers quality coffee, sandwiches and a wide selection of beers. It has an informal lounge area where students and young researchers can relax while enjoying snacks and beverages. Like the main building, Dale’s Café is named after Aarhus University’s 2010 Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences, Dale T. Mortensen. The Dale T. Mortensen Building houses the International Centre, the new PhD House and the IC Dormitory, which contains 28 dorm rooms and two apartments dedicated to recently-arrived international PhD students.[40][41]

Klubben

Klubben (which means 'The Club' in Danish) is a bar located at the former ASB (Aarhus School of Business), now under the faculty of Business and Social Sciences.

During regular school hours and weekdays, Klubben is the main socializing area of the former ASB with spaces to study, relax with your friends, play fussball/pool/board games, but on Friday nights, Klubben changes into a club where students meet and have fun until 2AM. Klubben is usually packed with both Danish and international students, and the atmosphere is often amazing. Klubben sells cheap beers and drinks, which, of course, is a big benefit to any student. Additionally, Klubben opens whenever any larger sports event such as the Champions League, Danish national team fixtures or Super Bowl is on. Due to a limited number of allowed visitors, Klubben usually only admits people studying at the faculty of Business and Social Sciences.

Klubben had until spring 2012 the largest turnover in sales of alcohol of any club in Denmark on any given Thursday night. From spring 2012 the night for big parties has been moved to Fridays. Check out the website Klubben.dk for pictures from Fridays in Klubben. Klubben is one of the business units of Studenterlauget, the one student union with most people employed in Denmark

Studenterlauget

At Aarhus University, Business and Social Sciences (at the former ASB) you find the largest student organisation in Denmark – Studenterlauget. Studenterlauget strives to create the best possible social and professional opportunities for the students at Business and Social Sciences. To do this, they have created a professional student organisation with nine business units, so that they use the students' potential to achieve the highest level of service possible. Studenterlauget has have approximately 4,000 members whom they service through the nine business units. Around 130 people most of whom are students are employed.[42]

People

Ranking

In recent years, Aarhus University has been moving up in international university rankings.

QS World University Ranking[43]

2011 2010 2009 2008 2007
World Ranking 79 84 63 81 114
Ranking in Scandinavia 2 5 2 3 5
Ranking in Europe 20 34 20 29 31
Leiden – Crown Indicator[44]

2010 2009 2008 2007
World Ranking* 95/55 - 105 -
Ranking in Scandinavia* 3/2 - 3 -
Ranking in Europe* 33/13 - 24 -

*: The 2010 rankings indicate the university's rank among the world's 250 largest universities and among the world's 100 largest universities respectively. Size is determined on the basis of the number of publications.

Shanghai (ARWU)[45]

2011 2010 2009 2008 2007
World Ranking 86 98 97 93 102
Ranking in Scandinavia - 7 7 7 7
Ranking in Europe - 32 31 31 40

Residence halls

  • Bronzealdervænget
  • Børglum Kollegiet
  • Dania kollegiet
  • Grundtvigs Hus Kollegiet
  • Hejredal Kollegiet
  • Herredsvej
  • Kirsebærhaven
  • Kløvergården
  • Kollegierne i Universitetsparken
  • Ladegårdskollegiet
  • Nørre Alle Kollegiet
  • Ravnsbjerg Kollegiet
  • Rundhøjkollegiet
  • Skejbygårds Kollegiet
  • Skejbyparken
  • Skelager Kollegiet
  • Skjoldhøj Kollegiet
  • Skovkollegiet
  • Stenaldervej Kollegiet
  • Tandlægekollegiet
  • Teknologkollegiet
  • Vilhelm Kiers Kollegium

The residence halls in the University Park are located on campus; the other residence halls are spread all over the city.

Partner universities and membership

References

Citations
  1. ^ Knudsen, Astrid Marie Gad (22 Nov 2011). "Bestand 2011" (in Danish). Retrieved 2012-07-07. {{cite web}}: More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help)
  2. ^ Agersnap T., "Theodor Geiger: Pioneer of Sociology in Denmark", Acta Sociologica, Volume 43, Number 4, 1 December 2000, pp325-330(6)
  3. ^ Frängsmyr, Tore (Ed.), "Jens C. Skou: Autobiography"Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1997, Nobel Foundation, Stockholm, 1998
  4. ^ Niels Bohr professor at Aarhus University awarded Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, [1]
  5. ^ a b c d Trefzer, Sandra (3 Okt 2011). "History of The University of Aarhus". Aarhus University. Retrieved 2012-07-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help)
  6. ^ a b Gyldendal. "Aarhus Universitet". Den Store Danske (in Danish). Gyldendal. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  7. ^ Albeck 1978, pp. 163–165
  8. ^ Faber 1946, p. 62 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFaber1946 (help)
  9. ^ Faber 1946, pp. 63–64 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFaber1946 (help)
  10. ^ Faber 1946, p. 67 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFaber1946 (help)
  11. ^ Faber 1946, p. 74 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFaber1946 (help)
  12. ^ Albeck 1978, p. 265
  13. ^ Faber 1946, p. 52 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFaber1946 (help)
  14. ^ Albeck 1978, pp. 266–267
  15. ^ [2]
  16. ^ http://en.statsbiblioteket.dk
  17. ^ http://www.dpu.dk/en
  18. ^ http://auhe.au.dk/en/
  19. ^ "Aarhus University Board". Retrieved 2011-03-01.
  20. ^ http://www.au.dk/en/facultiesdepartmentsetc/organisation
  21. ^ http://www.au.dk/om/profil/nogletal/studenterbestand/bestand-2011/
  22. ^ [3]
  23. ^ [4]
  24. ^ [5]
  25. ^ [6]
  26. ^ [7]
  27. ^ Link label
  28. ^ http://www.au.dk/en/summeruniversity/ausummeruniversity/
  29. ^ http://studieguide.au.dk/en/
  30. ^ "ATP kræver kulegravning af Cheminova". August 18, 2008. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
  31. ^ "Universitet knægter ansats ytringsfrihed". March 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
  32. ^ "'Mette Jensen-sagen handler ikke om ytringsfrihed'". May 17, 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-20.
  33. ^ [8]
  34. ^ [9]
  35. ^ [10]
  36. ^ The Board of the University of Aarhus, Aarhus University, www.au.dk
  37. ^ http://www.studenterhusaarhus.dk/Default.aspx?ID=21
  38. ^ http://www.au.dk/fileadmin/www.au.dk/Internationalt_Center/Incomingexchangestudents/Student_Exchange_Guide_2010_2011.pdf
  39. ^ http://www.aus.dk
  40. ^ http://www.au.dk/en/news/archive/2011/haveacoffeewithanobellaureateandhangoutindalescafe
  41. ^ http://phd.au.dk/en/phdhouse/dalescafe
  42. ^ http://www.studenterlauget.dk/about-sl/studenterlauget.html
  43. ^ QS. "Aarhus University". Quacquarelli Symonds. Retrieved 2012-07-07.
  44. ^ [11]
  45. ^ www.arwu.org
Bibliography
  • Albeck, A. Gustav; Krebs, Carl; Illum, Knud; et al. (1978). Aarhus Universitet 1928-1978. Aarhus: Universitetsforlaget i Aarhus. ISBN 87-876-7107-7. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Explicit use of et al. in: |first3= (help); Unknown parameter |editors= ignored (|editor= suggested) (help)
  • Faber, Knud (1946). Opbygningen af Aarhus Universitet. Copenhagen: Nordisk Forlag. {{cite book}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)

See also

56°10′N 10°12′E / 56.167°N 10.200°E / 56.167; 10.200