To help support Wikipedia, please visit our fundraising page, or read about how we use the money.

University of Groningen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The University of Groningen (Dutch: Rijksuniversiteit Groningen or RUG) in a university in Groningen, Netherlands.

It is one of the oldest research universities in Europe, boasting more than 100,000 graduates since its inception in 1614.

More than 20,000 students are currently enrolled in more than 160 bachelor's degree and master's degree programmes, and some 775 students are studying for their PhD. Every year, about 2,500 students graduate from the university, and some 250 PhD students defend their doctorate thesis.

As the university's students and staff come from the Netherlands and from at least 90 other countries, the University of Groningen is truly international. The university has 5,000 employees and an annual budget of €445 million. It is one of the largest employers in the north of the Netherlands.

The first president of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Wim Duisenberg, studied here and obtained his PhD on the economics of disarmament.

The first Dutch astronaut Wubbo Ockels received a doctor of philosophy degree in physics and mathematics from the University of Groningen in 1973.

The large number of students reduces the average age of the population of the city of Groningen; partly for this reason the city has a lively and dynamic character.

External link



Personal tools
Other languages