Heinrich-Heine-University
Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf (HHU) (German: Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf) is the university of Düsseldorf, Germany, named after the most famous son of Düsseldorf, the poet Heinrich Heine.
History
[change | change source]In the era of Napoleon Bonaparte there was the first university in Düsseldorf, which ended after Napoleon surrendered. So in the further 19th century there was only a Medical Academy and the famous Arts School of Düsseldorf and a Teacher Academy (Special University only for studying to became a teacher) until the 1970s, but no regular university, in Düsseldorf. In the 1960s the state government of North Rhine-Westphalia decided to have a regular university in the state's capital. The university started about 1970. It got its name only in the 1980s, because the medicine faculty wanted to have a physician's name, because of the tradition as Medical Academy.
Current situation
[change | change source]Currently the Heinrich-Heine-University is a university with about 20,000 students, which is middle-class in Germany. It has a lot of subjects in sciences, arts, economics, and so on. The deep points are on biological-medicinal research in sciences and some deep points in arts, economics, political sciences, and philosophy.
Subjects
[change | change source]Like most German universities it has many subjects:
- Mathematics
- Physics
- Computer Sciences
- Chemistry
- Biology
- Medicine
- Dental Medicine
- Philosophy
- Psychology
- Social sciences and Politics
- English Language and literature
- Romance Languages (French, Spanish, Italian) and literature
- Latin and Old Greek
- German Language and Literature
- Linguistics and Computer Linguistics
- Eastern Asian Sciences (deep point Japan)
- Media Sciences
- History
- History of Arts
- Economics
- Laws
- Geography
- Sports
- Educational Sciences