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布里斯托大學(xué)的學(xué)校歷史

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布里斯托大學(xué)?;?br />布里斯托大學(xué)(拉丁文校名:Universitatis Bristolliensis;英文校名:University of Bristol) 的第一個(gè)學(xué)院即布里斯托醫(yī)學(xué)院成立于1833年,至1876年先后成立的幾個(gè)學(xué)院合并為一個(gè)大學(xué)整體即布里斯托大學(xué)學(xué)院(University College,Bristol),于1909年得到皇家特許授權(quán)(Royal Charter)并更名為布里斯托大學(xué),布里斯托大學(xué)的校訓(xùn)為拉丁文“Vim Promovet Insitam,英文意思為[Learning] promotes ones innate power – from Horace,Ode 4.4,中文意思是“(學(xué)習(xí))提高一個(gè)人內(nèi)在天賦”。
?;蘸x:布里斯托大學(xué)的盾徽由五個(gè)象征組成,包括太陽(yáng)代表Wills家族,馬代表Fry家族,海豚代表Colston家族,打開(kāi)的書(shū)代表學(xué)習(xí),中間的船舶和城堡來(lái)自中世紀(jì)布里斯托市的印章。[19]
英文校史介紹
Early years
After the founding of the University College in 1876, Government support began in 1889. After mergers with the Bristol Medical School in 1893 and the Merchant Venturers Technical College in 1909, this funding allowed the opening of a new Medical School and an Engineering School—two subjects that remain among the Universitys greatest strengths. In 1908, gifts from the Fry and Wills families, particularly 100,000 from Henry Overton Wills III(6m in todays money), were provided to endow a University for Bristol and the West of England, provided that a Royal Charter could be obtained within two years. In December 1909, the King granted such a Charter and erected the University of Bristol. Henry Wills became its first Chancellor and Conwy Lloyd Morgan the first Vice-Chancellor. Wil
ls died in 1911 and in tribute his sons Georgeand Harry built the Wills Memorial Building, starting in 1913 and finally finishing in 1925. Today, it houses parts of the academic provision for earth sciences and law, and graduation ceremonies are held in its Great Hall. The Wills Memorial Building is a Grade II* listed building.
In 1920, George Wills bought the Victoria Rooms and endowed them to the University as a Students Union. The building now houses the Department of Music and is a Grade II* listed building.
At the point of foundation, the University was required to provide for the local community. This mission was behind the creation of the Department of Extra-Mural Adult Education in 1924 to provide courses to the local community. This mission continues today; a new admissions policy specifically caters to the BS postcode area of Bristol.
Among the famous names associated with Bristol in this early period is Paul Dirac, who graduated in 1921 with a degree in engineering, before obtaining a second degree in mathematics in1923 from Cambridge. For his subsequent pioneering work on quantum mechanics, he was awarded the 1933 Nobel Prize for Physics. Later in the 1920s, the H.H. Wills Physics Laboratory was opened by Ernest Rutherford. It hassince housed several Nobel Prize winners: Cecil Frank Powell (1950); Hans Albrecht Bethe (1967); and Sir Nevill Francis Mott (1977).The Laboratory stands on the same site today, close to the Bristol Grammar School and the city museum.
Sir Winston Churchill became the Universitys third Chancellor in 1929, serving the University in that capacity until 1965. He succeeded Richard Haldane who had held the office from 1912 following the death of Henry Wills.
During World War II, the Wills Memorial was bombed, destroying the Great Hall and the organ it housed. It has since been restored to its former glory, complete with oak panelled walls and a new organ.
Post-war development
In 1946, the University established the first drama department in the country. In the same year, Bristol began offering special entrance exams and grants to aid the resettlement of servicemen returning home. Student numbers continued to increase, and the Faculty of Engineering eventually needed the new premises that were to become Queens Building in 1955. This substantial building housed all of theUniversitys engineers until 1996, when Electrical Engineering and Computer Science moved over the road into the new Merchant Venturers Building to make space for these rapidly expanding fields. Today, Queens Building caters for most of the teaching needs of the Faculty and provides academic space for the heavy engineering subjects (civil, mechanical, and aeronautical).With unprecedented growth in the 1960s, particularly in undergraduate numbers, the Students Union eventually acquired larger premises in a new building in the Clifton area of the city, in 1965. This building was more spacious than the Victoria Rooms, which were now given over to the Department of Music. The new Union provides many practice and performance rooms, some specialist rooms, as well as three bars: Bar 100; the Mandela (also known as AR2) and the Avon Gorge. Whilst spacious, the Union building is thought by many to be ugly and out of character compared to the architecture of the rest of the Clifton area, having been mentioned in a BBC poll to find the worst architectural eyesores in Britain. The University has proposed relocating the Union to a morecentral location as part of its development masterplan. More recently, plans for redevelopment of the current building have been proposed.
The 1960s were a time of considerable student activism in the United Kingdom, and Bristol was no exception. In 1968, many students marched in support of the Anderson Report, which called for higher student grants. This discontent culminated in an 11-day sit-in at the Senate House (the administrative headquarters of the University). A series of Chancellors and Vice-Chancellors led the University through these decades, with Henry Somerset, 10th Duke of Beaufort taking over from Churchill as Chancellor in 1965 before being succeeded by Dorothy Hodgkin in 1970 who spent the next 18 years in the office.
As the age of mass higher education dawned, Bristol continued to build its student numbers. The various undergraduate residences were repeatedly expanded and, more recently, some postgraduate residences have been constructed. These more recent ventures have been funded (and are run) by external companies in agreement with the University.
Since 1988, there have been only two further Chancellors: Sir Jeremy Morse, then chairman of Lloyds Bank who handed over in 2003 to Brenda Hale, the first female Law Lord.
One of the few Centres for Deaf Studies in the United Kingdom was established in Bristol in 1981, followed in 1988 by the Norah Fry Centre for research into learning difficulties. Also in 1988, and again in 2004, the Students Union AGM voted to disaffiliate from the National Union of Students (NUS). On both occasions, however, the subsequent referendum of all students reversed that decision and Bristol remains affiliated to the NUS.
In 2002, the University was involved in argument over press intrusion after details of the son of then-Prime Minister Tony Blairs application to university were published in national newspapers.
As the number of postgraduate students has grown (particularly the numbers pursuing taught Masters Degrees), there eventually became a need for separate representation on University bodies and the Postgraduate Union (PGU) was established in 2000. Universities are increasingly expected to exploit the intellectual property generated by their research activities and, in 2000, Bristol established the Research and Enterprise Division (RED) to further this cause (particularly for technology-based businesses). In 2001, the university signed a 25-year research funding deal with IP2IPO, an intellectual property commercialisation company. In 2007, research activities were expanded further with the opening of the Advanced Composites Centre for Innovation and Science (ACCIS) and The Bristol Institute for Public Affairs (BIPA).
In 2002, the University opened a new Centre for Sports, Exercise and Health in the heart of the University precinct. At a cost, local residents are also able to use the facilities.
Expansion of teaching and research activities continues. In 2004, the Faculty of Engineering completed work on the Bristol Laboratory for Advanced Dynamics Engineering (BLADE). This 18.5m project provides cutting-edge technology to further the study of dynamics and is the most advanced such facility in Europe. It was built as an extension to the Queens Building and was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II in March 2005.
In January 2005, The School of Chemistry was awarded 4.5m by the Higher Education Funding Council for England to create Bristol ChemLabS: a Centre for Excellence in Teaching Learning (CETL), with an additional 350k announced for the capital part of the project in February 2006. Bristol ChemLabS stands for Bristol Chemical Laboratory Sciences; it is the only Chemistry CETL in the UK.
September 2009 saw the opening of the Universitys Centre for Nanoscience and Quantum Information. This 11 million state of the art building is dubbed as the quietest building in the world and has other technologically sophisticated features such as self-cleaning glass. Advanced research into quantum computing, nanotechnology, materials and other disciplines are being undertaken in the building.
There is also a plan to significantly redevelop the centre of the University Precinct in the coming years. The first step began in September 2011, with the start of construction of a state-of-the-art Life Sciences building. In a time of heavy financial pressures on all Universities, this 50 million project is a clear statement that Bristol is committed to world class research and teaching facilities.[21]

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