Ivan Franko Lviv National University. Lviv National State University named after. Ivan Franko. Rules for admission to LNU

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Lvovsky National University named after Ivan Franko
(I. Franko Leningrad National University)

Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm)
original name

Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko

International name

Ivan Franko National University of Lviv

Former names

Lviv University named after Jan Casimir

Motto

Рatriae deсori сіvibus еduсandis

Year of foundation
Rector
Legal address

Ukraine Ukraine, 79000, Lviv, st. Universitetskaya 1

Website
Coordinates: 49°51′00″ n. w. 24°01′00″ E. d. /  49.85° N. w. 24.016667° E. d. / 49.85; 24.016667 (G) (I) K: Educational institutions founded in 1661

Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko(ukr. Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko listen)) is one of the oldest universities in Eastern Europe and the oldest university in Ukraine. In the past it was called Lviv University named after Jan Casimir.

Story

The object is included in the state register of monuments of Ukraine. A monument to the history of Ukraine of national significance. Security number: 130004-N

The founding date of the University is considered to be January 20, 1661, when the decree of the Polish King John II Casimir awarded the status of an academy and the “title of university” to the Jesuit college. Formal confirmation of the rights of the academy and the university followed in -.

Architecture of the main building

The current building of the main building of Lviv University at 1 Universitetskaya Street was built in -1881 (architect J. Hochberger). Initially, it housed the Regional Sejm of Galicia and Lodomeria. The facade is decorated with a majestic portico with columns and a loggia, sculptural allegorical groups “Work” and “Education” at the entrance, “Galicia, Vistula and Dniester” - on the attic (sculptor T. Rieger). In 1920, the building was transferred to the Jan Casimir University of Lviv.

Modernity

In the 1997/1998 academic year, 11,649 students studied full-time, including 2,980 on the basis of full reimbursement of tuition costs; 3,680 students studied part-time, of which 2,543 were paying students. The full course of study lasted 5 years. The University has 112 departments, four of which were opened in 2001. The main form of training of scientific personnel is graduate school; for the 1997/1998 academic year, it trained specialists in 89 specialties in the humanities and natural sciences; 505 people studied full-time in graduate school, and 206 part-time students.

Faculties

  • Biological
  • Geographical
  • Geological
  • Economic
  • Electronics
  • Pre-university training
  • Journalism
  • Foreign languages
  • Historical
  • Culture and arts
  • International relations
  • Mechanics and mathematics
  • Applied Mathematics and Computer Science
  • Physical
  • Philological
  • Philosophical
  • Chemical
  • Legal

University rating

Famous teachers

see also

  • Astronomical Observatory of Ivan Franko Lviv National University

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Notes

Links

  • (Ukrainian) (English)

An excerpt characterizing Ivan Franko Lviv National University

“But what about,” Plato quickly answered, “a horse festival.” And we must feel sorry for the livestock,” Karataev said. - Look, the rogue has curled up. She got warm, the son of a bitch,” he said, feeling the dog at his feet, and, turning around again, immediately fell asleep.
Outside, crying and screams could be heard somewhere in the distance, and fire could be seen through the cracks of the booth; but in the booth it was quiet and dark. Pierre did not sleep for a long time and, with open eyes, lay in his place in the darkness, listening to the measured snoring of Plato, who lay next to him, and felt that the previously destroyed world was now being erected in his soul with new beauty, on some new and unshakable foundations.

In the booth into which Pierre entered and in which he stayed for four weeks, there were twenty-three captured soldiers, three officers and two officials.
All of them then appeared to Pierre as if in a fog, but Platon Karataev remained forever in Pierre’s soul as the strongest and dearest memory and personification of everything Russian, kind and round. When the next day, at dawn, Pierre saw his neighbor, the first impression of something round was completely confirmed: the whole figure of Plato in his French overcoat belted with a rope, in a cap and bast shoes, was round, his head was completely round, his back, chest, shoulders, even the hands that he carried, as if always about to hug something, were round; a pleasant smile and large brown gentle eyes were round.
Platon Karataev must have been over fifty years old, judging by his stories about the campaigns in which he participated as a long-time soldier. He himself did not know and could not determine in any way how old he was; but his teeth, bright white and strong, which kept rolling out in their two semicircles when he laughed (which he often did), were all good and intact; There was not a single gray hair in his beard or hair, and his whole body had the appearance of flexibility and, especially, hardness and endurance.
His face, despite the small round wrinkles, had an expression of innocence and youth; his voice was pleasant and melodious. But the main feature of his speech was its spontaneity and argument. He apparently never thought about what he said and what he would say; and because of this, the speed and fidelity of his intonations had a special irresistible persuasiveness.
His physical strength and agility were such during the first time of captivity that it seemed that he did not understand what fatigue and illness were. Every day, in the morning and in the evening, when he lay down, he said: “Lord, lay it down like a pebble, lift it up into a ball”; in the morning, getting up, always shrugging his shoulders in the same way, he said: “I lay down and curled up, got up and shook myself.” And indeed, as soon as he lay down, he immediately fell asleep like a stone, and as soon as he shook himself, in order to immediately, without a second of delay, take up some task, like children, getting up, taking up their toys. He knew how to do everything, not very well, but not badly either. He baked, steamed, sewed, planed, and made boots. He was always busy and only at night allowed himself conversations, which he loved, and songs. He sang songs, not as songwriters sing, who know that they are being listened to, but he sang like birds sing, obviously because he needed to make these sounds just as it is necessary to stretch or disperse; and these sounds were always subtle, gentle, almost feminine, mournful, and at the same time his face was very serious.
Having been captured and grown a beard, he apparently threw away everything alien and soldierly that had been imposed on him and involuntarily returned to his former, peasant, folk mindset.
“A soldier on leave is a shirt made from trousers,” he used to say. He was reluctant to talk about his time as a soldier, although he did not complain, and often repeated that throughout his service he was never beaten. When he spoke, he mainly spoke from his old and, apparently, dear memories of “Christian”, as he pronounced it, peasant life. The sayings that filled his speech were not those, mostly indecent and glib sayings that soldiers say, but they were those folk sayings that seem so insignificant, taken in isolation, and which suddenly take on the meaning of deep wisdom when they are spoken opportunely.
Often he said the exact opposite of what he had said before, but both were true. He loved to talk and spoke well, decorating his speech with endearments and proverbs, which, it seemed to Pierre, he was inventing himself; but the main charm of his stories was that in his speech the simplest events, sometimes the very ones that Pierre saw without noticing them, took on the character of solemn beauty. He loved to listen to fairy tales that one soldier told in the evenings (all the same ones), but most of all he loved to listen to stories about real life. He smiled joyfully as he listened to such stories, inserting words and making questions that tended to clarify for himself the beauty of what was being told to him. Karataev had no attachments, friendship, love, as Pierre understood them; but he loved and lived lovingly with everything that life brought him to, and especially with a person - not with some famous person, but with those people who were before his eyes. He loved his mongrel, he loved his comrades, the French, he loved Pierre, who was his neighbor; but Pierre felt that Karataev, despite all his affectionate tenderness towards him (with which he involuntarily paid tribute to Pierre’s spiritual life), would not for a minute be upset by separation from him. And Pierre began to feel the same feeling towards Karataev.
Platon Karataev was for all the other prisoners the most ordinary soldier; his name was Falcon or Platosha, they mocked him good-naturedly and sent him for parcels. But for Pierre, as he presented himself on the first night, an incomprehensible, round and eternal personification of the spirit of simplicity and truth, that is how he remained forever.
Platon Karataev knew nothing by heart except his prayer. When he gave his speeches, he, starting them, seemed not to know how he would end them.
When Pierre, sometimes amazed at the meaning of his speech, asked him to repeat what he had said, Plato could not remember what he had said a minute ago - just as he could not tell Pierre his favorite song in words. It said: “darling, little birch and I feel sick,” but the words didn’t make any sense. He did not understand and could not understand the meaning of words taken separately from speech. His every word and every action was a manifestation of an activity unknown to him, which was his life. But his life, as he himself looked at it, had no meaning as a separate life. She made sense only as a part of the whole, which he constantly felt. His words and actions poured out of him as uniformly, necessarily, and directly as a scent is released from a flower. He could not understand either the price or the meaning of a single action or word.

Ivan Franko Lviv National University is one of the oldest universities in Ukraine; January 20, 2011 marked 350 years since its founding.

It all started with a fraternal school, which was reorganized into a Jesuit college, to which King John II Casimir on January 20, 1661 granted “the dignity of an academy and the title of a university” with the right to teach all the then university disciplines, awarding academic degrees of bachelor, licentiate, master and doctor.

After the dissolution of the Jesuit Order in 1773, Lviv University was closed. However, soon a number of divisions of the Jesuit academy became the basis of the Josephine University in Lviv, with the entry of Galicia into the Austrian Empire. The highest governing body of the university was the senate (consistory). It consisted of the rector, deans and seniors (the oldest professors in terms of age and experience). The Senate decided on the most important issues relating to the general management of the university. All other matters were decided by the deans, who were also the directors of the faculties. From 1787 to 1806, the studium Ruthenum functioned at the Faculty of Theology - Ukrainian (“Russian”) courses with two-year training in the Ukrainian language.



During the second half of the 19th century. The struggle continued for the right of women to attend university studios. In 1897, women were allowed to study at the Faculty of Philosophy, and in 1900 at the Faculty of Medicine and the Department of Pharmacy. Women repeatedly demanded to be allowed to study at the Faculty of Law, but the government did not meet them halfway.

1917, then Galician Seym

Education at the university for the vast majority of students was paid. Students of the Faculty of Theology did not pay tuition at all. In secular faculties, only a portion of students enjoyed such benefits (students who submitted a certificate of poverty and successfully completed semester colloquiums). In addition to tuition fees, students paid a fee for immatriculation (ceremonial acceptance as a student), paid for exams, colloquiums, seminars, for the right to use the library, etc. There were also student scholarships. The scholarship fund consisted primarily of donations from individuals. The most famous were scholarship funds named after Karol Ludwik, J. Slovacki, Tsalevich, Gaecki, etc. Students had dormitories, but the number of places in them was limited.

In whose house from 1851 to 1920 there was Lviv University, and also the Faculty of Biology

After the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Galicia was captured by Poland. The Ministry of Religions and Education of Poland already on November 18, 1918, by a special order, announced that it was taking Lviv University under its guardianship, and named it after the Polish king John Casimir. The only language of instruction in the educational institution was Polish; only at the Faculty of Theology were certain disciplines taught in Latin. Departments teaching in Ukrainian were closed. Within two to three years, all professors and associate professors of Ukrainian nationality were fired from their jobs, and Ukrainian youth were limited in their access to university education.

According to the articles of the secret protocol to the agreement between the USSR and Germany of August 23, 1939, Western Ukraine fell into the zone of influence of the Soviet Union. On September 22, Soviet troops entered Lviv. On October 26, 1939, the puppet People's Assembly of Western Ukraine met in Lvov, which proclaimed the introduction of Soviet power. During this period, Lviv University also underwent radical changes. According to the Charter of the USSR Higher School, a radical organizational restructuring of the university was carried out as a higher educational institution with free and open education for all citizens. The theological faculty was liquidated, and the medical department with the pharmaceutical department was reorganized into a medical institute. In October 1939, new departments were created: history of Marxism-Leninism, dialectical and historical materialism, political economy, Ukrainian language, Ukrainian literature, Russian language, Russian literature, history of the USSR, history of Ukraine, physical education. Along with ensuring high professional training of specialists, they had to educate young people on the basis of Marxist-Leninist ideology and a materialist worldview.

By decree of January 8, 1940, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Ukrainian SSR named Lviv State University after the outstanding Ukrainian writer and thinker Ivan Franko, who studied at the Faculty of Philosophy in the 70s of the 19th century.

The work of the university was stopped with the German attack on the Soviet Union and the June 30, 1941 invasion of Lviv by Nazi troops. In the first days, 70 famous scientists from the university, polytechnic and medical institutes were arrested, and after beatings and abuse they were shot in the area of ​​​​what is now Sakharov Street. In 1942, the German occupation authorities closed universities in Ukraine. The occupiers robbed and destroyed university property. The equipment of the classrooms and laboratories of the faculties of physics, mathematics and chemistry, as well as the library of the department of folklore and ethnography, which numbered 15 thousand volumes, were exported to Germany. From the university's scientific library, in which the main reading room was destroyed, 20 thousand volumes of the most valuable books, about 5 thousand early printed and incunabula, and 500 valuable manuscripts were taken away.

The restoration of the university's activities began immediately after the liberation of Lvov from Nazi troops. On July 30, 1944, a meeting was held at the university, the participants of which - 127 teachers and technical workers - appealed to the intelligentsia to take an active part in the restoration of the economy, educational, cultural and educational institutions of Lvov. During 1944 - 1945, mainly by students and teachers, the premises on the street were organized. Shcherbakova (now Grushevsky), 4 (biological faculty), on the street. Lomonosov (now Cyril and Methodius), 6 and 8 (chemical and physical buildings), the scientific library and hostel on the street were renovated. Herzen, 7, an astronomical observatory and a botanical garden were partially rebuilt. After a break of more than three years, the University welcomed students again on October 15, 1944.

Declaration of independence of Ukraine - new page in the history of the University. In 1990, the University was headed by Professor, Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Ivan Vakarchuk. The opening of new faculties and departments is the implementation of a large-scale program of reforms in the organization of studies at Lviv University. The Faculty of International Relations, the Faculty of Philosophy, the Faculty of Pre-University Training, and the Institute of Historical Research were founded, headed by Doctor of Historical Sciences J. Gritsak. On October 11, 1999, by Decree of the President of Ukraine, Ivan Franko Lviv State University was awarded the status of “national”.

On the pediment of the main building of the Ivan Franko Lviv National University there is a slogan: “Patriae decori civibus educandis” (“Educated citizens are the adornment of the Motherland”). The University team is working hard to realize this idea.


Reading room of the scientific library named after. M. Dragomanova.

Rector of the University, Professor, Doctor of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Ivan Vakarchuk welcomes the first-year students.

Graduates

Solemn initiation into students.

Celebrating the 350th anniversary of the University

And these are the teachers of the Ukrainian language department))))))))) I remember you, my dear teachers))))))))

The students presented Ivan Franko with a robe...

Students dancing...


Dear friends! Come study at Ivan Franko Lviv National State University!

Lviv National University named after. I. Franko (LNU) trains bachelors in the following areas:

  • Humanitarian sciences;
  • Natural Sciences;
  • Journalism and information;
  • Computer Science and Computer Engineering;
  • Art;
  • Culture;
  • International relationships;
  • Management and administration;
  • Right;
  • System Sciences and Cybernetics;
  • Social and political sciences;
  • Service sector;
  • Physical and mathematical sciences;
  • Economics and Entrepreneurship;
  • Electronics.

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "HUMANITIES"

  • Story
  • Philology
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Foreign language or Russian language (according to profile). 3. History of Ukraine*;
  • Philosophy

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "NATURAL SCIENCES"

  • Biology
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Biology. 3. Physics or chemistry*;
  • Geography
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Geography. 3. History of Ukraine or mathematics*;
  • Geology
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Geography or physics*;
  • Chemistry
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Chemistry. 3. Physics or mathematics*;
  • Ecology, environmental protection and balanced use of natural resources
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Chemistry or geography*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "JOURNALISM AND INFORMATION"

  • Journalism
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Foreign language or Russian language. 3. Creative competition*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "INFORMATICS AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING"

  • Computer science

SPECIALTIES IN THE "ART" DIRECTION

  • Musical art
  • Theater arts
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. Creative competition*;
  • Choreography
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. Creative competition*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE "CULTURE" DIRECTION

  • Book science, library science and bibliography
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. Foreign language or geography*;
  • Cultural studies
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. Foreign language or geography*.

SPECIALTIES OF THE DIRECTION "INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS"

  • International information
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Foreign language. 3. World history or mathematics*;
  • International law
  • International relationships
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Foreign language. 3. World history or geography*;
  • International economic relations
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Foreign language. 3. Mathematics or geography*;
  • international Business
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Foreign language. 3. Mathematics or world history*;
  • Regional studies
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Geography. 3. World history or foreign language*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION"

  • Management
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Geography or foreign language*.

SPECIALTIES OF THE DIRECTION "LAW"

  • Jurisprudence
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. Foreign language or mathematics*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "SYSTEM SCIENCES AND CYBERNETICS"

  • Computer science
  • Applied Mathematics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Physics or foreign language*;
  • System analysis
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Physics or foreign language*.

SPECIALTIES OF THE DIRECTION "SOCIAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCES"

  • Political science
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. World history or foreign language*;
  • Psychology
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Biology. 3. History of Ukraine or foreign language*;
  • Sociology
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. History of Ukraine. 3. Mathematics or foreign language*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE "SERVICE SECTOR" DIRECTION

  • Tourism
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Geography. 3. History of Ukraine or foreign language*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE DIRECTION "PHYSICAL AND MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES"

  • Astronomy
  • Mathematics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Physics or foreign language*;
  • Mechanics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Physics or foreign language*;
  • applied Physics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Physics. 3. Mathematics or chemistry*;
  • Statistics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Physics or foreign language*;
  • Physics

SPECIALTIES OF THE DIRECTION "ECONOMICS AND ENTREPRENEURSHIP"

  • Marketing
  • International economics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. Foreign language or geography*;
  • Applied Statistics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. History of Ukraine or geography*;
  • Accounting and Auditing
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. History of Ukraine or geography*;
  • Finance and credit
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. History of Ukraine or geography*;
  • Enterprise economy
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. History of Ukraine or geography*;
  • Economic cybernetics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. History of Ukraine or geography*;
  • Economic theory
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Mathematics. 3. History of Ukraine or geography*.

SPECIALTIES IN THE "ELECTRONICS" DIRECTION

  • Micro- and nanoelectronics
    Competitive subjects: 1. Ukrainian language and literature. 2. Physics. 3. Mathematics or chemistry*.

    - (I. Franko LNU) ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko (Lviv National University named after I. Franko) Main building of Lviv University (former building of the Galician Sejm) Original name Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko ... Wikipedia

    The original name of the Astronomical Observatory is the scientifically advanced branch of the Lviv National University named after Ivan Franko Type astronomical observatory Code 067 ... Wikipedia



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