Peking
University is a comprehensive and National key university.
The campus, known as "Yan Yuan"-- the gardens
of Yan, is situated at the northeast of the Haidian
District at the western suburbs of Beijing. It stands
near the Yuan Ming Gardens and the Summer Palace.
The University consists of 30 colleges and
12 departments, with 93 specialties for undergraduates,2
specialties for the second Bachelor's degree, 199
specialties for Master candidates and 173 specialties
for Doctoral candidates. While still laying stress
on basic sciences, the university has paid special
attention to the development of applied sciences.
At present, Peking university has 216 research institutes
and research centres, and there are 2 national engineering
research centres, 81 key national disciplines, 12
national key laboratories.
The university has made an effective combination
of the research on important scientific issues with
the training of personnel with high level specialized
knowledge and professional skill as demanded by the
country's socialist modernization. It strives not
only for the simultaneous improvements in teaching
and research work, but also for the promotion of interaction
and mutual promotion among various subjects.
Thus Peking University has become a center for teaching
and research and a university of the new type, consisting
of diverse branches of learning such as pure and applied
sciences, social sciences and the humanities, and
sciences of management and education. Its aim is to
rank among the world's best universities at the beginning
of the next century.
Peking University, the former Jing Shi Da Xue Tang(the
Metropolitan University) of the Qing Dynasty, opened
in December 1898. The Metropolitan University was
then not only the most prestigious institution of
higher learning but also the highest administrative
organization of education in China. In May 1912, the
Metropolitan University was renamed "Peking University".
In 1917, its presidency was taken up by Mr.Cai Yuanpei,
an outstanding scientist, educationist and democratic
revolutionary, who played an active role in the reform
and development of the university. By 1919, the university
developed into the country's largest institution of
higher learning, with 14 departments and an enrollment
of more than 2,000 students.
Peking University has a glorious revolutionary tradition.
In 1919, the anti-imperialist and anti-feudal May
4th Movement was initiated from the university, which
had been the centre of the Chinese New-Culture Movement
and the earliest base for the dissemination of Marxism
in China. Chen Duxiu, Li Dazhao and Mao Zedong, founders
of the Chinese communist Party, as well as Lu Xun,
a great writer, thinker and chief leader of the Chinese
New-Culture Movement, all either taught or held offices
in the university. In order to carry on the revolutionary
tradition of the May 4th Movement, the university
decided, after the new China was founded, that the
4th of May be set as the date on which to celebrate
the anniversary of the founding of the university.
During the War of Resistance Against Japan, Peking
University moved to Kunming, a city in Yunnan Province,
together with Tsinghua University and Nankai University,
formed the National Southwestern Associated University.
In 1946, after the victory of the war, Peking University
moved back to Beiping (then the name of Beijing).
At that time, the university comprised six schools
(Arts, Science, Law, Medicine, Engineering and Agriculture),
and a research institute for the humanities. The total
enrollment of student grew to 3,000.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China,
the government carried out, in 1952, a nationwide
readjustment of colleges and universities with the
aim to promote higher education and quicken the training
of personnel with specialized knowledge and skill
by pooling the country's manpower and material resourses.
After the readjustment, Peking University became a
university comprising departments of both liberal
Arts and Sciences and emphasizing the teaching and
research of basic sciences. By 1962, the total enrollment
grew to 10,671 undergraduate students and 280 graduate
students. Since 1949, Peking University has trained
for the country 73,000 undergraduates and specialty
students, 10,000 postgraduates and 20,000 adult-education
students, and many of them have become the backbones
on all fronts in China.
Peking University, the former Jing Shi Da Xue Tang(the
Metropolitan University) of the Qing Dynasty, opened
in December 1898. The Metropolitan University was
then not only the first comprehensive key institution
of higher learning but also the highest administrative
organization of education in China. In May 1912, the
Metropolitan University was renamed "Peking University".
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