Comillas Pontifical University
Universidad Pontificia Comillas
Seal
Latin: Pontificia Universitas Comillensis Matriti
MottoEl Valor de la Excelencia
Motto in English
The Value of Excellence
TypePrivate Catholic Pontifical higher education institution
Established1890 (1890)
Religious affiliation
Roman Catholic Church (Jesuit)
ChancellorVery Rev.Arturo Sosa, SJ
Vice-ChancellorRev.Joaquín Barrero Díaz, SJ
RectorDr. P. Enrique Sanz Giménez-Rico, SJ[1]
Students11,149[2]
Location,
CampusBoth urban and rural.
ColorsYellow & Black
Websitewww.comillas.edu
Entrance to original complex in Comillas

Comillas Pontifical University (Spanish: Universidad Pontificia Comillas) is a private Catholic higher education institution run by the Spanish Province of the Society of Jesus in Madrid, Spain. The university is involved in a number of academic exchange programmes, work practice schemes and international projects with over 200 institutions of higher education in Europe, Latin America, North America and Asia.

History

Pope Leo XIII founded the Seminary of St. Anthony of Padua in 1890 in the town of Comillas, (Province of Santander, currently Cantabria), in response to efforts made by the Marquis of Comillas to build an institution for educating local candidates to the priesthood. At the time of its foundation, the seminary was entrusted to the Society of Jesus. In 1904, the seminary was raised to the status of a Pontifical university when Pope Pius X granted the school the power to confer academic degrees in theology, philosophy and canon law.

In 1969 the university was moved to Madrid, where it admitted a wider range of students including international students.

In 1978 the Jesuits incorporated into the university their Madrid's higher education institution ICAI-ICADE, the resultant entity of the merger in 1960 of ICAI and ICADE, two institutes established in 1908 and 1956 respectively. They are today the ICAI School of Engineering, the ICADE School of Law and the ICADE School of Business and Economics.

Several other schools, like the San Juan de Dios School of Nursing, were incorporated later on, to reach the university's present structure of seven colleges and schools:

Study and research centres and institutes have been created (Institute for Research in Technology, Institute for Liberalism, Krausism and Freemasonry Research, Graduate Studies Institute, Institute for Educational Science, Institute for Migration Research, Faith and Secularism Institute, Law Innovation Center, Modern Language Institute, University Institute on the Family).

See also

References

40°25′48″N 3°42′41″W / 40.43000°N 3.71139°W / 40.43000; -3.71139

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.