Savoy Mont Blanc University

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University Savoie Mont Blanc
Université Savoie Mont Blanc
File:University of Savoy.svg
Established 1960s, officially-recognised 1979
Type Public
President Dennis Varaschin[1]
Academic staff
727
Students 15,376 (2021–2022)
244
Location Annecy;
Jacob-Bellecombette,
Le Bourget-du-Lac
, Haute-Savoie/Savoie, France
Website

Savoy Mont Blanc University (French: Université Savoie Mont Blanc, a.k.a. Chambéry University) is a public university in the region of Savoy, with one campus in Annecy and two around Chambéry.

Campuses

The university was officially founded in 1979 from several colleges founded in the 1960s and 1970s. To avoid a straight choice between the two biggest towns of the Savoie/Haute-Savoie region, the authorities decided to set up a campus in each city for different areas of study. The university has three campuses:

  • The Annecy-le-Vieux campus (near Annecy) is the university's "technology institute" (IUT), and teaches engineering-related subjects and business and administration related subjects. There is either the faculty of economics and management (IMUS, Institut de Management de l'Université de Savoie).
  • Jacob-Bellecombette (1.5 km south of Chambéry) is the campus for students of languages, literature, social sciences, law and economics. It has a library, sports hall and one cafeteria. Chambéry is the home of the university's presidence and administrative buildings.
  • The Technolac campus at Bourget-du-Lac (12 km north of Chambéry) teaches science.

History

  • Between 1295 and 1563, Chambéry was the capital of Savoy. The University of Turin was founded in 1404, and Chambéry was the home of an école préparatoire, a school preparing students to go there. But there was no university in Chambéry in this period, and Turin took over from Chambéry as Savoy's capital in 1563.
  • The annexation of Savoy by France after the unification of Italy meant that Chambéry had an académie between 1860 and 1920, but not a university.
  • During the movement creating new universities in the 1960s, a Savoy Collège Scientifique Universitaire (CSU) was created, then a Collège Littéraire Universitaire (CLU) in 1963. These colleges were merged, creating the Centre Universitaire de Savoie (CUS), at Chambéry, on 9 May 1969. In 1973, Annecy's technical and business college, the Institut Universitaire Technologique (IUT), was founded, and from 27 June 1979, the CUS was officially classed as a university. It was later renamed the Université de Savoie and then in May 2014 Université Savoie Mont Blanc [2]

Number of students

1960 1992 1994 2005 2013[3] 2022[4]
300 3,000 10,400 12,368 12,806 15,376

Foreign students

After Paris I, Pantheon-Assas University and Strasbourg III, Savoy has the fourth-highest number of Erasmus exchange students in France. The school of international relations has signed 228 conventions with universities in 82 countries, and the university takes more than 1,000 foreign students per year overall.

  • Europe 71%
    • United Kingdom 17%
    • Italy 10.5%
    • Germany 10%
    • Spain 8%
    • Sweden 5%
  • North America: 7%
  • Eastern Europe (Pays d'Europe centrale, orientale et nouveaux États indépendants de l'ex-Union soviétique): 5%
  • Asia: 6%
  • North Africa/Middle-East: 5%
  • Latin America: 2.5%
  • Africa: 2.5%
  • Australia/New Zealand: 1%

Gallery

Chambéry campus

Annecy campus

Departments

Annecy

  • IUT d'Annecy]
    • Département Techniques de Commercialisation
    • Département Mesures Physiques
    • Département Génie Mécanique et Productique
    • Département Génie Électrique et Informatique Industrielle
    • Département Réseaux et Télécoms
  • IAE Savoie Mont Blanc
  • Polytech Annecy-Chambéry

Chambéry

  • School of literature, languages and human sciences (LLSH)
  • School of law and business
  • IAE Savoie Mont Blanc

Bourget-du-Lac

  • School of applied sciences
  • IUT de Chambéry
  • Polytech Annecy-Chambéry

Notable people

Faculty

Alumni

Recipients of honorary degree

  • Norberto Bobbio (1909 – 2004) - Italian philosopher of law and political sciences and a historian of political thought
  • Fabiola Gianotti (born 1960) - Italian experimental particle physicist; first woman to be Director-General at CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research)

References

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External links