The Queen's University of Belfast (QUB) is a university in Belfast, Northern Ireland; the university is often called Queen's University, Belfast. The university was originally part of Queen's University of Ireland, created in 1845 to encourage higher education for Catholics and Presbyterians as a counterpart to the Trinity College, Dublin, then an Anglican institution. The university offers academic degrees at various levels and across a broad subject range. It is particularly strong in the professions: pharmacy, medicine, dentistry, law, accountancy, architecture, engineering as well as pure and applied sciences, the arts and humanities and social sciences. The university's current President and Vice-Chancellor is Professor Peter Gregson, and its Chancellor is the former United States Senator, George Mitchell. On June 20, 2006 the university announced a £259 million investment programme focusing on facilities, recruitment and research.*
Queen's has been led by a distinguished line of Vice-Chancellors (presidents), including Sir David Keir, Lord Ashby of Brandon, Dr Michael Grant, Sir Arthur Vick, Sir Peter Froggatt served a 10-year term, Sir Gordon Beveridge, and Sir George Bain.
A more detailed history: A History (Queen's Website)
The university was one of only eight United Kingdom universities to hold a parliamentary seat in the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster until such representation was abolished in 1950. The university was also represented in the now defunct Parliament of Northern Ireland from 1920-1968 where it held four seats. The last Member of Parliament for the university's Westminster seat was Professor D.L. Savory and the last Member of Parliament for the university's Northern Irish parliamentary seat was Dr. H.I. McClure. Both representatives belonged to the Ulster Unionist Party.
The university has formal agreements with other colleges in Northern Ireland and operates several outreach schemes to rural areas.
Several institutes are also associated with Queen's. Located close to the main campus is the Institute of Professional Legal Studies at Queen's which offers training to law graduates to enable them to practice as solicitors or barristers in Northern Ireland, England & Wales and the Republic of Ireland. Admission to the Institute is highly competitive and depends on the graduate's overall academic standing and their performance in an unseen written exam.
The Institute of Theology consists of several colleges with a Christian emphasis, including St Mary's (Catholic), Union Theological College (Presbyterian) as well as Baptist and Methodist colleges in Belfast. In all five colleges teach any programmes with a theological emphasis on behalf of the university; the university may confer theology degrees but cannot teach the subject itself. The Institute of Theology was known as the Faculty of Theology until 1998, being created as a faculty in 1926.
The university also hosts the annual Belfast Festival at Queen's and the Belfast Film Festival. It runs Northern Ireland's only arthouse cinema - Queen's Film Theatre - and an art gallery, The Naughton Gallery at Queen's, which is a registered museum. The university's student's union is located opposite the main campus. The main hall is named for Nelson Mandela and hosts concerts and Shine, a weekly nightclub.*
Belfast | Queen's University of Belfast | Educational institutions established in 1845
Ollscoil na Banríona, Béal Feirste | クイーンズ大学 (アイルランド) | Queens University Belfast
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