University of Tsukuba

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University of Tsukuba
筑波大学
The seal of the University of Tsukuba

Motto: None
Established October, 1973 (Originally in 1872)
Type: Public (National)
President: Yoichi Iwasaki
Location Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
Campus: Urban
Mascot: None
Website: www.tsukuba.ac.jp
The University of Tsukuba has a modern campus
The University of Tsukuba has a modern campus

The University of Tsukuba (筑波大学 Tsukuba daigaku?) is located in the city of Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture in the Kantō region The University has 28 college clusters and schools with a total of around 15,000 students (in 2003).

The current university was established in October, 1973. A forerunner of this university was Tokyo University of Education (東京教育大学 Tōkyō kyōiku daigaku?) originally founded in 1872 as one of the oldest universities in Japan, Tokyo Shihan Gakko.

The university is ranked one of the top Asian universities (9th to 17th) in the “Academic Ranking of World Universities[1]

The University of Tsukuba has had several Nobel Prize winners so far, namely Leo Esaki, Hideki Shirakawa and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, which is extremely rare among universities in Asia, where there have been fewer Nobel laureates than in European and American universities.

The University of Tsukuba is famous in the research of physical education, physics and economics.[citation needed]

On July 11, 1991 Japanese translator Hitoshi Igarashi was stabbed to death at the University for translating Salman Rushdie's most famous novel The Satanic Verses.

In October 2002, the University of Tsukuba merged with the University of Library and Information Science (ULIS, 図書館情報大学 Toshokan jōhō daigaku?). The School of Library and Information Science and the Graduate School of Library and Information - Media Studies were established.

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