The first marine school in Estonia was founded in 1715 in Tallinn, later the school was founded in
Narva as well. In these so-called calculation-schools, the sailors and shipbuilders studied different subjects, including navigation. In 1880, a school was founded in Tallinn for children of the port factory and workshop staff. The better graduates of the school received the right to work as deck officers on ships. In the second half of the 19th century, a number of Estonian maritime schools were founded. The first of these was the Heinaste Maritime School (1864-1916), where the teaching languages were Estonian, Russian and Latvian. Other maritime schools followed in other cities as well: in Narva (1873 – 1918),
Paldiski (1876 – 1916),
Käsmu (1884 – 1931),
Kuressaare (1891 – 1915), (1919 – 1928), (1942 – 1944), and
Pärnu (1919 – 1922), (1945 – 1989). The
Tallinn Maritime School, the predecessor of the Estonian Maritime Academy of TUT, was founded in 1919. At the same time, a class of engineer officers was opened at the Tallinn University of Applied Sciences (Estonian: Tallinna Tehnikum), which in 1920 became the Tallinn Ship Engineer School and, in 1935, was merged with the Tallinn Maritime School. In 1945, the Tallinn Marine Fisheries Technicum was established, which was renamed the Tallinn Fisheries Technical School in 1956, the Tallinn Fish Industry Marine School in 1965, and the Tallinn Marine College in 1989. During the period of
Soviet occupation from 1945 to 1991, the Estonian Maritime Schools belonged to the unified maritime education system of the
USSR, and therefore the maritime education of Estonia was predominantly in Russian. In the newly independent Estonia, Estonian is again the language of instruction. At the beginning of the 1990s, three educational institutions in the maritime education field were provided in Tallinn: •
Tallinn Maritime School (Estonian: Tallinna Merekool) • Tallinn Marine College (Estonian: Tallinna Merekolledž) • Tallinn 1st Industrial School (Estonian: Tallinna 1. Kutsekeskkool) In 1992, a united Estonian Maritime Education Center was formed, which merged Tallinn's Marine College and Tallinn 1st Industrial School. Before that, in 1991, the Pärnu Maritime School and the Oceanic Sea Marine School of Production were liquidated. In 1999 Estonian Marine Education Center was renamed to the Estonian Maritime Academy. In the autumn of 2006, a master's degree in maritime academy was opened. In 2009, the Marine Academy's management moved from
Lasnamäe to the top of the
Kopli peninsula at the Kopli 101 building. Different faculties followed: The Maritime Faculty and the Training Center from Luise street building and in 2012, the Faculty of Shipping, the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and other support structures from the Mustakivi street building. On August 1, 2014, the Estonian Maritime Academy joined the Technical University of Tallinn and became one of the colleges and since then has been renamed Estonian Maritime Academy of TUT. When joining TUT, the Estonian Maritime Academy was separated from the Industrial Education Department, which became an independent educational institution called the Estonian Maritime School, located in the Kopli 101 courtyard building. The Joining Agreement was signed on April 23 of the same year. On January 1, 2017, the Estonian Maritime Academy of TUT became one out of the five faculties of the TUT. When joining, the former TUT Kuressaare College was named the Kuressaare Center of the Estonian Maritime Academy of TUT. TTU Small Craft Competence Center (SCC) continued with its former name. == Kuressaare College ==