Establishment and merging into Guangxi University Guangxi Normal University was established in 1932 as Guangxi Provincial Teacher's College, the first normal school in the Guangxi region and one of the first teacher training institutions in the country. Its first president was notable educator Yang Dongyu (). The original campus was located in the
Yanshan District of Guilin, where the modern university now maintains a branch campus. Almost immediately from its establishment, the fledgling institution became the center of a power struggle between the provincial Guangxi government and the
Nationalist Ministry of Education, resulting in a long period of evolution, absorption into other institutions, renaming, and re-establishment. In 1936, the provincial government ordered the school to merge into National Guangxi University (now known as
Guangxi University, the flagship public university of Guanxi province). The school became the National Guangxi University College of Liberal Arts, which focused on the
humanities and no longer functioned solely as a normal school.
Relocation and evolution into an independent institution In 1941, a greater demand for schoolteachers in Guangxi caused the college to be separated from Guangxi University and reconstituted as the independent Guangxi Teacher's College. The school was renamed the Guangxi Guilin Teacher's College in 1942, and then National Guilin Teacher's College in 1943. In February 1946, the school moved to the city of
Nanning and became the National Nanning Teacher's College. In February 1950, the school moved back to Guilin and merged with National Guangxi University for the second time. This time, the school became the National Guangxi University Teacher's College, also known as the College of Culture and Education, retaining its function as a normal school. In 1953, the
People's Republic of China began a nationwide reorganization of higher education institutions. In July 1953, the
Ministry of Education ordered the re-establishment of the normal school as an independent institution to be known as Guangxi Teacher's College. To support the creation of the new school, Guangxi University transferred 53 professors in its departments of Chinese, foreign languages, history, mathematics, physics, and chemistry, as well as 256 faculty members of the College of Culture and Education (many of them faculty of the original Guangxi Provincial Teacher's College), to the Guangxi Teacher's College. Once again independent, the school was granted the historic
Jingjiang Princes' Palace in Guilin, Guangxi as its new Wangcheng Campus. Until 1978, it was the only institution of higher education in Guangxi authorized to grant a bachelor's degree in teacher education. In 1981, the Guangxi Teacher's College received authorization to grant master's degrees. On May 29, 1983, the institution incorporated as the Guangxi Normal University. It granted its first doctoral degrees in 2006. == Academics and research ==