File:Johan Heinrich Neuman - Johan Rudolf Thorbecke.jpg|Johan Rudolf Thorbecke, statesman File:Henry.Pirenne.Portrait.gif|Henri Pirenne, historian File:George de Hevesy.jpg|George de Hevesy, Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry File:Maurice Maeterlinck 2.jpg|Maurice Maeterlinck, Nobel Prize winner in Literature File:Corneille Heymans nobel.jpg|Corneel Heymans, Nobel Prize winner in Medicine File:Belgisch-Nederlandse studieconferentie te Helvoirt (NB). Minister M. de Riemaeck, Bestanddeelnr 920-8362.jpg|Marguerite Legot, first female government minister in Belgium File:Yaakov Dori2.jpg|Yaakov Dori, president of the Technion, Haifa File:Suzanne Lilar.1980s.jpg|Suzanne Lilar, feminist writer File:Marc van Montagu and Jozef Schell.jpg|Jozef Schell (right), molecular biologist File:Marmont675.jpg|Marc van Montagu, molecular biologist File:Robert Cailliau On Desk.jpg|Robert Cailliau, co-inventor of the World Wide Web File:Guy Verhofstadt EP press conference 3.jpg|Guy Verhofstadt, politician File:Rolin-Jacquemyn.jpg|Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns, jurist and diplomat File:Hélène Mallebrancke (1902-1940).jpg|Hélène Mallebrancke (1902–1940) Civil engineer and Belgian Resistance member in Second World War
Notable alumni •
Joseph Antoine Ferdinand Plateau (1801–1883), physicist, mathematician •
Abdoel Rivai (1871–1937), physician, journalist, the first native of the
Dutch East Indies to obtain
doctoral degree •
Leo Apostel (1925–1995), philosopher •
Leo Baekeland (1863–1944), chemist, inventor of
Bakelite •
Wim Blockmans (born 1945), historian •
Thierry Bogaert, founder of
DevGen •
Luc Bossyns, civil engineer •
Marc Bossuyt (born 1944), judge, professor •
Dries Buytaert (born 1978), computer scientist, founder of the
Drupal CMS •
Robert Cailliau (born 1947), co-inventor of the World Wide Web •
Luc Coene (1947–2017), economy, governor of the
National Bank of Belgium (NBB) •
Gerard Cooreman, former prime minister of Belgium •
Marc Coucke (born 1965), co-founder of
Omega Pharma •
Franz Cumont (1868–1947), historian • (1922–1992), gynecologist, best known as chocolate maker of the brands Leonidas and Daskalidès. •
Pieter de Decker, former prime minister of Belgium •
Bert De Graeve (born 1955), law, businessman •
Michel de Kemmeter, author and researcher in
human sustainable development •
Arnoud De Meyer (presently) director of Judge Business School of the University of Cambridge •
Martin De Prycker (born 1955), engineer •
Bertha De Vriese (1877–1958), first woman to enroll and graduate as a physician • Wim De Waele, economy and computer science, director of the
IBBT •
Catherine de Zegher (born 1955), international curator, art critic, and art historian •
Rudy Dekeyser, molecular biologist, assistant director of the
VIB •
Bart Deplancke (born 1975), professor at
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne •
Paul de Smet de Naeyer, former prime minister of Belgium •
Martin Dobelle (1906–1986), veteran orthopedic surgeon •
Yaakov Dori (1899–1973), first
chief of staff of the
Israeli Defense Forces, president of the
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology •
Paul Fredericq (1850–1920), historian •
Walter Fiers (1931–2019), molecular biologist •
Leopold Flam (1912–1995), historian, philosopher •
Dirk Frimout (born 1941), physicist, astronaut •
Derrick Gosselin (born 1956), engineer, economist, business manager •
Joseph Guislain (1797–1860), physiologist and psychiatrist •
Jacques-Joseph Haus (1796–1881), jurist •
Lucienne Herman-Michielsens (1926–1995), law, politician •
Philippe Herreweghe (born 1947), doctor, psychiatrist, orchestra conductor •
Corneille Heymans (1892–1968), physiologist (
Nobel Prize winner) •
Jan Hoet, (1936–2014), art historian, museum director, founding director of the
SMAK •
Maksymilian Horwitz (1877–1937), Polish socialist and communist intellectual and activist •
Friedrich August Kekulé von Stradonitz (1829–1896), chemist •
Jaap Kruithof (1929–2009), philosopher •
Tom Lanoye (born 1958), philologist, writer •
François Laurent (1810–1887), jurist •
Théo Lefèvre, former prime minister of Belgium •
Marguerite Legot (1913–1977), jurist, first Belgian woman to serve as a government minister •
Yves Leterme (born 1960), former prime minister of Belgium •
Emma Leclercq (1851–1933), cell biologist •
Herman Liebaers (1919–2010), writer, former Marschal of the Royal Household. •
Suzanne Lilar (born Suzanne Verbist) (1901–1992), philosopher, jurist, essayist, novelist •
Julius Mac Leod (1857–1919), botanist •
Maurice Maeterlinck (1862–1949), jurist, writer (
Nobel Prize winner) •
Hélène Mallebrancke (1902–1940), first female Belgian civil engineer to graduate from the University of Ghent, Resistance member in Second World War •
Paul Mansion (1844–1919), mathematician •
Rudi Mariën, pharmacy, chairman of
Innogenetics •
Gerard Mortier (1943–2014), artistic director •
Roland Peelman, conductor and musical director •
Jean-Pierre Nuel (1847–1920), physiologist •
Peter Piot (born 1949), doctor, assistant secretary-general of the
United Nations •
Henri Pirenne (1862–1935), historian •
Karel Poma (1920–2014), chemist and politician •
Ockert Potgieter (1965–2021), missionary and film director •
Adolphe Quetelet (1796–1874), statistician •
Godfried-Willem Raes (born 1952), composer, performer and instrument maker •
Jacques Rogge (1942–2021), doctor, president of the
International Olympic Committee •
Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns (1835–1902), jurist, diplomat and cofounder of the
Institut de droit international •
George Sarton (1884–1956), chemist and historian of science •
Jozef Schell (1935–2003), molecular biologist •
Ferdinand Augustijn Snellaert (1809–1872), physician and writer •
Imre Takács, environmental engineer and process engineer •
Manuel Tito de Morais (1910–1999), electronic engineer and Portuguese politician •
Luc Van den Bossche (born 1947), law, politician •
Guido van Gheluwe (1926–2014), jurist and founder of the
Orde van den Prince •
Herman Vanderpoorten (1922–1984), politician •
Hugo Van Heuverswyn (born 1948) chemist, biotech pioneer and businessman •
Ann Van Gysel, zoology •
Dirk Van de Put, businessman, incoming CEO of
Mondelez International •
Karel van de Woestijne (1878–1929), writer •
Henry van de Velde (1863–1957), architect • Alexander Van Dijck, pioneer in rare diseases •
Prudens van Duyse (1804–1859), writer •
Paul van Geert (born 1950), psychologist •
Marc Van Montagu (born 1933), biotech pioneer •
Désiré van Monckhoven (1834–1882), physicist •
Jules Van Praet (1806–1887), statesman •
Willy van Ryckeghem (born 1935), economist •
Piet Vanthemsche (born 1955), veterinary surgeon •
Daniel Varoujan (1884–1915), Armenian poet •
Guy Verhofstadt (born 1953), former prime minister of Belgium, liberal European politician •
Dirk Verhofstadt (born 1955), publisher •
Etienne Vermeersch (1934–2019), philosopher •
Katrien Vermeire (born 1979), artist •
Frank J. M. Verstraete, veterinary dentist and academic •
Swen Vincke (born 1972), video game director and founder of
Larian Studios •
André Vlerick (1919–1990), economy •
Emile Waxweiler (1867–1916), engineer and sociologist •
Marc Zabeau (born 1949), zoology •
Gerald Misinzo (born 1975), molecular biology, Tanzanian veterinary virologist and professor •
Ingrid De Poorter (born 1977), professor specialises in privacy law, IT law and intellectual property law
Notable faculty •
S.N. Balagangadhara (born 1952), comparative science of cultures •
George de Hevesy (1885–1966),
Nobel Prize winner, Chemistry •
François Laurent (1810–1887), historian and jurisconsult •
Jan De Maeseneer (born 1952), medicine, family medicine •
Georges De Moor (born 1953), medicine, medical informatics •
Walter Fiers (1931–2019), molecular biologist •
Corneille Heymans (1892–1968), physiologist (
Nobel Prize winner) •
Joseph Plateau (1801–1883), physicist •
Xavier Saelens (born 1965), biotechnology •
Jeff Schell (1935–2003), biotech pioneer •
Erwin Schrödinger (1887–1961), physicist (
Nobel Prize winner), visiting scholar •
Johan Rudolf Thorbecke (1798–1872), statesman •
Jean Van Houtte, former prime minister of Belgium •
Marc Van Montagu (born 1933), biotech pioneer •
August Vermeylen (1872–1945), author, art historian, statesman •
Adolf von Baeyer (1835–1917), chemist (Nobel Prize winner), visiting scholar •
August Kekulé (1829–1896), chemist •
Victor D'Hondt (1841–1901), lawyer and jurist, known for
D'Hondt method Rectors • 1817–1818:
Jean Charles Van Rotterdam • 1818–1819: • 1819–1820:
Jean Baptiste Hellebaut • 1820–1821: • 1821–1822:
François Egide Verbeeck • 1822–1823:
Jean Guillaume Garnier • 1823–1824:
Pierre De Ryckere • 1824–1825:
Louis Vincent Raoul • 1825–1826:
Jacques Louis Kesteloot • 1826–1827:
Jean Charles Hauff • 1827–1828:
Jacques Joseph Haus • 1828–1829:
Pierre Lammens • 1829–1830: • 1830–1831:
Jacques Van Breda • 1831–1832:
Leopold Auguste Warnkoenig • 1832–1833:
François Verbeeck • 1833–1834:
Jacques Joseph Haus • 1834–1835:
Jacques Louis Kesteloot • 1835–1838:
Jacques Joseph Haus • 1838–1839:
Philippe Auguste De Rote • 1839–1840: • 1840–1841:
Jean Timmermans • 1841–1842:
Josephus Nelis • 1842–1843:
Georg Wilhelm Rassmann • 1843–1844:
Charles Van Coetsem • 1844–1845:
Marie-Charles Margerin • 1845–1846:
Jean-Baptiste Minne-Barth • 1846–1847:
Joseph Roulez • 1847–1848:
François Verbeeck • 1848–1852:
Eloi Manderlier • 1852–1855: • 1855–1857:
Constant-Philippe Serrure • 1857–1864:
Joseph Roulez • 1864–1867:
Jacques Joseph Haus • 1867–1870: • 1870–1873:
Joseph Jean Fuerison • 1873–1879: • 1879–1885: • 1885–1887:
Jean-Jacques Kickx • 1887–1891:
Gustave Wolters • 1891–1894:
Adhémar Motte • 1894–1897:
Charles Van Cauwenberghe • 1897–1900:
Polynice Van Wetter • 1900–1903: • 1903–1906: • 1906–1909:
Hector Leboucq • 1909–1912: • 1912–1915:
Henri Schoentjes • 1916–1918:
Pierre Hoffmann • 1918–1919:
Henri Schoentjes • 1919–1921:
Henri Pirenne • 1921–1923:
Eugène Eeman • 1923–1924:
Jean-François Heymans • 1924–1927: • 1927–1929:
Camille De Bruyne • 1929–1930: • 1930–1933:
August Vermeylen • 1933–1936: • 1936–1938: • 1938–1939:
Jean Haesaert • 1939–1941:
René Goubau • 1940–1944: • 1944–1947: • 1947–1950: • 1950–1953: • 1953–1957: • 1957–1961:
Pieter Lambrechts • 1961–1969: • 1969–1973: • 1973–1977: • 1977–1981: • 1981–1985: • 1985–1993: • 1993–2001: • 2001–2005:
Andreas De Leenheer • 2005–2013:
Paul Van Cauwenberge • 2013–2017: • 2017–2025: • 2025–present:
Petra De Sutter Recipients of honorary doctorates •
J. G. ten Houten,
Wageningen Agricultural University, Agricultural Sciences •
Mary Beard,
University of Cambridge, Classics (2021) == See also ==