Some institutions were members of federal universities as university-level institutions before becoming universities in their own right.
University of London The
University of London was formed as a degree-awarding examining board in 1836 in response to the application of
University College London (UCL) to be chartered as a university. It originally operated a system of affiliated institutions with two registers: one (controlled by the government) of institutions allowed to submit students for examination for Arts and Law degrees, with UCL and
King's College London (KCL) as the two initial colleges named in the charter, and a second (controlled by the university) of institutions allowed to submit students for medical degrees. Apart from being allowed to submit students for London examinations, there was no connection between the affiliated colleges and the university.
Former members of federal universities Former federal universities in Great Britain include the
Victoria University, the
University of Wales, the
University of St Andrews, the
University of Durham, and the
Federal University of Surrey. In the first two cases, the federal university merged with one of its colleges when it broke up (a process still ongoing as of July 2018 for Wales) while in the other three cases, where the university had previously existed as a non-federal body, it simply reverted to that status. In Ireland the
Queen's University of Ireland was succeeded by the
Royal University of Ireland which was succeeded (without Belfast) by the
National University of Ireland, which continued to exist after Irish independence. The longest lived of these federal institutions was the
University of Wales, which was founded by royal charter in 1893 with the federation of University College Wales (now
Aberystwyth University), University College North Wales (now
Bangor University) and University College South Wales and Monmouthshire (now
Cardiff University). Prior to this, students at these university colleges prepared for examinations of the University of London. The university grew with the addition of further colleges, and in 1971
St David's College, Lampeter (now part of the
University of Wales Trinity Saint David), Wales' oldest degree-awarding institution, suspended its own degree-awarding powers and entered the University of Wales as St David's University College. In 2007 the university changed from a federal structure to a confederation of independent institutions, allowing individual institutions which had gained the status of universities in their own right to use the title of university, and in 2008 Aberystwyth, Bangor and Swansea Universities decided to exercise their right to award their own degrees. This led to the effective break-up of the university in 2011, with it being decided that the University of Wales would merge with the
University of Wales Trinity Saint David and no longer accredit other institutions. From August 2017 the two institutions have been functionally integrated although a legal merger has not (as of July 2018) been finalised. This table of universities that were former members of federal universities is sorted primarily by when they became part of a federal university, with date of institutional foundation as a secondary index. ==Former universities==