The university was founded in 1817 by
William I of the Netherlands, then King of the
United Kingdom of the Netherlands, and by his Minister of Education,
Anton Reinhard Falck. The foundation of the university was the result of a long intellectual tradition which dates back to the origins of the
Prince-Bishopric of Liège. Beginning in the eleventh century, the influence of the
principality attracted students and prominent scientists and philosophers, such as
Petrarch, to study in its libraries. The reputation of its medieval schools gave the city the reputation as
a new Athens. A 17 March 1808 decree by
Napoleon I concerning the organization of an imperial university indicated Liège as the site of a new academy to be composed of a Faculty of Arts and a Faculty of Science—the first university charter for Liège. Ultimately, Liège owes its university to
William I of the Netherlands, who remembered the city's prestigious legacy of teaching and culture when he decided to establish a new university on
Walloon soil. Nearly 200 years later, settled to some extent in the district of Liège, the University of Liège belongs to the French community of Belgium. The university is located at the edge of the river
Meuse, in the center of
the Island, the Latin Quarter of Liège. In 2009, the Agronomical University of Gembloux (FUSAGx), based in
Gembloux, in the
Province of Namur, integrated ULiège. It has adopted a new name for academics as well as research, namely
Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech.
Chronology • 1817: foundation of the University of Liege by
William I of the Netherlands • 1838: opening of the Liège mining school • 1881: first female student • 1882: beginning of the construction of the Trasenster Institutes in Liège: • 1882: Institute of Astrophysics and the
Cointe Observatory; • 1883: Institute of Pharmacy, the Botanical Institute and the
Montefiore Institute of Electrical Engineering; • 1885: the Auguste Swaen Institute of Anatomy; • 1888: Institutes of Physiology, of Zoology and of Chemistry • 1955: foundation of the
University of Lubumbashi (called Elisabethville at the time) by the State University of Liège • 1967: beginning of the transfer process from the city center to the Sart Tilman campus • 1969: the
Cureghem University of Veterinary Medicine in
Brussels is administratively attached to the University of Liège • 1989: the State University of Liège becomes a university of the
French Community of Belgium • 1991: The Faculty of Veterinary Medicine is transferred from Brussels to the Sart Tilman campus • 2004: The
Fondation universitaire luxembourgeoise integrates the University of Liège, creating the Faculty of Science's Department of Environmental Science and Management • 2005:
HEC Liège (Management School) and the Department of Economics and Business Administration of the University of Liège merge to create the
HEC Liège – School of Management of the University of Liège business school • 2009: The University of Agricultural Sciences of Gembloux (FUSAGx) in
Gembloux is integrated into the University of Liège, becoming an independent faculty under the name Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech • 2010: Through the merger of the ''Institut supérieur d'architecture Saint-Luc de Liège
(ISA Saint-Luc Liège) and the Institut supérieur d'architecture Lambert Lombard'' (ISAI LL), a new faculty is created within ULiège: the Faculty of Architecture • 2015: the Institute of Human and Social Sciences (ISHS) becomes an independent faculty: the Faculty of Social Sciences (FaSS) • 2021: The Department of Media, Culture and Communication of the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters establishes its school of journalism, with various auditoriums, classrooms and studios in the renovated Grand Poste de Liège; named Media Campus, these facilities are located in front of the historical faculty buildings. The student radio station 48FM is also moving there. ==Organisation==