The first teachers training was held in Oldenburg as early as 1793, launched by Duke
Peter Friedrich Ludwig. A garden seminar for teachers training was created in 1882. During the
Weimar Republic, the establishment of the
Pedagogical Academy (Pädagogische Akademie) in Oldenburg in 1929 enabled the vocational training of teachers. On 1 October 1945, the institution reopened in postwar Germany. In 1948 it was renamed the
Pedagogical College Oldenburg (Pädagogische Hochschule Oldenburg). The first step towards the university was taken on 23 February 1959 with the decision of the city council to launch a university project, which was followed in 1970 with the
Memorandum establishing the University of Oldenburg from the Minister of Culture of
Lower Saxony. The
Landtag of Lower Saxony decided to integrat the former
Pedagogig Seminar (Pädagogische Hochschule) into the university. The university was finally founded in 1973. Enrollment and teaching started in the summer semester of 1974, with an education curriculum for 2,400 students in eight diploma courses. In 1991, the university was officially named after pacifist, writer and
Nobel laureate Carl von Ossietzky, having been denied to take on his name by previous (both left-leaning and right-leaning) state governments. That same year, the number of students passed the mark of 10,000. The eleven departments of the university were reorganized into five faculties in 2002. By the end of 2011, there were about 11,325 students. In 2012, the university founded the faculty of medicine and health sciences, introducing a 12-semester course in human medicine, which leads up to the German state examination,
Staatsexamen, a prerequisite to practice as a physician. The new faculty is part of the
European Medical School Oldenburg-Groningen (EMS), a cooperation between the University of Oldenburg, the
University of Groningen (
Netherlands), and local hospitals. == University Profile ==