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  1. In 1886, the university was renamed Imperial University, and it adopted the name Tokyo Imperial University in 1897 after the founding of the next imperial university, what is now Kyoto University. By 1888, all faculties had completed their relocation to the former site of the Tokyo house of the Maeda family in Hongo , where they ...

  2. In 1897, when it was decided to establish the nation's second university in Kyoto, the original Imperial University was renamed Tokyo Imperial University. Meanwhile, the newly established university was named Kyoto Imperial University. Unlike in Europe and North America, modern higher education in Japan mostly originated as national ...

    Founded
    Name
    Present-day Name
    Location
    1877
    Imperial University (帝國大學),renamed Tōkyō ...
    University of Tokyo (東京大学)
    Bunkyō, Tokyo
    1897
    Kyōto Imperial University ...
    Kyoto University (京都大学)
    Kyoto, Kyoto
    1907
    Tōhoku Imperial University ...
    Tohoku University (東北大学)
    Sendai, Miyagi
    1911
    Kyūshū Imperial University ...
    Kyushu University (九州大学)
    Fukuoka, Fukuoka
    • História
    • Ex-Alunos E Membros Do Corpo Docente Notáveis
    • Leitura Adicional
    • Ligações Externas

    A universidade foi fundada pelo governo Meiji em 1877 com seu nome atual, fundindo escolas governamentais mais antigas de medicina, vários estudiosos tradicionais e ensino moderno. Ela foi rebatizada de Universidade Imperial(帝國大學, Teikoku daigaku?) em 1886, e depois Universidade Imperial de Tóquio(東京帝國大學, Tōkyō teikoku daigaku?) em 1897, quando o s...

    A universidade teve muitos alunos notáveis. 15 primeiros-ministros do Japão estudaram na Universidade de Tóquio. O ex-primeiro-ministro Kiichi Miyazawa ordenou que as agências governamentais ja...
    Dez ex-alunos da Universidade de Tóquio receberam o Prêmio Nobel.

    Kato, Mariko (11 de agosto de 2009). «Todai still beckons nation's best, brightest but goals diversifying». Japan Times(em inglês)

  3. This page was last edited on 3 December 2003, at 23:30 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.

  4. Imperial University of Peking (1898–1912), now Peking University, Beijing, China. Imperial Universities of the Japanese Empire (1868–1947) University of Tokyo, formerly known as "Imperial University".

  5. The name of Tokyo Daigaku (Tokyo University) changed to Teikoku Daigaku (Imperial University) Absorbed Kobu Daigakko (Engineering College), resulting in five departments. 1890. Established Tokyo Norin Gakko (Agriculture and Dendrology College), resulting in six colleges. 1897.

  6. From these beginnings, the University of Tokyo continued to merge with many different schools specializing in various fields, such as the Imperial College of Engineering and Tokyo School of Agriculture and Forestry, thereby growing into a comprehensive research university.