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AGH University of Science and Technology in Kraków, (abbreviated as ''AGH UST'') is a public university in
Kraków Kraków (), or Cracow, is the second-largest and one of the oldest cities in Poland. Situated on the Vistula, Vistula River in Lesser Poland Voivodeship, the city dates back to the seventh century. Kraków was the official capital of Poland un ...
,
Poland Poland, officially the Republic of Poland, is a country in Central Europe. It is divided into 16 administrative provinces called voivodeships, covering an area of . Poland has a population of over 38 million and is the fifth-most populou ...
. Founded in 1913, its inauguration took place in 1919. The university focuses on innovative technologies, its research profile also includes
engineering disciplines Engineering is the discipline and profession that applies scientific theories, mathematical methods, and empirical evidence to design, create, and analyze technological solutions cognizant of safety, human factors, physical laws, regulations, pra ...
,
exact sciences The exact sciences, sometimes called the exact mathematical sciences, are those sciences "which admit of absolute precision in their results"; especially the mathematical sciences. Examples of the exact sciences are mathematics, optics, astron ...
, Earth sciences, and
social sciences Social science is one of the branches of science, devoted to the study of societies and the relationships among individuals within those societies. The term was formerly used to refer to the field of sociology, the original "science of so ...
. The university is one of 10 Polish higher education institutions that has been granted the title of a
research university A research university or a research-intensive university is a university that is committed to research as a central part of its mission. They are the most important sites at which knowledge production occurs, along with "intergenerational kn ...
. The university comprises, among other units, 16 faculties, a research centre – the AGH UST Academic Centre for Materials and Nanotechnology, and other didactic centres and departments. It offers three levels of education: first-cycle, second-cycle, and third-cycle (doctoral schools). The university educates more than 20,000 students and employs almost 2,000 academic staff (including more than 200 professors and more than 500 associate professors). In international rankings, the AGH UST regularly ranks first among Polish technical universities in The
Center for World University Rankings College and university rankings order the best institutions in higher education based on factors that vary depending on the ranking. Some rankings evaluate institutions within a single country, while others assess institutions worldwide. Ranking ...
2022-2023 or the Academic Ranking of World Universities 2021. 260px, Main Building façade 260px, Faculty of Drilling, Oil and Gas and Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Automatics, Computer Science and Engineering in Biomedicine 260px, Faculty of Materials Science and Ceramics 260px, Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science


Structure


Faculties, centres, departments, and schools


Faculties


Faculty of Civil Engineering and Resource Management

Faculty of Metals Engineering and Industrial Computer Science

Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Automatics, Computer Science and Engineering in Biomedicine

Faculty of Computer Science, Electronics and Telecommunications

Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Robotics

Faculty of Geology, Geophysics and Environmental Protection

Faculty of Mining Surveying and Environmental Engineering

Faculty of Materials Science and Ceramics

Faculty of Foundry Engineering

Faculty of Non-Ferrous Metals

Faculty of Drilling, Oil and Gas

Faculty of Management

Faculty of Energy and Fuels

Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science

Faculty of Applied Mathematics

Faculty of Humanities


Research centres


Academic Centre for Materials and Nanotechnology


Didactic departments

* Department of Foreign Languages * Department of Sport and Physical Education


Doctoral schools


AGH UST Doctoral School


Auxiliary units




AGH UST Main Library

AGH UST Center of Energy



AGH UST Swimming Pool

AGH UST Space Technology Centre

UNESCO Chair for Science, Technology, and Engineering Education

AGH UST Centre of e-Learning
* AGH UST IT Solutions Centre
AGH UST Press


Governance

The Rector is a one-person university body; the university collegial bodies include: University Council, Senate, and Scientific Discipline Councils. The Rector serves as the executive head of the university, plays a prominent representative role, and acts as the governing body over staff, students, and doctoral students. The Rector has five Vice-Rectors who aid in governing the university. The University Council comprises six people appointed by the Senate (including three people from outside the academic community) and the chairperson of the student government. The Senate comprises: * Rector as the Chairperson * Professors and Associate Professors * Academic teachers * Non-academic staff * Students and doctoral students who constitute, one student for each faculty, and at least one doctoral student's representative. For a scientific discipline that is classified at least into category B+ (by the Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education), a Scientific Discipline Council is established. Currently, there are 16 scientific discipline councils at the AGH UST.


Rankings

* The Center for World University Rankings, CWUR (2022–2023 edition) – 1st place among Polish technical universities; world rank: 590th place. * ARWU Academic Ranking of World Universities 2021 World Top 1000, Shanghai Ranking (2021 edition) – world rank range: 701–800. 1st place among Polish technical universities. * CWTS Leiden Ranking (2021 edition) – global ranking: 520th place, 165th place in Europe.
CWTS Leiden Ranking by field (2021 edition) – 1st place among Polish universities in the following fields:
Mathematics and Computer Science, Physical Sciences and Engineering. * University Ranking by Academic Performance, URAP (2021–2022 edition) – world rank: 633. The ranking includes 3002 higher education institutions from around the world.
URAP by field rankings (2020–2021 edition) – Metallurgy Engineering – rank: 94, Mathematical Sciences – rank: 262, Mechanical Engineering – rank: 281. * GRAS Global Ranking of Academic Subjects, developed by the team preparing the so-called “Shanghai Ranking” (2021 edition):
Metallurgical Engineering – rank range 151–200 (the only Polish university on the list),
Physics – rank range 201–300 (2nd place among Polish universities),
Mathematics – rank range 301–400 (2nd place among Polish technical universities)
Mechanical Engineering – rank range 301–400,
Energy Science and Engineering – rank range 301–400. * THE Times Higher Education World University Ranking by subject (2022 edition): Computer Science – rank range: 601–800, Social Sciences – rank range: +601, Business and Economics – rank range: +601, Physical Sciences – rank range: 801–1000, Engineering – rank range: 801–1000.


Research University

In 2019, the AGH UST received the title of a research university. The laureates of the project titled ''Initiative for Excellence – Research University'', launched by the Polish Ministry of Science and Education, are the 10 best Polish higher education institutions.


Accreditations


ABET accreditation

In 2017, the first- and second-cycle Mechatronic Engineering programmes of study at the AGH US
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering and Robotics
with English as the language of instruction, received ABET accreditation. The AGH UST was able to obtain accreditation as the first university in Poland and one of a few in Europe.


ENAEE accreditation

Four first- and second-cycle programmes of study at the AGH UST received accreditation from the European Network for Accreditation of Engineering Education, namely, Mining Engineering at th
Faculty of Civil Engineering and Resource Management
Technical Computer Science, Materials Engineering, and Metallurgy at th
Faculty of Metals Engineering and Industrial Computer Science


International cooperation

The university has concluded more than 280 general agreements on cooperation with higher education institutions around the world. The AGH UST has partners in more than 60 countries. To date, the highest number of agreements have been signed with universities in Ukraine, France, the People's Republic of China, and the United States of America. The AGH UST participates in international programmes, such as Erasmus+, Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate (EMJD), SMILE, CEEPUS, T.I.M.E., VULCANUS in Japan, HUSTEP, SIT, NAWA, and Spinaker. The university is a member of the following international organisations: ACRU, EUA, IAU, SEFI, AEUA, KMM-VIN AISBL, C-MAC NSU NPO, T.I.M.E., Magalhaes Network, EIT InnoEnergy, CEEPUS, IROs Forum, SPIRE, and UN Global Compact. The AGH UST implements projects carried out jointly with international partners, within the framework of the following programmes: EU HORIZON 2020, KIC InnoEnergy, KIC RawMaterials, POLONEZ, HARMONIA, Visegrad Scholarship Program, Research Fund for Coal and Steel, ERA, bilateral cooperation programmes, Structural Funds. The AGH UST is a member of the European project UNIVERSEH – the European Space University for Earth and Humanity. The consortium, which comprises partner universities from France, Germany, Luxembourg, and Sweden, strives to develop space exploration technologies.


Business cooperation

Cooperation with the economic sector, higher education institutions, and research institutes, as well as participation in Polish and international scientific and industrial consortia allows the AGH UST to carry out numerous projects and implement them to the market. Annually, the university concludes about 100 contracts, letters of intent, and agreements on cooperation with industry, central administration, and business environment institutions. Additionally, the AGH UST implements about 1,000 research and development contracts annually, among which more than 75% are commissioned by industry. The innovative potential of the AGH UST is based on its intellectual property, which is expressed in the number of obtained patents, trademarks, and utility models, as well as the know-how and experience of its scientists and students. Each year, the university obtains nearly 100 patents and grants several dozens of licenses.


Campus

240px, AGH UST Campus The AGH UST Campus is located in the centre of Krakow. All teaching facilities, seats of faculties, administration, and student organisations, as well as the largest in Poland AGH UST Student Campus, together with student clubs and sports and recreation facilities constitute a compact 40-hectare hub. The Main Building (A-0) was erected between 1923 and 1935. The winning building design was presented at a competition organised in 1913 and won by an architect from Krakow – Sławomir Odrzywolski. After the First World War, the project served as a starting point, and Wacław Krzyżanowski was asked to cooperate thereon; he designed the façade and the interior of the building. The monumental edifice serves as a perfect example of academic classicism in Poland, in style during the 1920s. Currently, the building houses the university's central authorities and administration, the Faculty of Geology, Geophysics, and Environmental Protection, and the Geological Museum. With the development of the university after the war, the campus began to grow. A prospective construction plan of the AGH UST, aimed at expanding its premises, was initiated by Professor Walery Goetel and continued throughout the following decades. In 1964, construction of the student campus began. To date, it remains the largest academic settlement of this kind in Poland. Its designer was Professor Tomasz Mańkowski. Until the end of 1979, 21 student dormitories were erected. The beginning of the 21st century marks an intense expansion of the entire campus. More than a dozen modern buildings were constructed, and the numerous existing ones have been extended or modernised.


AGH UST Main Library

240px, AGH UST Main Library The Main Library of AGH University of Science and Technology is the largest technical library in Krakow and one of the largest in Poland. The library was established in the academic year 1921–22 and its initial loci were 18 Loretańska Street and subsequently 7 Smoleńsk Street. In 1929, the library collection was transferred to a room within the newly built main building of the Mining Academy at 30 Mickiewicza Avenue. In 1938, the book collection amounted to more than 17,000 volumes. During World War II, the collection was deposited at the Jagiellonian Library. Despite the prohibition introduced by the General Government administration, the books were secretly lent out to MA students and employees. After the war, the collection, reduced by 25%, returned to the main building of the academy. In 1966, a new free-standing library building was opened, erected due to the efforts of Władysław Piasecki, the library head. Since then, the library has begun to develop dynamically. As a result of launching new programmes of study at the Mining Academy, the library's book collection grew and its thematic scope broadened. In the 1990s, the library underwent digitalisation. Between 1996 and 1999, the interior was renovated and in 2010, the façade of the main library building was modernised, and the decision was taken to expand it and completely remodel it. The modernised building was made available in 2014. Currently, the library collection has more than 900,000 volumes including books, journals, and special items. Furthermore, the library's collection, in addition to printed materials, also includes access to Polish and foreign databases, online journals and e-books.


Laboratories

The AGH UST has more than 800 laboratories equipped with state-of-the-art apparatus, including the transmission electron microscope Titan Cubed G-2 60-300, devices requiring the so-called clean room conditions, nanotechnology and material nanodiagnostics equipment, a computed tomography scanner to study construction materials, an electron microprobe Jeol SuperProbe JXA-8230 that facilitates the determination of elemental contents from boron to uranium in all kinds of solid substances, mass spectrometers, diffractometers, 3D printers for prototype creation, numerous appliances for environmental tests, microscopes for microstructure parameter analyses and measurements, as well as various types of laboratory installations (including a fully functional production line in the Industry 4.0 Laboratory or a singing Tesla coil in the High Voltage Laboratory). The AGH UST has one of the quietest places in Poland – an anechoic chamber, as well as the Experimental Mine, which is unique in Poland and one of the few such research and educational laboratories in Europe, and also serves as a museum.


Green areas and an outdoor gallery

The green spaces and garden squares of the campus constitute an outdoor gallery. It features, for example, sculptures of Bronisław Chromy, a Krakow artist, sculptures of students from the Faculty of Sculpture of the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, as well as natural creations – glacial erratics. Moreover, campus premises abound in industrial machines related to the development of technological thought and research activity of respective faculties.


AGH UST Student Campus

The Miasteczko Studenckie AGH, which spans about 13 ha, is an integral part of the university campus and remains the largest student settlement in Poland. The 20 student houses offer more than 7,500 beds to students. The campus comprises student clubs, a swimming pool with a gym and bowling alley, and sports fields. Student clubs: * Academic Cultural Centre, Club STUDIO – one of the largest concert clubs in Poland * Klub Zaścianek * Klub Gwarek * Klub Filutek


History


Efforts to establish the Mining Academy

The efforts to establish a Polish mining school in Krakow and to appoint suitable teaching staff began in the second half of the 19th century and intensified when Galicia gained autonomy in 1860. This endeavour involved Polish engineers – miners and metallurgists, Galician representatives, and Krakow authorities. Concentrated diplomatic action was taken in Vienna to win the favour of the Austrian government. At the beginning of the 20th century, a group of prominent engineers and mining activists, led by engineer Jan Zarański, went to great lengths to obtain approval for establishing a higher education institution in Krakow to educate mining engineers. These efforts were successful, and on July 10, 1912, Krakow authorities received a permit to open an academy.


1913 – institution of the Mining Academy

In April 1913, the Ministry of Civil Engineering in Vienna appointed the Organising Committee of the Mining Academy in Krakow, chaired by Professor Józef Morozewicz. The document that confirmed the establishment of a higher school of mining in Krakow was signed on May 31, 1913, by emperor
Franz Joseph I Franz Joseph I or Francis Joseph I (german: Franz Joseph Karl, hu, Ferenc József Károly, 18 August 1830 – 21 November 1916) was Emperor of Austria, King of Hungary, and the other states of the Habsburg monarchy from 2 December 1848 until ...
of Austria. The outbreak of
World War I World War I (28 July 1914 11 November 1918), often abbreviated as WWI, was List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll, one of the deadliest global conflicts in history. Belligerents included much of Europe, the Russian Empire, ...
made it impossible to inaugurate the first academic year of the newly established academy in October 1914. The minutes from a conference at the President of Krakow, Juliusz Leo, contain a footnote related to the Mining Academy. A magistrate official, probably reorganising documents, wrote an additional note at the bottom of one of them that said: ''‘Due to the outbreak of war, the Mining Academy was not opened, the whole matter being postponed to more peaceful times, 21st March 2015.’''


1919 – the opening of the academy

240px, Group of professors and lecturers of the Mining Academy from the 1920s. When Poland regained its independence in 1918, the Organising Committee of the Mining Academy in Krakow recommenced its work. On April 8, 1919, the Council of Ministers put forward an official motion to establish and open the Mining Academy in Krakow. On May 1, 1919, the first six professors of the Mining Academy were appointed. On October 20, 1919, Józef Piłsudski officiated a celebratory inauguration of the Mining Academy in the main hall of the Jagiellonian University.


Polish-Soviet War

Students of the Mining Academy took active part in the Polish-Soviet war in 1920. These events were described by Professor Antoni Hoborski: ''‘our youth submitted to voluntary conscription, which I witnessed; then, on the 19th day of July 1920, they all went to their camps (only 6 were deemed unfit for military service)’''.


Development in the interwar period

240px, Students of the Mining Academy from the Department of Metallography at Krzemionki, Kraków, the academic year 1926/1927 240px, Mining Academy building with the original statue of St. Barbara on top, placed there on August 24, 1939 On June 15, 1923, with the participation of the contemporary President of the Republic of Poland, Stanisław Wojciechowski, and numerous representatives of the world of science and mining industry, the cornerstone of the new main building of the academy was lain. In 1925, the design of the Mining Academy emblem was created. It had the initials B.T. (Bogdan Treter) on it. It was probably approved by the General Assembly of Professors. From September 1929 to March 1930, the main building was gradually filled with departments and central administration of the academy. In 1935, the building was officially and ceremonially blessed. The academy has quickly achieved a high-quality level of education, assuming its place among the best mining schools in Europe. Moreover, since its inauguration, the academy has cooperated closely with industry, according to its resources and capabilities, and maintained connections with the Polish economy. The Main Building of the Mining Academy assumed its final shape shortly before the outbreak of
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the World War II by country, vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great power ...
. The construction is a perfect example of academic classicism, in style in the 1920s in Poland, which constitutes a manifestation of the power and might of the reborn Polish state. The façade decoration was complemented by monumental statues of miners and metallurgists. The figures were made in 1935 by the sculptor Jan Raszka. On August 24, 1939, the top of the building was crowned with the statue of Saint Barbara made by Stefan Zbigniewicz. At its two faculties, the Faculty of Mining and the Faculty of Metallurgy, in the interwar period, the Mining Academy had educated 792 engineers, many of whom later held high positions in Polish industry and higher education.


World War II

The Nazi German invasion of Poland in September 1939 brought the university to a halt. On September 6, Krakow was seized by German troops. They began to loot and plunder the university property, and reorganise the Main Building of the Mining Academy to house the Regierung des Generalgouvernements (
General Government administration The General Government administration ( de , Generalgouvernement für die besetzten polnischen Gebiete , translation = General Government for the occupied Polish areas), a government and administration of the General Government set up on part ...
). In 1940, the statue of Saint Barbara was thrown off the top of the main building and shattered to pieces.


Sonderaktion Krakau

On September 6, 1939, a general assembly of
Jagiellonian University The Jagiellonian University ( Polish: ''Uniwersytet Jagielloński'', UJ) is a public research university in Kraków, Poland. Founded in 1364 by King Casimir III the Great, it is the oldest university in Poland and the 13th oldest university in ...
professors was called to inform them about the policy of German authorities on science and education. On this day at noon, in room 66 of the JU Collegium Novum, professors and lecturers gathered numerously. The building was surrounded by the
Gestapo The (), abbreviated Gestapo (; ), was the official secret police of Nazi Germany and in German-occupied Europe. The force was created by Hermann Göring in 1933 by combining the various political police agencies of Prussia into one orga ...
and the meeting participants were arrested. Among the detainees were also Mining Academy professors who had attended another meeting in the boardroom of the JU Faculty of Philosophy. 183 people were imprisoned, among them professors, associate professors, and assistants from both universities, as well as many other people outside the academic community. The arrested were detained at the prison at Montelupich Street in Krakow and subsequently transferred to the barracks at Mazowiecka Street. Later, they were transported to a prison in Wrocław and finally to the concentration camp in Sachsenhausen. The concentration camp took the lives of the following: * Professor Antoni Hoborski – first Mining Academy rector (1920–1922), * Professor Władysław Takliński – Mining Academy rector (1933–1939), * Antoni Meyer, DSc – head of the MA Faculty of Mining Department of Legal Theory (1932–1939). Others who remained in the camp were Andrzej Bolewski, Stanisław Gołąb, and Julian Kamecki. They were transported to the concentration camp in Dachau and released only in the last quarter of 1940. Releasing the professors was possible due to a united protest action of world scientific communities.


Mining Academy employees as victims of the Katyn massacre

Among the victims murdered by the
NKVD The People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (russian: Наро́дный комиссариа́т вну́тренних дел, Naródnyy komissariát vnútrennikh del, ), abbreviated NKVD ( ), was the interior ministry of the Soviet Union. ...
on the territory of the
Soviet Union The Soviet Union,. officially the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR),. was a transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. A flagship communist state, it was nominally a federal union of fifteen nationa ...
between April and May 1940 were three Mining Academy employees: * Zygmunt Mitera, DSc – Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Mining (murdered in the so-called Kharkov camp), * Tadeusz Ramza, Eng – Senior Teaching Assistant at the Faculty of Mining (shot in the back of the head during the liquidation of the prison camp of Polish officers in Starobielsk), * Augustyn Jelonek – Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Metallurgy (shot in the back of the head during the liquidation of the prison camp of Polish officers in Starobielsk). Forced by the Germans, but with the consent of the Polish government in London and the Polish Underground State, in 1943, more than a dozen Poles went to Katyn, including the writer
Ferdynand Goetel Ferdynand Goetel (15 May 1890 – 24 November 1960) was a Polish novelist, playwright, essayist, screen writer, and political activist; member of the prestigious Polish Academy of Literature from 1935; president of the Polish PEN Club as well as ...
(secretary of the Mining Academy between 1920 and 1925, brother of Professor Walery Goetel). The committees corroborated that the massacre of Polish officers was executed by the Soviets. After the war, Ferdynand Goetel was to the Soviets one of the most inconvenient witnesses of the Katyn massacre.


Education during the war

Thanks to the generosity and dedication of the Mining Academy employees, the collection of the MA Main Library was safely deposited in the Jagiellonian Library. Academy activities had to go underground, and the governance attempted to reclaim or establish makeshift teaching venues and educational materials. With the consent of the occupier, in 1940, a State School of Mining, Metallurgy, and Measurement (Staatlische Fachschule für Berg- Hütten- und Vermessungwesen) was established with Polish as the language of instruction. Professor Walery Goetel took the position of the head teacher; other professors from the closed Mining Academy became teachers. Both professors and assistants were also involved in underground education, lecturing, and teaching classes for academic students. During the underground schooling action, 278 examinations and 16 diploma exams took place.


After World War II

In 1947, by virtue of an important resolution, the academy was renamed Academy of Mining and Metallurgy (Polish: ''Akademia Górniczo-Hutnicz''a, ''AGH''). Formal approval of this change by the central authorities came only in 1949. Professor Walery Goetel, who promoted a far-reaching development plan, initiated the expansion of the academy. His plan was carried out and implemented in the following decades. During the authoritarian times of the
Polish People's Republic The Polish People's Republic ( pl, Polska Rzeczpospolita Ludowa, PRL) was a country in Central Europe that existed from 1947 to 1989 as the predecessor of the modern Republic of Poland. With a population of approximately 37.9 million ne ...
(Polish: ''Polska Republika Ludowa'', ''PRL''), the academic and educational profile of the academy was adjusted to the needs of industry, and the university itself thrived, as no other higher education institution at that time. 240px, Model of the Academy of Mining and Metallurgy extended in the post-war years In 1969, the academy received a patron – Stanisław Staszic. It was also when the academy obtained its banner. On December 14, 1981, the AGH academic community, under the banner of the ‘Solidarity’ Movement, took a stand and protested against suppressing – by introducing
martial law Martial law is the imposition of direct military control of normal civil functions or suspension of civil law by a government, especially in response to an emergency where civil forces are overwhelmed, or in an occupied territory. Use Martia ...
– the newly acquired sense of freedom and fellowship. The AGH NSZZ ‘Solidarity’ was an academic organisation, the only one in Krakow and one of three in the country, that organised sit-down strikes in the first days of the martial law. Since the 1990s, the academy has been developing programmes of study that chart out technological advancement, such as automatics and robotics, computer science, electronics and telecommunications, biomedical engineering, and mechatronics. In 1999, the top of the AGH Main Building was once again crowned with a reconstructed statue of Saint Barbara, made by Jan Siek. The figure was blessed on June 17, 1999, by pope
John Paul II Pope John Paul II ( la, Ioannes Paulus II; it, Giovanni Paolo II; pl, Jan Paweł II; born Karol Józef Wojtyła ; 18 May 19202 April 2005) was the head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State from 1978 until his ...
during his sixth pilgrimage to Poland (5–17 June 1999). In relation to a debate on the change of the academy name in 2003, it has been decided that the English translation of the name will be: AGH University of Science and Technology. However, there are many documents, books, research papers etc. in English that still use the literal translation of the university name in Polish. In the academic year 2006–2007, the AGH UST implemented a new Visual Identity System, including a new sign identifying the university. In the 21st century, the university has experienced extensive expansion. The campus premises have gained more than a dozen new buildings, and numerous existing objects have been modernised.


University symbols


Emblem

The AGH UST emblem shows a stylised eagle with a crown, head turned right, and a shield with Hammer and Pick ( symbol of mining), as well as AGH UST initials. The present version of the emblem was designed on the basis of a drawing made in 1925 by Bogdan Treter. The AGH UST emblem ought to be used exclusively to promote the history and scientific legacy of the university.


Graphic symbol

The AGH UST graphic symbol is the only sign used for everyday visual identification of the university. It has replaced the AGH UST emblem in this role. The ideogram represents a stylised eagle, which is an allusion to the university emblem. In its coloured version, the ideogram has three colours.


Colors

AGH University of Science and Technology colors are green, black and red in reference to the tradition of mining and metallurgy. Green being a symbol of nature, black symbolizing mines, prudence and wisdom and red being a symbol of fire and molten iron.


Traditions


Mining Ceremonies

' (English: St. Barbara's day) is a mining holiday, deeply embedded in the AGH UST tradition, drawing on the customs of old Austrian mining schools, which were transplanted onto the Krakow soil by the university professors. Each year, on December 4, ' (English: March of the Foxes) – a mining procession parades through the streets of Krakow. ‘Foxes’ are newly admitted students who enter the mining tribe. On this day, in St. Anna's Collegiate Church a ceremonial mass is said. The highlight of the celebration is held in the Assembly Hall. Subsequently, in the Main Hall, the traditional ' (English: leather jump) takes place, which consists in jumping over the miner's apron (a short leather apron traditionally worn to protect the miners’ clothing as they sat or knelt while working). For first-year mining and geology students, the jump constitutes a rite of acceptance as a miner. The celebration is accompanied by the recurrent Mining Division Student Research Clubs Conference and the International Exhibition and Trade Fair of Minerals, Fossils, and Jewellery. The culmination of the celebration is the annual meeting of the ' (English: guilds).


Metallurgy Ceremonies

Another remarkable celebration held at the AGH UST is the Metallurgist's Day. The way in which it is celebrated is very similar to the mining ceremonies. The event takes place annually in May, and in addition to the official ceremonies in the Assembly Hall, the programme includes, among other things, the Metallurgy Division Student Research Clubs Conference and an academic conference. Metallurgical traditions, which are nurtured at the university, include the Metallurgist's Vowing ceremony, which takes place in the Main Hall of the AGH UST Main Building. Traditionally, the celebration is accompanied by a meeting of academic staff and students during the so-called ' (English: metallurgy tavern).


Hoborski Science Days

Each year, in October, the AGH UST holds Science Holidays – better known as Hoborski Science Days. The event aims to popularise science and its technical applications, simultaneously commemorating the figure of Professor Antoni Hoborski, a prominent Polish mathematician, the first rector of the Mining Academy.


References


External links


AGH University of Science and Technology, homepage
{{authority control Educational institutions established in 1919 1919 establishments in Poland