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University of Gothenburg
University of Gothenburg
Göteborgs universitet
Latin: Universitas Gothoburgensis
Motto Tradita innovare innovata tradere
Motto in English
Renew our heritage and pass it on renewed
Type Public
Established 1891
Endowment SEK 4.785 billion (total income, 2009)[1]
Academic staff
3,230 [2]
Administrative staff
6000 [2]
Students 37 000 [2]
Doctoral students
1,920[2]
Location Sweden Gothenburg, Sweden
Campus urban
Colours blue, white
Website www.gu.se
The University of Gothenburg (Swedish: Göteborgs universitet) is a university in Sweden's second largest city, Gothenburg.
The University is the third-oldest of the current Swedish universities, and with 37 000 students and 6000 staff members,[3] it is also among the largest universities in the Nordic countries.
About
With its eight faculties and 38 departments, the University of Gothenburg is one of the most wide-ranging and versatile universities in Sweden. Its eight faculties offer training in the Creative Arts, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, Humanities, Education, Information Technology, Business, Economics and Law, and Health Sciences.
The University of Gothenburg has the highest number of applicants per study place in many of its subjects and courses, making it one of the most popular universities in Sweden.
Rankings
Gothenburg University places well in global rankings and is usually positioned among the world's best 200 institutions:
Ranking (year) World Rank
Academic Ranking of World Universities (2015)[4] # 151-200
Web Ranking of European Universities (2015)[5] # 177
QS World University Rankings[6] (2015) # 247
Times Higher Education (2016)[7] # 180
History
Library (Swedish: Kurs- och tidningsbibliotek)
The University of Gothenburg was founded as Göteborgs högskola (Gothenburg University College) in 1891. In 1907 it was granted the same status as Uppsala University and Lund University by the Swedish government, thus creating Sweden's third university.
Over the course of time, it has merged with a number of previously independent higher education institutions in the city and has continuously expanded its study profile. It was granted the rights of a full university by the Swedish Government in 1954, following the merger of the Göteborgs högskola (Gothenburg College) with the Medicinhögskolan i Göteborg (Gothenburg Medical School).
In 1971, the originally separate Gothenburg School of Economics and Commercial Law became part of the University of Gothenburg.
Sahlgrenska University Hospital is associated with the university as a teaching hospital.
In the 1990s the School of Economics and the Academy of Music, Drama and Opera have moved to new buildings in the city centre. A new campus for the Faculty of Education (teacher training) was opened in central Gothenburg in 2006.
The University of Gothenburg is a pronounced city university, that is most of its facilities are within the city centre of Gothenburg. The main building as well as most faculties are located in the central part of Gothenburg.
Together with Uppsala, Lund, and Stockholm universities, it is one of four large international research universities in Sweden.
Structure
Management
The entrance (left) to and the auditorium (right) of the main administrative building of the university.
The University of Gothenburg is one of Sweden’s largest universities. It is a comprehensive university, organised into eight faculties and 38 departments. The University is a public authority as well as a confederation of Faculty Boards. Each faculty/school has significant autonomy based on its attributed powers, and a distinct identity within the University.
The University Board is the University’s highest decision-making body.[8] The board consists of 15 members and has "supervision over all the University’s affairs, and is responsible that its duties are fulfilled". The Swedish Government appoints seven of the members externally, based on their having experience in activities that have significance for the university’s teaching and research functions. In addition, the Vice-Chancellor, three faculty members and three students, as well as union representatives are included as ordinary members.
The day-to-day management is headed by the Vice-Chancellor, who is responsible for implementing the decisions of the board.[9] She is supported by the central administration.
Faculties
Modern architecture: Sahlgrenska Academy (left) and the reading hall of the School of Business and Law (right).
GU offers a large variety of academic disciplines, e.g. Department of Geosciences (left) and Department of Swedish Studies (right).
The university is organised into eight academic faculties.[10] Collaboration across faculty and subject boundaries is emphasised in the university's research and education strategies. All faculties takes advantage of this possibility and are active participants in a multitude of cross-disciplinary research and education activities within the framework of the university. It should also be noted that the university closely cooperates with Chalmers University of Technology, a fact that further increases the total scope of the academic environment in Gothenburg.
The Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts (Konstnärliga fakulteten) offers courses in the fields of design and crafts, film studies, photography, scene, music and fine arts. The Göteborg Organ Art Center, HDK, Högskolan för scen och musik, and Valand Academy are part of the faculty.
The Faculty of Education (Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten) is responsible for teacher training in various subjects.
The Faculty of Arts (Humanistiska fakulteten) comprises the humanities, for instance cultural studies, history, literature, history of ideas, religion, modern languages, philosophy, linguistics, theory of science and Swedish language and literature
The Faculty of Arts
The IT Faculty (IT fakulteten) offers programmes in applied information technology, computer science and engineering.
The Faculty of Science (Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten) covers a number of science disciplines such as botany, cell and molecular biology, physics, earth sciences, chemistry, conservation, marine ecology, mathematics, environmental science, and zoology.
The Sahlgrenska Academy (Sahlgrenska Akadamin) is part of the University of Gothenburg and functions as a medical school and university hospital.
The School of Business, Economics and Law (Handelshögskolan vid Göteborgs universitet) is a business school and a law school.
The Faculty of Social Sciences (Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten) offers courses in peace and development studies, public administration, journalism, psychology, social anthropology, social work, sociology, political science, and European studies.
Noted people
Alumni
Artisten – Academy of Music and Drama
Percy Barnevik, industry leader, former CEO of Asea Brown Boveri
Nick Bostrom, philosopher and futurist, and Director of the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University
Malin Byström, operatic soprano
Magnus Carlsson, singer
Jan Eliasson, diplomat and politician (former President of the United Nations General Assembly, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Sweden)
Hans Hagnell, politician
Carl Henrik Fredriksson, literary critic, columnist, essayist, and translator
Cecilia Malmström, politician (European Commissioner)
Aleksandra Mir, visual artist
Njuguna Ndungu, economist, Governor and Chairman of the Board of the Central Bank of Kenya
Susanna Roxman, Anglophone poet and critic
Juri Kurol, Swedish Orthodontist
Maria Wetterstrand, politician (Green Party)
Muhammad al-Yaqoubi, Syrian Islamic scholar
Jonas Jonasson, author of The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared.
Lotta Lotass, writer and member of the Swedish Academy.
Sture Allén, computer linguist, former permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy
Jens Allwood, linguist
Arvid Carlsson, Nobel Prize laureate in Medicine, 2000
Ernst Cassirer, philosopher
Östen Dahl, linguist (member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities and Academia Europaea)
Åke Edwardson, author (used to teach Journalism)
Gunnar D Hansson, author
Tore Janson, linguist.
Bernhard Karlgren, sinologist
Nils Kock, developer of the Kock pouch surgical procedure
Lotta Lotass, writer and literary scholar (Member of the Swedish Academy)
Erik Lönnroth, historian (Member of the Swedish Academy)
Bo Ralph, linguist (Member of the Swedish Academy)
Bo Rothstein, political scientist
Agnes Wold, professor of clinical bacteriology
Honorary degrees
The University of Gothenburg has awarded numerous honorary doctorates to public figures and excellent academics, including:
Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, President of Iceland 1980–1996 (honorary doctorate 1990)
Hillary Clinton, politician (honorary doctorate, 2007)
David Cox, statistician (honorary doctorate 2007)
Linda Haas, sociologist
Past rectors
1891 Axel Kock
1891–1893 Hjalmar Edgren
1893–1899 Johannes Paulson
1899–1909 Johan Vising
1909–1914 Ludvig Stavenow
1914–1931 Otto Sylwan
1931–1936 Bernhard Karlgren
1936–1951 Curt Weibull
1951–1966 Hjalmar Frisk
1966–1972 Bo Eric Ingelmark
1972–1982 Georg Lundgren
1982–1986 Kjell Härnqvist
1986–1992 Jan S. Nilsson
1992–1997 Jan Ling
1997–2003 Bo Samuelsson
2003–2006 Gunnar Svedberg
2006– Pam Fredman
See also
Chalmers University of Technology
GOArt
Gothenburg quadricentennial jubilee
List of universities in Sweden
Royal Society of Sciences and Letters in Gothenburg
The International Science Festival in Gothenburg
References
↑ Swedish Higher Education Authority (Högskoleverket) – Annual report 2010 (Swedish), page 106ff
1 2 3 4 Göteborgs universitet i siffror (English). University of Gothenburg
↑ facts and figures University of Gothenburg
↑ "University of Gothenburg - Academic Ranking of World Universities - 2014 - Shanghai Ranking - 2014". Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "University". Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "University of Gothenburg Rankings". Top Universities. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ www.timeshighereducation.com/world-university-rankings/university-of-gothenburg?ranking-dataset=133819
↑ "Sidan kunde inte hittas". Göteborgs universitet. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "Organisation - About the University, University of Gothenburg, Sweden". University of Gothenburg. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "Faculties - About the University, University of Gothenburg, Sweden". University of Gothenburg. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Göteborgs universitet.
University of Gothenburg – Official site
University of Gothenburg alumni network
slide-show
University of Gothenburg
Academics
Bioscience Business SchoolBusiness, Economics & LawGOArtHDKHögskolan för scen och musikSahlgrenska University HospitalTheatre AcademyQuality of Government InstituteValand Academy
Affiliates
Center for Intellectual Property StudiesIT UniversityLindholmen Science ParkNordicomTjärnö Marine Biological LaboratoryViktoria Institute
Related
Abrahamsson and Anderson v FogelqvistAfrica & Asia JournalBaroque organCulture CollectionLibraryNordic Journal of English StudiesUniversity Hospital
Categories
AlumniStaffUniversity
Universities in Sweden
Public
UppsalaLundGothenburgStockholmUmeåLinköpingKarolinska InstitutetRoyal Institute of TechnologyLuleåKarlstadLinnaeus UniversityÖrebroMid SwedenSwedish National Defence College Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Private
ChalmersStockholm School of Economics Jönköping
Santander Network
Aalborg UniversityAdam Mickiewicz UniversityBabeș-Bolyai UniversityEindhoven University of TechnologyGhent UniversityGrenoble Institute of TechnologyJoseph Fourier UniversityLund UniversityMalmö UniversityNorwegian University of Science and TechnologyPierre Mendès-France UniversityPolytechnic University of ValenciaUniversidad Autónoma de Nuevo LeónUniversity of BariUniversity of BayreuthUniversity of BergenUniversity of CantabriaUniversity of CataniaUniversity of GiessenUniversity of GothenburgUniversity of KentUniversity of Las Palmas de Gran CanariaUniversity of Le HavreUniversity of LeedsUniversity of LiègeUniversity of LimerickUniversity of MaltaUniversity of MinhoUniversity of MurciaUniversity of OsnabrückUniversity of PatrasUniversity of Pau and Pays de l'AdourUniversity of PortoUniversity of Rennes 1University of Rennes 2 – Upper BrittanyUniversity of RouenUniversity of Southern DenmarkUniversity of TriesteUniversity of ValladolidUniversity of WrocławVrije Universiteit
Coordinates: 57°41′54″N 11°58′18″E
Authority control
WorldCat IdentitiesVIAF: 140125343LCCN: n78086045ISNI: 0000 0001 0943 5738GND: 16315245-7SELIBR: 117335SUDOC: 026451492BNF: cb11869713c (data)NLA: 35842932NKC: nlk20030133732BNE: XX254106
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.
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Created on: 2017-05 from the kiwix ZIM file
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University of Gothenburg
University of Gothenburg
Göteborgs universitet
Latin: Universitas Gothoburgensis
Motto Tradita innovare innovata tradere
Motto in English
Renew our heritage and pass it on renewed
Type Public
Established 1891
Endowment SEK 4.785 billion (total income, 2009)[1]
Academic staff
3,230 [2]
Administrative staff
6000 [2]
Students 37 000 [2]
Doctoral students
1,920[2]
Location Sweden Gothenburg, Sweden
Campus urban
Colours blue, white
Website www.gu.se
The University of Gothenburg (Swedish: Göteborgs universitet) is a university in Sweden's second largest city, Gothenburg.
The University is the third-oldest of the current Swedish universities, and with 37 000 students and 6000 staff members,[3] it is also among the largest universities in the Nordic countries.
About
With its eight faculties and 38 departments, the University of Gothenburg is one of the most wide-ranging and versatile universities in Sweden. Its eight faculties offer training in the Creative Arts, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, Humanities, Education, Information Technology, Business, Economics and Law, and Health Sciences.
The University of Gothenburg has the highest number of applicants per study place in many of its subjects and courses, making it one of the most popular universities in Sweden.
Rankings
Gothenburg University places well in global rankings and is usually positioned among the world's best 200 institutions:
Ranking (year) World Rank
Academic Ranking of World Universities (2015)[4] # 151-200
Web Ranking of European Universities (2015)[5] # 177
QS World University Rankings[6] (2015) # 247
Times Higher Education (2016)[7] # 180
History
Library (Swedish: Kurs- och tidningsbibliotek)
The University of Gothenburg was founded as Göteborgs högskola (Gothenburg University College) in 1891. In 1907 it was granted the same status as Uppsala University and Lund University by the Swedish government, thus creating Sweden's third university.
Over the course of time, it has merged with a number of previously independent higher education institutions in the city and has continuously expanded its study profile. It was granted the rights of a full university by the Swedish Government in 1954, following the merger of the Göteborgs högskola (Gothenburg College) with the Medicinhögskolan i Göteborg (Gothenburg Medical School).
In 1971, the originally separate Gothenburg School of Economics and Commercial Law became part of the University of Gothenburg.
Sahlgrenska University Hospital is associated with the university as a teaching hospital.
In the 1990s the School of Economics and the Academy of Music, Drama and Opera have moved to new buildings in the city centre. A new campus for the Faculty of Education (teacher training) was opened in central Gothenburg in 2006.
The University of Gothenburg is a pronounced city university, that is most of its facilities are within the city centre of Gothenburg. The main building as well as most faculties are located in the central part of Gothenburg.
Together with Uppsala, Lund, and Stockholm universities, it is one of four large international research universities in Sweden.
Structure
Management
The entrance (left) to and the auditorium (right) of the main administrative building of the university.
The University of Gothenburg is one of Sweden’s largest universities. It is a comprehensive university, organised into eight faculties and 38 departments. The University is a public authority as well as a confederation of Faculty Boards. Each faculty/school has significant autonomy based on its attributed powers, and a distinct identity within the University.
The University Board is the University’s highest decision-making body.[8] The board consists of 15 members and has "supervision over all the University’s affairs, and is responsible that its duties are fulfilled". The Swedish Government appoints seven of the members externally, based on their having experience in activities that have significance for the university’s teaching and research functions. In addition, the Vice-Chancellor, three faculty members and three students, as well as union representatives are included as ordinary members.
The day-to-day management is headed by the Vice-Chancellor, who is responsible for implementing the decisions of the board.[9] She is supported by the central administration.
Faculties
Modern architecture: Sahlgrenska Academy (left) and the reading hall of the School of Business and Law (right).
GU offers a large variety of academic disciplines, e.g. Department of Geosciences (left) and Department of Swedish Studies (right).
The university is organised into eight academic faculties.[10] Collaboration across faculty and subject boundaries is emphasised in the university's research and education strategies. All faculties takes advantage of this possibility and are active participants in a multitude of cross-disciplinary research and education activities within the framework of the university. It should also be noted that the university closely cooperates with Chalmers University of Technology, a fact that further increases the total scope of the academic environment in Gothenburg.
The Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts (Konstnärliga fakulteten) offers courses in the fields of design and crafts, film studies, photography, scene, music and fine arts. The Göteborg Organ Art Center, HDK, Högskolan för scen och musik, and Valand Academy are part of the faculty.
The Faculty of Education (Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten) is responsible for teacher training in various subjects.
The Faculty of Arts (Humanistiska fakulteten) comprises the humanities, for instance cultural studies, history, literature, history of ideas, religion, modern languages, philosophy, linguistics, theory of science and Swedish language and literature
The Faculty of Arts
The IT Faculty (IT fakulteten) offers programmes in applied information technology, computer science and engineering.
The Faculty of Science (Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten) covers a number of science disciplines such as botany, cell and molecular biology, physics, earth sciences, chemistry, conservation, marine ecology, mathematics, environmental science, and zoology.
The Sahlgrenska Academy (Sahlgrenska Akadamin) is part of the University of Gothenburg and functions as a medical school and university hospital.
The School of Business, Economics and Law (Handelshögskolan vid Göteborgs universitet) is a business school and a law school.
The Faculty of Social Sciences (Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten) offers courses in peace and development studies, public administration, journalism, psychology, social anthropology, social work, sociology, political science, and European studies.
Noted people
Alumni
Artisten – Academy of Music and Drama
Percy Barnevik, industry leader, former CEO of Asea Brown Boveri
Nick Bostrom, philosopher and futurist, and Director of the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University
Malin Byström, operatic soprano
Magnus Carlsson, singer
Jan Eliasson, diplomat and politician (former President of the United Nations General Assembly, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Sweden)
Hans Hagnell, politician
Carl Henrik Fredriksson, literary critic, columnist, essayist, and translator
Cecilia Malmström, politician (European Commissioner)
Aleksandra Mir, visual artist
Njuguna Ndungu, economist, Governor and Chairman of the Board of the Central Bank of Kenya
Susanna Roxman, Anglophone poet and critic
Juri Kurol, Swedish Orthodontist
Maria Wetterstrand, politician (Green Party)
Muhammad al-Yaqoubi, Syrian Islamic scholar
Jonas Jonasson, author of The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared.
Lotta Lotass, writer and member of the Swedish Academy.
Sture Allén, computer linguist, former permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy
Jens Allwood, linguist
Arvid Carlsson, Nobel Prize laureate in Medicine, 2000
Ernst Cassirer, philosopher
Östen Dahl, linguist (member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Royal Swedish Academy of Letters, History and Antiquities and Academia Europaea)
Åke Edwardson, author (used to teach Journalism)
Gunnar D Hansson, author
Tore Janson, linguist.
Bernhard Karlgren, sinologist
Nils Kock, developer of the Kock pouch surgical procedure
Lotta Lotass, writer and literary scholar (Member of the Swedish Academy)
Erik Lönnroth, historian (Member of the Swedish Academy)
Bo Ralph, linguist (Member of the Swedish Academy)
Bo Rothstein, political scientist
Agnes Wold, professor of clinical bacteriology
Honorary degrees
The University of Gothenburg has awarded numerous honorary doctorates to public figures and excellent academics, including:
Vigdís Finnbogadóttir, President of Iceland 1980–1996 (honorary doctorate 1990)
Hillary Clinton, politician (honorary doctorate, 2007)
David Cox, statistician (honorary doctorate 2007)
Linda Haas, sociologist
Past rectors
1891 Axel Kock
1891–1893 Hjalmar Edgren
1893–1899 Johannes Paulson
1899–1909 Johan Vising
1909–1914 Ludvig Stavenow
1914–1931 Otto Sylwan
1931–1936 Bernhard Karlgren
1936–1951 Curt Weibull
1951–1966 Hjalmar Frisk
1966–1972 Bo Eric Ingelmark
1972–1982 Georg Lundgren
1982–1986 Kjell Härnqvist
1986–1992 Jan S. Nilsson
1992–1997 Jan Ling
1997–2003 Bo Samuelsson
2003–2006 Gunnar Svedberg
2006– Pam Fredman
See also
Chalmers University of Technology
GOArt
Gothenburg quadricentennial jubilee
List of universities in Sweden
Royal Society of Sciences and Letters in Gothenburg
The International Science Festival in Gothenburg
References
↑ Swedish Higher Education Authority (Högskoleverket) – Annual report 2010 (Swedish), page 106ff
1 2 3 4 Göteborgs universitet i siffror (English). University of Gothenburg
↑ facts and figures University of Gothenburg
↑ "University of Gothenburg - Academic Ranking of World Universities - 2014 - Shanghai Ranking - 2014". Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "University". Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "University of Gothenburg Rankings". Top Universities. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ www.timeshighereducation.com/world-university-rankings/university-of-gothenburg?ranking-dataset=133819
↑ "Sidan kunde inte hittas". Göteborgs universitet. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "Organisation - About the University, University of Gothenburg, Sweden". University of Gothenburg. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
↑ "Faculties - About the University, University of Gothenburg, Sweden". University of Gothenburg. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Göteborgs universitet.
University of Gothenburg – Official site
University of Gothenburg alumni network
slide-show
University of Gothenburg
Academics
Bioscience Business SchoolBusiness, Economics & LawGOArtHDKHögskolan för scen och musikSahlgrenska University HospitalTheatre AcademyQuality of Government InstituteValand Academy
Affiliates
Center for Intellectual Property StudiesIT UniversityLindholmen Science ParkNordicomTjärnö Marine Biological LaboratoryViktoria Institute
Related
Abrahamsson and Anderson v FogelqvistAfrica & Asia JournalBaroque organCulture CollectionLibraryNordic Journal of English StudiesUniversity Hospital
Categories
AlumniStaffUniversity
Universities in Sweden
Public
UppsalaLundGothenburgStockholmUmeåLinköpingKarolinska InstitutetRoyal Institute of TechnologyLuleåKarlstadLinnaeus UniversityÖrebroMid SwedenSwedish National Defence College Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Private
ChalmersStockholm School of Economics Jönköping
Santander Network
Aalborg UniversityAdam Mickiewicz UniversityBabeș-Bolyai UniversityEindhoven University of TechnologyGhent UniversityGrenoble Institute of TechnologyJoseph Fourier UniversityLund UniversityMalmö UniversityNorwegian University of Science and TechnologyPierre Mendès-France UniversityPolytechnic University of ValenciaUniversidad Autónoma de Nuevo LeónUniversity of BariUniversity of BayreuthUniversity of BergenUniversity of CantabriaUniversity of CataniaUniversity of GiessenUniversity of GothenburgUniversity of KentUniversity of Las Palmas de Gran CanariaUniversity of Le HavreUniversity of LeedsUniversity of LiègeUniversity of LimerickUniversity of MaltaUniversity of MinhoUniversity of MurciaUniversity of OsnabrückUniversity of PatrasUniversity of Pau and Pays de l'AdourUniversity of PortoUniversity of Rennes 1University of Rennes 2 – Upper BrittanyUniversity of RouenUniversity of Southern DenmarkUniversity of TriesteUniversity of ValladolidUniversity of WrocławVrije Universiteit
Coordinates: 57°41′54″N 11°58′18″E
Authority control
WorldCat IdentitiesVIAF: 140125343LCCN: n78086045ISNI: 0000 0001 0943 5738GND: 16315245-7SELIBR: 117335SUDOC: 026451492BNF: cb11869713c (data)NLA: 35842932NKC: nlk20030133732BNE: XX254106
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.
This snapshot was generated and distributed by the Distributed Wikipedia Mirror project The Distributed Wikipedia Mirror is a global effort, independent from Wikipedia.
Created on: 2017-05 from the kiwix ZIM file
IPFS Link (this snaphost): /ipfs/QmXoypizjW3WknFiJnKLwHCnL72vedxjQkDDP1mXWo6uco/wiki/University_of_Gothenburg.html
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