Kharkiv National University in Ukraine is one of the oldest universities in Eastern Europe. This well-known Ukrainian science and education center was established on January 29, 1805. It was the earliest university established in Little Russia and present-day Ukraine (Lviv The university did not reach the scale of a comprehensive university in 1817), and it is also one of the five universities built by the Russian Tsar. The other four universities are: Vilnius University, Tartu University, Moscow University and St. Petersburg University. According to the history of nearly 200 years. The university has trained many world-renowned scientists, writers, historians, astronomers, mathematicians, psychologists, chemists and other outstanding experts. They have won the Nobel Prize in Biology Randolph, the Nobel Prize in Physics, Kuznets, the Nobel Prize in Economics, and the historian Baghari, the astronomer Barabasov, the psychologist Alexei Leontiev, the Tianjin Chenko, chemist Bekotov, mathematician Ryabunov, Ostraglaski, Biljabryan, Bishop St. Ivan Maximovich, etc.
Kharkov State University is one of the oldest universities in the world. On January 17, 1804, Russian Tsar Alexander I signed a document on the establishment of Kharkov Tsarist University. The person who made outstanding contributions to the establishment of Kharkiv University was Vasily Nazanovich Karazin. At that time, Kharkiv was a very inconspicuous provincial capital city. Karazin decided to A university was established in this humble city, so he persuaded the local citizens to collect donations, and the governor and deputy governor vacated the official residence as a teaching building, so that Kharkov University was established. In 1904, Kharkov University ushered in the 100th anniversary of its founding. In memory of this famous activist, citizens erected a statue for him in the square in front of the university. In 1812, the first periodical publishing house of the Kharkov province was created at the university - Kharkov Weekly. In 1807, the Zoological Laboratory was created, which is now the University Museum of Natural History. From 1920 to 1921, the university was named the Institute of Theoretical Knowledge, and in 1921 it was reorganized and established the Kharkov People's Educational Institute, whose main task was to train teachers for secondary schools. In 1921, the Faculty of Medicine of Kharkiv University became independent as the Kharkiv Medical Academy. In 1936, the university was named after the late famous writer Gorky.
The history of Kharkiv State University embodies the essence of wisdom, culture and Ukrainian history. After 200 years of development, many world-renowned scholars and educators have emerged from here. She is the only university in Ukraine that has successively trained three Nobel Prize winners in the fields of biology, economics, and physics. The first president of Ukraine conferred the title of honorary school on it. Since its establishment, Kharkiv State University has trained more than 130,000 graduates, about 60 of whom have become academicians of the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences.
Today, Kharkiv National University is the flagship of higher education and scientific research in Ukraine. It consists of 18 colleges and more than 100 departments, with 15,000 undergraduate students and 500 doctoral students. There are more than 2,000 teachers and researchers in the school, including more than 300 professors (Doctor of Science) and more than 800 doctors. There are 115 teaching areas, basically including all modern higher education content. The school is also one of the few universities in Ukraine (excluding Crimea, Donetsk, and Luhansk regions) that uses both Russian and Ukrainian languages for teaching.
It is an educational cooperation institution established between universities in the People's Republic of China and universities in Ukraine. The alliance aims to promote educational exchanges, cooperation and development between the two countries.
Contact email: china.ukraine.edu@gmail.com