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[[Image:Seal of the University of Szeged (color).gif|left|150px]]
[[Image:Seal of the University of Szeged (color).gif|left|150px]]
The '''University of Szeged''' is one of the most distinguished universities in Hungary. It is located in the southern Hungarian town, [[Szeged]]. Historians find its predecessor in title the Kolozsvári Egyetem (University of today's [[Cluj-Napoca]]), founded in 1872 by Emperor [[Franz Joseph]] I., which had to move to Hungary in 1921, and was restarted in Szeged.
The '''University of Szeged''' is one of the most distinguished universities in [[Hungary]] and in [[Central Europe]]. It is located in the southern Hungarian town, [[Szeged]]. Historians find its predecessor in title the Kolozsvári Egyetem (University of today's [[Cluj-Napoca]]), founded in [[1872]] by Emperor [[Franz Joseph]] I., which had to move to Hungary in [[1921]], and was restarted in Szeged.


Among its teachers were [[Albert Szent-Györgyi]], one of the founders of the [[Szeged Faculty of Sciences|Faculty of Sciences]], who received the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] in 1937 for his discoveries in connection with [[vitamin C]].
Among its teachers were [[Albert Szent-Györgyi]], one of the founders of the [[Szeged Faculty of Sciences|Faculty of Sciences]], who received the [[Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine]] in [[1937]] for his discoveries in connection with [[vitamin C]].


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Revision as of 15:49, 23 August 2005

File:Seal of the University of Szeged (color).gif

The University of Szeged is one of the most distinguished universities in Hungary and in Central Europe. It is located in the southern Hungarian town, Szeged. Historians find its predecessor in title the Kolozsvári Egyetem (University of today's Cluj-Napoca), founded in 1872 by Emperor Franz Joseph I., which had to move to Hungary in 1921, and was restarted in Szeged.

Among its teachers were Albert Szent-Györgyi, one of the founders of the Faculty of Sciences, who received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1937 for his discoveries in connection with vitamin C.