Top universities in Germany 2017
Best universities in Germany 2017
The top universities in Germany are scattered throughout the country,
with options to study in Munich, Berlin and 37 other cities in Germany.
In total, 41 universities in Germany are counted among the very best universities in the world.
LMU Munich is the top university in Germany, followed by Heidelberg University. The top university in Berlin is Humboldt University of Berlin.
There are more than 500 degrees (bachelor's and master's programmes)
taught in English at top German universities. Whatever subject you are
interested in, you can study that degree in Germany in English.
Top 5 universities in Germany
1. LMU Munich
With the second-largest student population of any university in
Germany, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich – to use its full name –
attracts a huge number of international students, about 13 per cent of
the total student body.
LMU Munich
dates back to 1472, making it one of the oldest universities in the
country. It has 34 Nobel laureates affiliated to the university,
including renowned scientists such as Otto Hahn, Max Planck and Werner
Heisenberg.
In fact, since the end of the 18th century, the university has had a
strong focus on natural sciences and has produced world-leading
research, discoveries and innovations since the middle of the
19th century.
The German Universities Excellence Initiative, launched in 2005, has
poured funding into LMU Munich, as well as other leading universities in
the country.
2. Heidelberg University
Heidelberg University, founded in 1386, is the oldest university in present-day Germany.
Now, the university offers undergraduate and postgraduate degrees
across 100 different subjects. Academics at Heidelberg have been
responsible for founding subdisciplines including psychiatric genetics,
modern sociology and environmental physics.
Close to 20 per cent of the student body is international,
representing 130 countries around the world. More than a third of
doctoral students are international.
The university particularly excels for its innovative research and
intellectual contributions across a range of subjects. Fifty-six Nobel
laureates have been associated with Heidelberg University, nine of whom
won while tenured at the university.
Many influential politicians, philosophers and scientists are alumni
or affiliates of the university, including Max Weber – the founder of
modern sociology – and philosopher Hannah Arendt.
The Old Town and castle are some of the most visited tourist destinations in Germany, known as the home of German romanticism.
3. Technical University of Munich
Also founded in the 19th century, the Technical University of Munich is the only state university dedicated to science and technology.
The university originally focused on engineering, but has expanded
over the years to include natural sciences, social sciences,
agriculture, brewing and food technology, and medicine. There are many
different specialisms within engineering and information technology;
three different departments cover these specialisms.
An overarching philosophy of "the entrepreneurial university" guides
the development of the university, which now has 12 faculties across
three campuses in or around Munich.
Between 1927 and today, 13 Nobel Prizes have been awarded in physics,
chemistry and medicine to academics affiliated to the university.
In 2001, the Technical University of Munich founded a subsidiary
university – the German Institute of Science and Technology (GIST) - TUM
Asia – in Singapore, providing an international education to students
in Asia.
4. Humboldt University of Berlin
Humboldt University of Berlin
is known not only for its own prestige but also for the educational
ethos and university model that has been adopted by other European and
Western universities since the 19th century.
The principle of the university is a union between teaching and
research, both done by prominent scholars. Some of Germany’s most
influential figures attended or worked at the university, including Marx
and Engels, Walter Benjamin, Albert Einstein and Max Planck.
In total, 40 Nobel prizewinners are associated with Humboldt University, the majority for physics, chemistry or medicine.
Although well-known and respected across all subjects, the university
particularly excels in arts and humanities, ranking 21st in the world
for humanities subjects.
The university library, opened in 1874, is one of the most extensive
in the country. It contains about 6.5 million books, and thousands of
magazines and journals.
Out of almost 30,000 students, about 16 per cent are international.
5. Free University of Berlin
The Free University of Berlin was founded as a result of concerns about Communist control of Humboldt University during the early Cold War period.
From its founding, students had much more impact on the university
system and decisions than in other universities in Germany, although
their input has been gradually scaled back.
Over the past 15 years, the university has dramatically reduced the
size of the student body from more than 60,000 students to just over
30,000 students. About 20 per cent of the students are international.
In 2007, the Free University of Berlin secured the most funding
applications for research through the German Universities Excellence
Initiative and is one of nine elite universities to receive special
funding for development.
The main campus in in the Dahlem district in Berlin, and there are
three other campuses for earth sciences, veterinary medicine and the
medical centre.
A student village – Studentendorf Schlachtensee – was built between
1959 and 1964 to provide housing options for students, financed by the
US government. The 27 buildings made up the first academic residential
complex built in postwar Berlin, and are regarded as historically and
architecturally significant.
Top universities in Germany 2017
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