State Agrarian University of Moldova
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The State Agrarian University of Moldova (UASM; Romanian: Universitatea AgrarÄ de Stat din Moldova) was a university located in ChiÈinÄu, Moldova.[1] Founded in 1933, it merged with the Technical University of Moldova, integrating into its structures in 2022.[2]
Universitatea AgrarÄ de Stat din Moldova | |
Former name | M. V. Frunze ChiÈinÄu Agricultural Institute (1940â1991) |
|---|---|
| Type | Public |
| Active | 1933â2022 |
| Location | , |
| Affiliations | Technical University of Moldova (since 2022) |
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Organization
The State Agrarian University of Moldova (SAUM) is the only higher agricultural education institution in the Republic of Moldova and the first higher education institution founded in ChiÈinÄu. SAUM has a history that began on 9 April 1933, when King Carol II of Romania promulgated the Law concerning the transformation of Agricultural Sciences Section of the University of IaÈi into the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences with its center in ChiÈinÄu. In 1938, the institution was renamed the Faculty of Agronomy and became administratively part of the newly established Gheorghe Asachi Polytechnic School.[3]
In 1940, following the occupation of Bessarabia by the Soviet Union, the faculty from ChiÈinÄu became an independent institution as the ChiÈinÄu Agricultural Institute, with four faculties (from 1944): Agronomy, Viticulture, Horticulture, and Animal Sciences. Other faculties are established over time: Mechanization of Agriculture (1950), Land Improvements (1954), Agrarian Economics (1965), Veterinary Medicine (1976). In 1991, the name of the institution was changed to the State Agrarian University of Moldova.[3]
At present, SAUM has over 6,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students trained in 23 specialties, 30 specializations, and 27 scientific specialties, respectively.
Gallery
- Sfatul ÈÄrii Palace was the first seat of the University in the 1930s
Notable alumni
- Avigdor Lieberman, Israel's former foreign minister
- Igor Dodon, Moldova's fifth president
- Mircea Snegur, Moldova's first president
- Andrei Sangheli, Moldova's second prime minister
