HISTORY
An illustrious history
Leiden University is the oldest university in the Netherlands. It was founded on 8 February 1575 in Leiden’s Pieterskerk church. This was at the time of the Eighty Years’ War, the uprising by the northern provinces against Spanish rule. Throughout the University’s entire 446year history, innovation has remained a firm tradition.
1575
1581
Rembrandt World-famous Dutch painter Rembrandt van Rijn studied at Leiden University. He enrolled as a student of the arts, and later painted famous Leiden alumni such as Marten Soolmans, Jan Six and Nicolaes Tulp.
1600
1620
Foundation
Academy Building
First tulip
Leiden University was founded by William of Orange in 1575. Legend has it that he founded the University to reward the city for its resistance to the Spanish.
The Academy Building on the Rapenburg canal is Leiden University’s oldest building. It came into the University’s possession in 1581, and is used for ceremonies such as graduations, inaugural lectures and PhD defences.
Carolus Clusius brought the first tulips to Leiden at the end of the 16th century. The bulbs originally came from Turkey. Clusius cultivated all sorts of new varieties in the Hortus botanicus. His research formed the basis of today’s bulb industry in the Netherlands. Hundreds of years later, his influence is still visible in the bulb fields between Leiden and Haarlem.
Charter of Leiden University from 1575.
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LEIDEN UNIVERSITY CORPORATE MAGAZINE 2021
The Clusius garden in the Hortus botanicus in around 1601.
Leiden Observatory Astronomy has a long and rich tradition in Leiden. The University acquired an observatory on the roof of the Academy Building as early as 1633. The Old Observatory was completed in 1861. This is still used for teaching, but the astronomers now work on the Science Campus.
1633
1714
Boerhaave Herman Boerhaave inspired a revolution in the medical world: he put the patient first. In 1714, this Leiden professor introduced lessons at the patient’s bedside. He transformed medicine from a theoretical to a practical, exploratory field.