University Paul Valéry of Montpellier
Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier
UPVM's logo
TypePublic university
Established1289/1970
PresidentPatrick Gilli
Academic staff
627
Students19,794[1]
Location,
France

43°37′59″N 3°52′12″E / 43.633°N 3.870°E / 43.633; 3.870
CampusUrban
Sporting affiliations
Service Universitaire des Activités Physiques et Sportives (SUAPS)
Websitewww.univ-montp3.fr

Paul Valéry University of Montpellier (French: Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier III), also known as or UPVM (official acronym) or Montpellier III (UM3, until early 2015), is a French university in the Academy of Montpellier. It is one of the three successor universities to the University of Montpellier, specialising in the arts, languages and social sciences.

The university is a member of the Coimbra Group, an association of long-established European multidisciplinary universities of high international standard.[2]

History

Origins

Paul Valéry University

The University of Montpellier, founded on 26 October 1289 through a bull issued by Pope Nicholas IV combining the schools of Medicine, Arts and Law, is the third university founded in France, following those of Paris and Toulouse.

In 1939, the new Faculty of Humanities was built in the city centre, facing Saint Pierre's Cathedral on the rue du Cardinal de Cabrières (currently home to part of the University of Montpellier 1's Law Faculty), and inaugurated by the then Dean Augustin Fliche.

In 1970, the former faculties formed three separate universities (Montpellier I, II and III). The Faculty of Arts, Languages, Social Sciences and Humanities becoming the "University of Montpellier III", whilst also taking on the name of Paul Valéry as a homage to the Sète-born writer who studied in Montpellier.

In 2015, the Universities of Montpellier I and II merged to be the University of Montpellier. Therefore, the University Paul Valéry of Montpellier III became University Paul-Valéry of Montpellier (UPVM).

Since 2002, all Nîmes students have been included in the University of Nîmes and are no longer part of the University of Montpellier III.

Presidents

List of presidents
Year of appointment Name Position Discipline
1990 Jules Maurin University Professor Contemporary History
1995 Pierre Benedetto University Professor Psychology
1998 Michèle Weil University Professor Literature
2003 Jean-Marie Miossec University Professor Geography
2008 Anne Fraïsse University Professor Latin
2016 Patrick Gilli University Professor Medieval History
2020 Anne Fraïsse University Professor Latin

Campus

Having become too cramped, the university moved in 1966 to a campus of over 10 hectares in the north of the city (route de Mende), close to the University of Montpellier II's new campus. In order to avoid confusion with the University of Montpellier 2, the architectural aesthetic was very carefully selected and large green spaces created.

In 1986 a new building comprising three lecture theatres (one seating 800 students) was built.

In 1998, a second University campus was built in Béziers on the site of the former Duguesclin barracks.

A move of the university's UFR 5 (psychology and sociology department) is currently being planned to the Saint-Charles site in Montpellier city centre.

Organisation

The university is organised into six teaching and research units:

  • Letters, Arts, Philosophy and Psychoanalysis
  • Languages and Cultures
  • Human and Environmental Sciences
  • Social and Organisational Sciences
  • Subject and Societal Sciences - Psychology, sociology and anthropology
  • Education - education, physical and sports education, mathematics.

It also has an Institute of Information Technoscience.[3]

Student life

Student life is coordinated through the Maison des Étudiants, a place for students' activities, freedom of expression, clubs and societies.

Its aim is to help students realise their own ambitions, allowing them to open up and develop a place for creation, as well as cultural and campus activities.

The Maison des Étudiants and its "Jean Moulin" function room are an important centre for student life on campus, playing host to: dance, music, theatre and first aid classes, as well as conferences, film screenings, debates, exhibitions, solidarity and cultural days, concerts and student evenings, amongst others.

Representative student organisations

Following the student elections of 30 and 31 May 2006 (postponed due to the anti-CPE blockades in March) marked by a low level of participation of around 5% (but a strong one from the Béziers campus of nearly 20%), the representative student organisations are as follows:

  • Tribune Étudiante, Confédération étudiante, Avis Culturel : 4 elected to the CA, 4 elected to the CEVU
  • UNEF : 3 elected to the CA, 3 elected to the CEVU
  • Sud étudiant : 3 elected to the CA, 3 elected to the CEVU
  • Melting-Pot : 2 elected to the CA, 2 elected to the CEVU, 1 elected to the CS
  • Caraïbe Afrique Solidarité Étudiante (The CASE) : 1 elected to the CA, 1 elected to the CEVU
  • Corpo Lettres Epsylone : 1 elected to the CA, 1 elected to the CEVU
  • UNI : 1 elected to the CA, 1 elected to the CEVU
  • La liste Culturelle étudiante : 1 elected to the CEVU
  • Association Contact : 1 elected to the CS
  • Étudiants solidaires : 1 elected to the CS
  • Réseau doctorant UPV : 1 elected to the CS

Other active associations

All student associations do not inevitably participate in representative student elections but are not less active. Numerous cultural associations, such as Asso7, ECUME or l'Écran et son Double, actively participate in campus activities.

The associations and student unions are housed in the "Maison des Etudiants", found on the north side of campus near the Vert Bois university restaurant.

Notable people

Faculty

Alumni

See also

References

  1. "UPVM | Accueil".
  2. Service des Relations Internationales Archived 25 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "UFR, INSTITUT ET ÉCOLES DOCTORALES". UPVM3. Retrieved 30 August 2022.
  4. "Addictions et tentative de suicide... Les secrets de la vie de Thierry Ardisson". Planet (in French). 17 June 2019. Retrieved 25 August 2021.
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