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History of Peking
University Peking University, the
former Jing Shi Da Xue Tang(the Metropolitan University) of the Qing Dynasty, opened
in December 1898. The Metropolitan University was then not only the most prestigious
institution of higher learning but also the highest administrative organization of
education in China. In May 1912, the Metropolitan University was renamed "Peking
University". In 1917, its presidency was taken up by Mr.Cai Yuanpei, an outstanding
scientist, educationist and democratic revolutionary, who played an active role in the
reform and development of the university. By 1919, the university developed into the
country's largest institution of higher learning, with 14 departments and an enrollment of
more than 2,000 students.
Peking University has a glorious revolutionary tradition. In
1919, the anti-imperialist and anti-feudal May 4th Movement was initiated from the
university, which had been the centre of the Chinese New-Culture Movement and the earliest
base for the dissemination of Marxism in China. Chen Duxiu, Li Dazhao and Mao
Zedong, founders of the Chinese communist Party, as well as Lu Xun, a great writer,
thinker and chief leader of the Chinese New-Culture Movement, all either taught or held
offices in the university. In order to carry on the revolutionary
tradition of the May 4th Movement, the university decided, after the new China was
founded, that the 4th of May be set as the date on which to celebrate the anniversary of
the founding of the university.
During the War of Resistance Against Japan, Peking University
moved to Kunming, a city in Yunnan Province, together with Tsinghua
University and Nankai University, formed the National Southwestern Associated
University. In 1946, after the victory of the war, Peking University moved back to Beiping
(then the name of Beijing). At that time, the university comprised six schools (Arts,
Science, Law, Medicine, Engineering and Agriculture), and a research institute for the
humanities. The total enrollment of student grew to 3,000.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China, the
government carried out, in 1952, a nationwide readjustment of colleges and
universities with the aim to promote higher education and quicken the training of
personnel with specialized knowledge and skill by pooling the country's manpower and
material resourses. After the readjustment, Peking University became a university
comprising departments of both liberal Arts and Sciences and emphasizing the teaching and
research of basic sciences. By 1962, the total enrollment grew to 10,671 undergraduate
students and 280 graduate students. Since 1949, Peking University has trained for
the country 73,000 undergraduates and specialty students, 10,000 postgraduates and 20,000
adult-education students, and many of them have become the backbones on all fronts in
China.
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