Varsity Cup | 05/20 14:00 | 8 | NMMU v FNB UP Tuks | W | 0-75 | |
Varsity Cup | 05/17 17:00 | 7 | FNB UFS Shimlas v FNB UP Tuks | W | 39-42 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/26 17:00 | 5 | FNB UWC v FNB UP Tuks | W | 25-31 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/22 17:00 | 4 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB Maties | L | 24-31 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/11 15:00 | 3 | FNB NWU Eagles v FNB UP Tuks | W | 15-33 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/08 14:00 | 2 | FNB UJ v FNB UP Tuks | W | 19-47 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/04 17:00 | 1 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB Wits | W | 48-25 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/09 17:00 | 6 | FNB Wits v FNB UP Tuks | L | 16-10 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/02 17:00 | 5 | FNB Maties v FNB UP Tuks | L | 13-7 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/24 17:00 | 4 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB UFS Shimlas | W | 43-33 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/17 17:00 | 3 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB UJ | W | 26-24 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/10 17:00 | 2 | FNB CUT Ixias v FNB UP Tuks | W | 23-40 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/03 14:45 | 1 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB NWU Eagles | W | 42-40 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/15 17:00 | 1 | FNB Maties v FNB UP Tuks | L | 34-12 | |
Varsity Cup | 04/08 14:45 | 2 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB NWU Eagles | W | 24-18 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/25 14:45 | 8 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB UCT Ikeys | D | 26-26 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/18 17:00 | 7 | FNB NWU Eagles v FNB UP Tuks | W | 0-28 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/11 17:00 | 6 | FNB UFS Shimlas v FNB UP Tuks | W | 14-27 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/04 16:30 | 5 | FNB UWC v FNB UP Tuks | W | 12-70 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/25 16:30 | 4 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB Wits | W | 46-12 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/18 17:00 | 3 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB Maties | L | 24-26 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/12 12:00 | 2 | FNB UJ v FNB UP Tuks | W | 19-40 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/04 16:30 | 1 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB CUT Ixias | W | 23-6 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/19 17:00 | 8 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB UJ | D | 30-30 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/12 16:30 | 7 | FNB CUT Ixias v FNB UP Tuks | W | 26-54 | |
Varsity Cup | 03/05 14:45 | 6 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB NWU Eagles | L | 26-40 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/26 16:30 | 5 | FNB UCT Ikeys v FNB UP Tuks | L | 23-13 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/12 17:00 | 3 | FNB Maties v FNB UP Tuks | L | 24-16 | |
Varsity Cup | 02/05 17:00 | 2 | FNB Wits v FNB UP Tuks | L | 25-19 | |
Varsity Cup | 01/29 14:45 | 1 | FNB UP Tuks v FNB UFS Shimlas | L | 17-19 |
The University of Pretoria (Afrikaans: Universiteit van Pretoria, Northern Sotho: Yunibesithi ya Pretoria) is a multi-campus public research university in Pretoria, the administrative and de facto capital of South Africa. The university was established in 1908 as the Pretoria campus of the Johannesburg-based Transvaal University College and is the fourth South African institution in continuous operation to be awarded university status. The university has grown from the original 32 students in a single late Victorian house to approximately 53,000 in 2019. The university was built on seven suburban campuses on 1,190 hectares (2,900 acres).
The university is organised into nine faculties and a business school. Established in 1920, the University of Pretoria Faculty of Veterinary Science is the second oldest veterinary school in Africa and the only veterinary school in South Africa. In 1949, the university launched the first MBA programme outside North America, and the university's Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS) has consistently been ranked the top business school in Africa for executive education, as well as being placed in the top 50 in the world. In 2012, the Financial Times ranked the GIBS Executive MBA 1st in Africa and 60th in the world.
Since 1997, the university has produced more research outputs every year than any other institution of higher learning in South Africa, as measured by the Department of Education's accreditation benchmark. In 2008, the university awarded 15.8% of all masters and doctorate degrees in South Africa, the highest percentage in the country. The DHET report, released in March 2019, shows that UP achieved the highest percentage (10,93%) of the total research output units of all South African universities for 2017. Fifty-three UP researchers are in the top 1% according to the Web of Science Index of 2019.
The university is commonly referred to as UP, Tuks, or Tukkies and in post-nominals the university is typically abbreviated as Pret or UP, although Pretoria is also used in official publications.
The day might come when the Transvaal University College might mean to the Transvaal what Oxford University has meant to England. A long time might have to pass, and for a hundred years we might have to watch the grass growing on our lawns before that day arrives, but noble beginning has been made.
— Jan Smuts,
at the laying of the Old Arts building's foundation stone
The proposal for a university for the capital, first mooted in the Volksraad in 1889, was interrupted by the outbreak of the Anglo–Boer War in 1899. In 1896, the South African School of Mines was founded in Kimberley. Eight years later, in 1904, the school was moved to Johannesburg and was renamed the Transvaal Technical Institute. The school's name changed yet again in 1906 to Transvaal University College. In 1902, after the signing of the Peace of Vereeniging, the Normal College for teacher training was established in Groenkloof, Pretoria. On 4 March 1908, when the Transvaal University College (TUC) transferred its arts and science courses to its newly established Pretoria campus, the precursor to the university was established, initially offering courses in languages, sciences, and law.
Instruction commenced with 32 students, 4 professors and 3 lecturers in the Kya Rosa, 270 Skinner Street a late Victorian residence purchased from Leo Weinthal the then owner of The Press (forerunner to the Pretoria News newspaper). The first four professors were H. Th. Reinink (Dutch), J. Purves (Scottish), D.F. du Toit Malherbe (South African) and A.C. Paterson (Scottish), who would also become the first vice-chancellor.
In 1910, the colonial secretary, General Jan Smuts tabled the act constituting the university as a separate entity before the Transvaal Parliament, the "Transvaalse and Universiteits-Inlijvingswet" Law 1 of 1910. On 17 May 1910, the Johannesburg and Pretoria campuses separated, each becoming an independent institution. The Johannesburg campus being reincorporated as the South African School of Mines and Technology, while the Pretoria campus retained the name of Transvaal University College until 1930. The South African School of Mines and Technology would later go on to become the University of the Witwatersrand in 1922. In 1910, the TUC acquired its own campus in the east of Pretoria, what is now the western part of the university's main campus in Hatfield. On 3 August 1910, Governor-General Herbert John Gladstone, 1st Viscount Gladstone laid the cornerstone of the Old Arts Building, the first building to be built on the newly established Hatfield campus. The building's striking Cape Dutch and Neo-Romanesque architectural style was recognised in 1968 when it was declared a provincial heritage site. During this time the colloquial name for the university, Tukkies or Tuks, was derived from the Afrikaans acronym for the college, i.e. Transvaalse Universiteitskollege (TUK).
The late 1910s and early 1920s saw the establishment of several faculties as the academic activities were expanded. Courses in agriculture (1917), theology (1918), economics and political science (1919), veterinary science (1920), and music (1923) were established as the institution grew.
On 10 October 1930, the University of Pretoria Private Act, No. 13 of 1930 changed the name of the TUC to the University of Pretoria. The TUC originally established as an English-medium institution had evolved into the only fully bilingual university in South Africa and remained as such until the early 1930s. The rapid increase of Afrikaans-speaking students brought about an imbalance between the demographics of students and the languages of instruction. By 1931, although 65% of students were Afrikaans-speaking, 68% of the classes were conducted in English. In 1932, the University Council addressed the imbalance, deciding that Afrikaans would become the only medium of instruction. An increase in student numbers necessitated the building of new facilities such as the Club Hall and Administration Building (colloquially known as the ship) when the seventh faculty, the Medical Faculty, was established in 1943. This period further saw the establishment of numerous student activities such as the annual Spring Day event and intervarsity. Student publications established include the Trek in 1931, the first Rag Mag in 1936 and the weekly student newspaper Die Perdeby in 1939. The period of 1948–1982 is characterised by the substantial increase in numbers of an almost exclusively white student body and the concomitant physical growth of the university infrastructure. The nearly doubling of student numbers demanded the physical expansion of the Hatfield campus and new buildings were built in quick succession as the campus grew eastward. In the mid-1960s, the university urgently required additional land and acquired the adjacent property of Christian Brothers' College, Saint Gabriel's. This property now forms the eastern section of the Hatfield campus.
In 1949, the university founded the Graduate School of Management (GSM),
During the period of 1982 to 2008, the university transformed into a bilingual, multiracial and inclusive institution. The comparatively smooth introduction of students from all races formed the initial impetus for transformation and in 1989 the university was declared officially desegregated and opened for all races. In 1993, a policy document was introduced, aiming to position the university in a newly democratic South Africa. In 1994, the university regained its status as a bilingual university when a new language policy was adopted. However, in 2019 a new language policy was adopted which discontinued Afrikaans as a language of instruction in favour of English only.
In 1999, the only two veterinary science faculties in the country, those of the University of Pretoria and Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University, formerly Medunsa, were amalgamated. The university's Onderstepoort campus once again housed the only veterinary faculty in South Africa. In 2000, the Teachers Training College Pretoria, formerly the Normal College Pretoria founded in 1902, was incorporated into the university's Faculty of Education, which saw the faculty moving to the self-sufficient Groenkloof campus.
The university's business school in Illovo, Johannesburg, the Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), was established in January 2000 following a substantial contribution by Sir Donald Gordon, the founder of Liberty Life and Liberty International, and a major investment by the University of Pretoria following discussions which started in 1998. The now defunct Vista University's Mamelodi campus was incorporated on 2 January 2004, as part of the restructuring of South African tertiary institutions. In 2011, GIBS opened a satellite campus on Pritchard Street in the inner city of Johannesburg. The Business school follows on the university's, now defunct Graduate School of Management's, long tradition of MBA tuition as the first business school outside North America and replaced it in January 2008.