Sophia University | |
Native Name: | 上智大学 |
Latin Name: | Universitas Sedis Sapientiae (University of the Seat of Wisdom) |
Motto: | Lux Veritatis (Latin) 真理の光 (Japanese) Shinri no Hikari (Romaji) |
Mottoeng: | Light of Truth |
Religious Affiliation: | Catholic Church (Jesuit) |
Chancellor: | Prof. Sali Augustine, SJ, PhD[1] |
President: | Yoshiaki Terumichi[2] |
Faculty: | 1,509 (2022/23) |
Administrative Staff: | 293 |
Students: | 13,437 (2022/23) |
Undergrad: | 12,080 (2022/23) |
Postgrad: | 1,357 (2022/23) |
Country: | Japan |
Coordinates: | 35.6842°N 139.7319°W |
Campus: | Urban |
Free Label: | Alma Mater song |
Free: | Sophia |
Colors: | Maroon |
Sports Nickname: | Sophians |
Mascot: | Sophia-kun (ソフィア君, maroon eagle) |
Sophia University, (Japanese: 上智大学, Jōchi Daigaku; Latin: Universitas Sedis Sapientiae) is a private research university in Tokyo, Japan. Founded in 1913 by the Jesuits, it was granted university status in 1928, becoming the first Catholic university in Japan.[3]
As of 2023, the University has 12,080 undergraduate students and 1,357 postgraduate students. The university has 9 undergraduate faculties and 10 graduate schools, with over 13,900 students in total.[4] [5] [6] Sophia University has consistently ranked as the top Catholic university in Asia.[7]
Sophia University is a highly globalised university with international students from 77 countries and exchange agreements with 400 universities in 81 countries.[8] The university attracts many students from across Japan and abroad. As of 2022, foreign students constituted approximately 9% of the student body.[9]
Sophia's alumni are commonly referred to as "Sophians", among whom include the 79th Prime Minister of Japan, Morihiro Hosokawa, several politicians represented in the Japanese National Diet, several foreign statesmen including, Carlos Holmes Trujillo, Mukhriz Mahathir, Li Linsi, many prominent business figures, including Hassan Jameel, and a number of actors and musicians in the Japanese film and music industries.
The name of the university is traced to letters of correspondence between two of the three founders of what would become Sophia University, Fr. James Rockliff, SJ and Fr. Hermann Hoffmann, SJ. The Japanese term 上智 ("higher wisdom" or "supreme wisdom", Jōchi) was the equivalent of the Latin word sapientia, which means wisdom. According to Catholic Church tradition, the term sapientia refers to one of the Church's devotional titles for the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Seat of Wisdom.[10] [11]
When Joseph Eylenbosch, SJ began teaching Greek at the university in April 1924, he thought that the Japanese term jōchi was the equivalent of the Greek term σοφία (sofia). Afterwards, the students had proposed that the school be known as Sophia University.
Fr. Hoffmann, SJ, who was serving as University President at that time, initially opposed the proposal. However, he soon accepted the idea and submitted the proposal to Rome for the approval.
The English language-based, peer-reviewed academic journal Monumenta Nipponica, which was first inaugurated in 1938, identified itself as being published by Sophia University. The use of Sophia as the university name then became firmly established in Japan and overseas.[12]
The origins of Sophia University could be traced to 1549 when Saint Francis Xavier, a prominent member and co-founder of the Society of Jesus, arrived in Japan to spread Christianity. In his letters to his fellow Jesuits, he had expressed hopes of establishing a university in Japan.[13] [14]
During the so-called Kirishitan period of Japanese history, the Catholic Church had been responsible for establishing and administering educational institutions in Japan called Collegios and Seminarios, serving as bridges between the East and West.
The establishment of the university only began to take place more than 400 years from St. Francis Xavier's arrival in Japan. In 1903, three Jesuit priests from Europe came to Japan to continue the missionary work of the Church and to help establish Sophia University. One of the founders, Fr. Joseph Dahlmann, SJ from Germany, who had come to Japan via India, had listened to the requests of Catholics in the country, who expressed their desires to construct a Catholic university to serve as the cultural and spiritual base of the Church's missionary operations in Japan.
Dahlmann heeded the requests and sent a proposal to the then-Bishop of Rome, Pope Pius X, at the Holy See in Rome. In 1905, Dahlmann was granted a private audience with the Pope, who promised to assign the Society of Jesus to create and administer a Catholic university in Japan. In Dahlmann's Latin memoirs regarding the encounter with Pius, he recounted that he spoke as follows: "Habebitis collegium in Japonica, magnam universitatem (in English: "You (plural) will have in Japan a college that is a great university".).
On that same year, the then-Bishop of Portland, Maine in the United States, William H. O'Connell, was appointed by the Pope to serve as a special ambassador of the Vatican to Emperor Meiji in Japan. O'Connell was also tasked to survey the situation in Japan. When he was granted an audience with Emperor Meiji, he had ascertained the education policy directions of the Japanese Ministry of Education, and reported to officials at the Holy See regarding the possible establishment of a Catholic university in Japan.
At the 25th General Congregation of the Society of Jesus in held in Rome in September 1906, Pius X issued a formal written statement to the Jesuits to establish a Catholic university in Japan. Thus, the delegates at the Congregation voted unanimously in favour of the Pope's commands, and the first concrete steps were taken to prepare a university institution in the East.[15]
Sophia University was founded by Jesuits in 1913. It opened with departments of German Literature, Philosophy and Commerce, headed by its founder Fr. Hermann Hoffmann, SJ (1864–1937) as its first official president.[16]
In 1932, a small group of Sophia University students refused to salute the war dead at Yasukuni Shrine in the presence of a Japanese military attache, saying it violated their religious beliefs. The military attache was withdrawn from Sophia as a result of this incident, damaging the university's reputation in the eyes of the government of the Japanese Empire. The Archbishop of Tokyo intervened in the standoff by permitting Catholic students to salute the war dead, after which many Sophia students, as well as Hermann Hoffmann himself, participated in rites at Yasukuni. The Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples later issued the Pluries Instanterque in 1936, which encouraged Catholics to attend Shinto shrines as a patriotic gesture; the Vatican re-issued this document after the war in 1951.[17] Hermann Heuvers served as the university's second president from 1937 until 1941.[18]
Sophia University continued to grow as it increased the number of academic departments, faculty members and students, in addition to advancing its international focus by establishing an exchange program. Many of its students studied at Georgetown University in the United States as early as 1935. Sophia's junior college was established in 1973, followed by the opening of Sophia Community College in 1976.
With the founding of the Faculty of Liberal Arts in 2006, Sophia University presently holds 27 departments in its eight faculties. Its current president is Yoshiaki Terumichi. Toshiaki Koso serves as head of its board of directors. Since 2008, the Global Leadership Program was started for students from four Jesuit universities in East Asia: Ateneo de Manila University in the Philippines, Fu Jen Catholic University in Taiwan, Sogang University in South Korea, and Sophia University in Japan.[19] In 2016 the university reached out to the four Jesuit junior-senior high schools in Japan, joining them in the Sophia College Corporation to help them pass on the Jesuit charism to their lay faculty through workshops and other assistance. These schools are Sophia-Fukuoka, Eiko Gakuen, Hiroshima Gakuin, and Rokko School.[20]
In 2019, Pope Francis visited Sophia University as a part of his 2019 pastoral tour. This was the first time in 38 years that a pope visited Sophia University.[21]
Sophia's main campus at Yotsuya is urban, consisting of roughly 25 large, modern buildings in the center of Tokyo. The majority of Sophia's 10,000 undergraduate students spend nearly all their time here. The faculties of Theology, Humanities, Law, Foreign Studies, Economics, Liberal Arts, and Science and Technology have their home here, as do the main library, cafeteria, gymnasium, chapel, bookstore, and offices. In April 2006, the Faculty of Comparative Culture, which had been located at the smaller Ichigaya campus, moved to the main Yotsuya campus and changed its name to the Faculty of Liberal Arts.[22] Nearly all of Sophia's foreign exchange and most of international students study at the FLA.
Students of Department of Nursing, Faculty of Human Sciences, starting from their second year, and students of the Course of Midwifery, commute to Mejiro Seibo campus at Shinjuku. Mejiro Seibo campus was originally the campus of Seibo College, before it merged with the Sophia University, and the department has retained connection to the nearby Seibo Hospital.
The Tokyo office of the Council on International Educational Exchange, the student exchange organisation, which oversees roughly half of the international students, is also based on the main Yotsuya Campus. The Shakujii (Tokyo) campus housed the Faculty of Theology. The Hadano campus in Kanagawa Prefecture is home to the Sophia Junior College, as well as a number of seminar halls and athletics complexes.[23]
Sophia University has international partnership agreements with 396 institutions in 81 countries.[24] Some of Sophia's partner universities include Georgetown University, Yale University, University of Hong Kong, Sogang University, and LMU Munich. It also maintains nine overseas bases serving as liaisons between the Sophia School Corporation and overseas localities. [25]
Established in 1911, the Sophia School Corporation (学校法人上智学院, Gakko Hojin Jochi Gakuin) is a public interest corporation established under the Private School Act (Act no. 270 of 1945) for the purpose of establishing a private school.[26] The Sophia School Corporation serves as the operator of Sophia University and other Jesuit-affiliated schools in Japan, managing a total of seven schools. It was established in 1951.[27]
Sophia University (Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo) | Eiko Gakuen Junior and Senior High School (Kamakura City, Kanagawa) | |
Sophia University Junior College Division (Hadano City, Kanagawa) | Rokko Junior and Senior High School (Kobe City, Hyogo) | |
Hiroshima Gakuin Junior and Senior High School (Hiroshima City, Hiroshima) | ||
Sophia-Fukuoka Junior and Senior High School (Fukuoka City, Fukuoka) |
The university has nine undergraduate faculties with 29 departments as well as 10 graduate schools with 25 programmes. With over 14,021 students as of 2017, the university provides academic opportunities for students from Japan and overseas to study in Japan. Sophia also possesses a wide-variety of English-taught academic programmes such as those provided by the Faculty of Liberal Arts (FLA). English programmes are also provided by the Faculty of Science and Technology (FST) through two programmes and the Green Science Program, provided by the Department of Materials and Life Sciences, and the Green Engineering Program, provided by the Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences.[28]
Department of Theology | Department of Philosophy | Department of Education | Department of Law | Department of Economics | Department of English Studies | Department of Global Studies | Department of Materials and Life Sciences | Department of Liberal Arts |
Department of History | Department of Psychology | Department of International Legal Studies | Department of Management | Department of German Studies | Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences | |||
Department of Japanese Literature | Department of Sociology | Department of Legal Studies of the Global Environment | Department of French Studies | Department of Information and Communication Sciences | ||||
Department of English Literature | Department of Social Services | Department of Hispanic Studies | ||||||
Department of German Literature | Department of Nursing | Department of Russian Studies | ||||||
Department of French Literature | Department of Luso-Brazilian Studies | |||||||
Department of Journalism |
In addition to most courses of study taught almost entirely in Japanese, Sophia has a variety of academic programmes and courses taught in English. The Faculty of Liberal Arts (FLA), the Green Science and Engineering courses in the Faculty of Science and Technology (FST), and the Sophia Program for Sustainable Futures (SPSF).[29]
Department of Economics (Faculty of Economics) | September 2020 | |
Department of Education (Faculty of Human Sciences) | September 2020 | |
Department of Sociology (Faculty of Human Sciences) | September 2020 | |
Department of Global Studies (Faculty of Global Studies) | September 2020 | |
Department of Journalism (Faculty of Humanities) | September 2021 | |
Department of Management (Faculty of Economics) | September 2022 |
Sophia University is a comprehensive research university with 9 undergraduate faculties with 10 graduate schools located on a single campus in Chiyoda, Tokyo. Leading higher education institutions in Japan toward globalisation and academic research, the university provides a strong international network of scholarship, attracting researchers and students from overseas to study in Japan.
As a research institution, the university established the Sophia Research Organisation (SRO) in April 2005 in order to promote and facilitate interdisciplinary and organisational research activities. The SRO possesses two research divisions: the Research Institutes Division and the Project Research Division. The university also has affiliated Research Organisations.
Simultaneously, Sophia's Centre for Research Promotion and Support provides additional support to general research activities and strengthens the a three-way collaboration initiative among industries, government, and academia. The Intellectual Property Rights Committee, established in 2005, ensures smooth collaborative support among the three individual groups and examines the inventions and intellectual properties of the researchers affiliated with Sophia University.[30]
To assist with academic research and learning, Sophia currently has a total of 3 libraries and an affiliated library, possessing in total more than 1.15 million books and 12,570 journal titles.[31] [32]
Sophia Research Organisation | Institute for Christian Culture | Nanotechnology Research Centre | Kirishitan Bunko Library |
Centre for Research Promotion and Support | Institute for Medieval Thought | Centre for Islamic Studies | Monumenta Nipponica |
Intellectual Property Rights Committee | Iberoamerican Institute | Sustainable Energy Research Centre | Sophia Asia Centre for Research and Human Development |
Sophia Science and Technology Liaison Office (SLO) | Linguistic Institute for International Communication | Research and Development Centre for CAE Technologies Applied for Next-Generation Transport Aircraft Design | Institute for Grief Care |
Institute of Global Concern | Microwave Science Research Centre | Semiconductor Research Institute | |
Institute of Comparative Culture | Water-Scarce Society Information and Research Centre | Sophia University Institute of Bioethics | |
European Institute | Sophia Institute for Human Security | Human Resource Centre for International Cooperation | |
Institute of Asian, African, and Middle EasternStudies | Institute of International Relations | ||
Institute of American and Canadian Studies | |||
Institute of Media, Culture, and Journalism | |||
Institute for Studies of the Global Environment |
Monumenta Nipponica [33] | ||
AGLOS Journal of Area-Based Global Studies [34] | Graduate School of Global Studies | |
コスモポリス (Cosmopolis) [35] | ||
Sophia Discussion Paper Series [36] | Faculty of Economics Graduate School of Economics | |
Sophia Business Case Series [37] | ||
上智経済論集 (Sophia Economic Review) [38] | ||
Sophia Linguistica [39] | Sophia Linguistic Institute for International Communication | |
イベロアメリカ研究 (Ibero-American Studies) [40] | Ibero-American Institute | |
Encontros Lusófonos [41] | ||
ラテンアメリカ研究 (ILA: Investigaciones Latinoamericanas) [42] | ||
ラテンアメリカ・モノグラフ・シリーズ (LAMS: Latin American Monograph Series) [43] | ||
Sophia Journal of Asian, African, and Middle Eastern Studies [44] | Institute of Asian, African, and Middle Eastern Studies | |
Occasional Papers (Monograph Series) [45] | ||
SOIAS Research Paper Series [46] | Sophia Organization for Islamic Area Studies |
Sophia University has student housing options and dormitories scattered throughout Tokyo. These university dormitories provide facilities and spaces for students to undertake study and research activities. Events and various programmes are also organised by students and housing staff for the benefit of the housing community all year round.[47]
List of Student Dormitories:
Sophia University has a group of designated and recommended dormitories, which are owned and operated by various private housing companies.[48]
List of Designated Dormitories Owned by Private Companies:
Tsu N: | 41 |
Jpu N: | 22 |
We N: | 8 |
Nikkeibp G: | 4 |
Gbudu N: | SA |
Line 1: | 0 |
Line 2: | 0 |
Qs W: | 901–950 |
Qs A: | 234 |
The A: | 601+ |
The W: | 1501+ |
There are several rankings below related to Sophia University.
According to the Times Higher Education 2021 Japan University Rankings, Sophia University is ranked 18th in the nation.[49] Sophia is the fourth largest liberal arts university in the country.
According to the 2023 QS World University Rankings, Sophia University is ranked 801–1000.[50] In the 2021 QS rankings, Sophia was 181st in Asia and the 28th in Japan. Its 2021 Times Higher Education Impact Ranking, which assesses universities against the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs), is 601–800.[51]
Alumni of Sophia have good employment prospects in Japanese industries. According to the Weekly Economist's 2010 rankings and the PRESIDENT's article on 2006/10/16, graduates from Sophia have the eighth best employment rate in 400 major companies, and the average graduate salary is the sixth best in Japan.[52] [53]
Admission to Sophia is highly selective and competitive. As such it is considered one of the top private universities along with Keio University and Waseda University. Typical acceptance rate is 5%.[54] Its entrance difficulty is considered one of the toughest along with Waseda and Keio among 730 private universities.[55] [56] [57]
Sophia University has student and academic exchange agreements with 387 overseas partner universities in 81 countries and regions as of June 2021.[58]
List of External University Agreements and Affiliations: