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Learn about UiO's study offers, research, events, global engagement and more. Find out how to apply, collaborate and contact UiO as a prospective student or partner.
- Courses
The first number of the course number code corresponds to...
- Master's Programmes
All bachelor’s programmes at the University of Oslo are...
- Admission
The University of Oslo welcomes qualified international...
- Studies
Registrations. Studentweb, semester fee, deadlines, student...
- Services and tools
Norway's largest research library. IT services. Information...
- University of Oslo Library
Databases, recommended literature and relevant sources...
- Global UiO
The University of Oslo aims to make a significant...
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Organisation - Home - University of Oslo - Universitetet i...
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All bachelor’s programmes at the University of Oslo are taught in Norwegian. These are our master’s and PhD programmes offered in English and our study options for newly arrived refugees in Norway. Found 73 programmes.
Learn how to apply to the University of Oslo as an international applicant for bachelor's, master's, PhD, exchange or single courses. Find out about tuition fees, scholarships, academic system and calendar.
The University of Oslo (Norwegian: Universitetet i Oslo; Latin: Universitas Osloensis) is a public research university located in Oslo, Norway. It is the oldest university in Norway and consistently considered the country's leading university, one of the highest ranked universities in the Nordic countries and one of world's hundred highest ...
Learn about Norway's largest and oldest university, founded in 1811 and ranked #117 in QS World University Rankings. Find out its tuition fees, scholarships, campus locations, and similar universities.
Learn about the Faculty of Medicine's research, education and innovation in health sciences. Find courses, programmes, events and news from the oldest medical faculty in Norway.
The University of Oslo (UiO) was established in 1813. It was Norway’s first university, founded when the city after which it is named was still just a provincial town called Christiania. Since then it has made academic breakthroughs in law, science (especially maritime science) and played a key role in Norway's liberation from Denmark.