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  • Collaborative research

    The University works with all types of partners to deliver research and innovation.

  • Holy Wars in Sacred Lands: Conflict and Coexistence during the Crusades

    Module code: HS2367 The Crusades were undoubtedly one of the most famous episodes of religious conflict and a central phenomenon of the High Middle Ages.

  • Ground-breaking Covid-19 work by University researchers wins award

    Ground-breaking Covid-19 work by University researchers wins award

  • Government issues record grant to University of Leicester to help students study abroad

    University of Leicester has been awarded over £1 million from the UK Government’s Turing Scheme

  • New species of rare ancient worm discovered in fossil hotspot

    A team of researchers including Leicester’s Professor David Siveter have discovered a new species of lobopodian, an ancient relative of modern-day velvet worms, in 430 million-years-old Silurian rocks in Herefordshire, UK.

  • Sarah Scott

    The academic profile of Professor Sarah Scott, Professor of Archaeology at University of Leicester

  • Gene inheritance for school and colleges

    Geneticists are interested in how genes, and the characteristics they influence, are passed on in families. Find out more by using our resources, designed for students in schools and colleges.

  • White Dwarfs

    White dwarfs are the end products of the life cycles of more than 90% of all stars. This makes them important laboratories for studying stellar evolution and the behaviour of matter at extremes of temperature and density.

  • Researcher involved in discovery of tiny star with a monstrous temper

    A tiny star with ‘a monstrous temper’ has been discovered by an international team of researchers, including Dr Sarah Casewell of the Department of Physics and Astronomy.

  • Prehistoric penis worms shed light on ocean ecology half a billion years ago

    Dr Tom Harvey from the Department of Geology has been involved in a study along with researchers at the University of Cambridge into Ottoia, a type of phallic-shaped ‘penis worm’ – and has helped to identify that the creature used a bizarre set of teeth to drag itself across...

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