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  • Generous gift will help fight vascular disease and prevent limb amputations

    Our University and Leicester’s Hospitals have received a generous gift of £5.15 million by fashion retailer George Davies – the largest from an individual in the University’s history - to give hope to patients who face losing a leg because of poor circulation.

  • Reimagining the Restoration: Samuel Pepys's diary and popular history

    About the project Samuel Pepys’s lively diary of the 1660s describes major events such as the plague and the Great Fire of London, alongside his hectic private life.

  • Evidencing the impact of the generic learning outcomes

    Jo Graham was commissioned to uncover evidence of the awareness, use and impact of the Generic Learning Outcomes on the museum sector in the UK.

  • Light Microscopy Laboratory

    The School of Archaeology and Ancient History's dedicated suite of Carl Zeiss light microscopes, which can be used for undertaking research on archaeological materials, environmental samples, artefacts and for a wide variety of applications.

  • Cardelle Fergusson

    Cardelle Fergusson graduated from the Leicester MBA in 2020 with a specialisation in marketing, after a recommendation from a colleague to study at the University of Leicester.

  • Gau Naik

    Gau Naik is a highly accomplished professional with a wide-ranging background in business, marketing, and technology.

  • Treatment for frail heart patients improves survival rates

    A new study, led by the University of Leicester, shows that heart patients treated with revascularisation have better survival rates, even with a high risk of frailty.

  • Exploring Disabled Joy: Attenborough Arts Centre presents Traces

    Read more about Attenborough Arts' latest exhibition, Traces

  • Swirlonic super particles baffle physicists

    In recent years, active, self-propelled particles have received growing interest amongst the scientific community.  Examples of active particles and their systems are numerous and very diverse, ranging from bacterium films to flocks of birds or human crowds.

  • Skin swabs could detect COVID-19

    COVID-19 could be detected through non-invasive skin swab samples, new research published by the Universities of Leicester, Surrey and Manchester has revealed today.

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