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3966 results for: ‘Subjects ranking ’

  • Arts, culture and heritage

    Our commitment to enrich and add value to the cultural vitality of the region is reflected by our myriad artistic and cultural activities. Discover our Attenborough Arts Centre and the University's Botanic Garden and Attenborough Arboretum.

  • Mike Le Bas

    We are saddened to learn of the passing of Dr Michael John Le Bas, who was Senior Lecturer in Igneous Petrology in the Department of Geology from 1961 to 1992.

  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 216

    Academic Librarian.

  • Medicinal Chemistry BSc

    Every infection-fighting and disease-treating drug owes a great debt to chemistry. In this degree, you’ll be given a solid grounding in chemistry and its role alongside drug development.

  • Adele Parks: My time at Leicester

    Find out what bestselling author Adele Parks remembers about her time studying English at the University of Leicester.

  • Public lecture on kidney dialysis

    The challenges facing dialysis patients and the health professionals who treat them is the subject of a public lecture at the University of Leicester on Tuesday 11 February.

  • The Magazine Rack

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on April 27, 2018 Worth revisiting. Free access via this great site to a downloadable collection of over 34,000 digitized magazines and other monthly publications.   They can be sorted by title or date.

  • Space instrument gets good vibrations in major step for solar wind mission

    A cutting-edge x-ray telescope has shaken off a University of Leicester test that put it through the rigours of being launched into space.

  • Leicester expert’s tale of ancient library makes The Telegraph’s greatest books of 2025 list

    A University of Leicester expert’s book explaining how ancient Mesopotamian knowledge shaped the roots of modern civilisation has been named as one of the Telegraph’s greatest books of 2025.

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