National University Corporation Tottori University (国立大学法人鳥取大学, Tottori Daigaku), abbreviated to Toridai (鳥大), is a national university in Japan. The main campus is located in Koyamachō-Minami, Tottori City, Tottori Prefecture.[3] Another campus, the Faculty of Medicine, is located on the Yonago Campus in Yonago, Tottori.
History
Tottori University (TU) was established in 1949 by integrating five national colleges in Tottori Prefecture:
The university at first had three faculties: the Faculties of Liberal Arts (in Tachikawa-cho Campus), Medicine (in Yonago Campus) and Agriculture (in Yoshikata Campus). The latter history of the university is as follows:
1965: the Faculty of Engineering was established (in Tachikawa-cho Campus).
1966: the Faculty of Liberal Arts was renamed Faculty of Education.
In August 1966 the Faculties of Education, Engineering and Agriculture were removed to the new-born Koyama Campus, which is now the main Tottori Campus.
The former Tachikawa-cho and Yoshikata Campuses are now used as Sanyo and Epson factories.
1999: the Faculty of Education was reorganized into Faculty of Education and Regional Sciences.
2004: the Faculty of Education and Regional Sciences was reorganized into Faculty of Regional Sciences.
Organization
Faculties (undergraduate schools)
Faculty of Regional Sciences
Faculty of Medicine (in Yonago Campus)
Faculty of Engineering
Faculty of Agriculture
Graduate schools
Graduate School of Regional Sciences (Master's courses only)
Graduate School of Medical Sciences (Yonago Campus)
Graduate School of Engineering
Graduate School of Agriculture (Master's courses only)
United Graduate School of Agricultural Science (Doctoral courses only)
The Tottori University Arid Land Research Center (乾燥地研究センタ, Tottori Daigaku Kansōchi Kenkyū Sentā) dates to 1923. As Tottori College of Agriculture and Forestry was located near the Tottori Sand Dunes, its main task included the study of agriculture on dry or sandy land. In 1923 it opened a test field by the sand dunes. The tradition is followed by the TU Faculty of Agriculture and the research center.[5]
^ ab"鳥取大学 (Tottori Daigaku)". Nihon Daihyakka Zensho (Nipponika) (日本大百科全書(ニッポニカ) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2012. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2012-04-19.