Search results
Results from the Health.Zone Content Network
UHI Perth. UHI Perth ( Scottish Gaelic: Colaiste Pheairt OGE) provides further education and higher education in the city of Perth, Scotland, through a main campus and by distance learning . Courses include degrees, through its membership of the University of the Highlands and Islands, as well as work-based learning and vocational training.
The University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) ( Scottish Gaelic: Oilthigh na GĂ idhealtachd agus nan Eilean) is an integrated, tertiary institution encompassing both further and higher education. It is composed of 12 colleges and research institutions spread around the Highlands and Islands, Moray and Perthshire regions of Scotland.
2013. Merger of Angus College and Dundee College [1] [2] Edinburgh College. Dalkeith and Edinburgh. 2012. Merger of Edinburgh's Telford College, Jewel and Esk College and Stevenson College, Edinburgh. Fife College. Cowdenbeath, Cupar, Dunfermline, Glenrothes, Kirkcaldy, Leven, Lochgelly and Rosyth. 2013.
Glenalmond College is a co-educational independent boarding school in Perth and Kinross, Scotland, for children aged between 12 and 18 years. It is situated on the River Almond near the village of Methven, about 8 miles (13 km) west of the city of Perth. The college opened in 1847 as Trinity College, Glenalmond and was renamed in 1983.
List of universities in Scotland. There are fifteen universities based in Scotland, the Open University, and three other institutions of higher education. [1] [2] The first university in Scotland was St John's College, St Andrews, founded in 1418. [3] St Salvator's College was added to St. Andrews in 1450.
Edinburgh Law School, founded in 1707, is a school within the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom dedicated to research and teaching in law.It is located in the historic Old College, the original site of the University.
History The lobby of the Scrymgeour Building. The origins of the Law School begin with the foundation of the University of St Andrews, around 1413.A group of Augustinian clergy, driven from the University of Paris by the Avignon schism and from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge by the Anglo-Scottish Wars, formed a society of higher learning in St Andrews, which offered courses of ...
The College at its foundation dealt with underdeveloped civil law. It did not dispense justice in criminal matters as that was an area of the law reserved to the King's justice, through the justiciars (hence the High Court of the Justiciary), the Barony Courts and the Commission of Justiciary. The High Court of Justiciary was only incorporated ...