The University of Bialystok is the largest university in the north-eastern region of Poland, educating in various fields of study, including humanities, social and natural sciences and mathematics. It has nine faculties, including a foreign one in Vilnius. Four faculties have been awarded the highest scientific category âÂÂAâÂÂ. The University of Bialystok has the right to confer doctoral degrees in ten fields, as well as postdoctoral degrees in law, economics, chemistry, biology, history and physics.
Over 13,000 students are being educated in 31 fields of study, including doctoral studies and postgraduate studies. The university employs nearly 800 academics, almost 200 professors among them.
Every year the university carries out approximately 60 research projects, financed from domestic and foreign funds; it also benefits from the structural funds. Among the university's many accomplishments are its participation in 6th and 7th Framework Programme for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration, Horizon 2020, Comenius and Aspera as well as the DAPHNE III programme.
After the end of World War II and the establishment a communist regime in the form of the Polish People's Republic, a proposal arose to establish a higher humanities school in Biaà Âystok, prompted by the desire of academics from Vilnius University (which became part of the Soviet Union), to settle there. Although local and political authorities recognized the need for such a university, the economic climate at the time did not favour the implementation of the project as well as the shortage of personnel in northeastern Poland in professions requiring economic knowledge and in the teaching profession.
On July 15, 1968, by order of the Minister of Education and Higher Education, Professor Henryk Jabà Âoà Âski, the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw was established as a higher vocational institute called Higher Pedagogical School (). The order specified provisions concerning its supervision, management, and organization. The Branch was subordinated to the University of Warsaw in both organizational and academic matters. It was directly supervised by the university's Vice-Rector, while its internal organization was determined by the Rector. Teaching was provided by staff employed at the Branch as well as by faculty from other University units delegated by the Rector. The Branch operated with its own budget and staffing structure, separate from those of the University of Warsaw.
On July 20, 1968, the Minister of Education and Higher Education issued an order defining the mission and scope of work for the newly established institution. Although the typescript of this order exists, its content is widely known, and it has been cited by numerous authors, the document itself is absent from officially published legal records. Nevertheless, the regulations took effect, and at the start of the 1968/1969 academic year, the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw began operating as the Higher Pedagogical School. Three faculties were created at that time: Humanities, Mathematics and Natural Sciences, and Elementary Education.
On September 29, 1972, a decree was issued by the Minister of Science, Higher Education, and Technology Jan Marian Kaczmarek granting the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw the right to establish its own organizational structure. This decree resulted in the transformation of the school into a university with a full academic profile on October 1, 1972, and the introduction of a single four-year master's degree program and a three-year vocational program.
In December 1981, during the growing political tensions in the country and the subsequent imposing of Martial law, there were growing protests among students of the university. Mirosà Âaw Goà ÂÃÂbiewski, a student in the university who had witnessed the attempted arrest of his father, Feliks Goà ÂÃÂbiewski (former chairman of a local Inter-Enterprise Coordination Committee), relayed the news regarding the beginning of the martial law to his colleagues at the local branch of the Independent Students' Association. A campaign was then launched to secure Strike Committee and NZS documents and printing equipment, transporting them to the Students dormitories.
In the 1980s a public discussion emerged concerning the independence of the Biaà Âystok Branch of Warsaw University. In June 1982, at the 21st Session of the Municipal National Council in Biaà Âystok, a motion to transform the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw into an independent university was passed. In July of that year, the Senate of the University of Warsaw presented its official position regarding the Branch's future, and the Voivodeship National Council in Biaà Âystok resolved that "it is advisable, justified, and necessary to create conditions in Biaà Âystok for the establishment of a university as soon as possible" entrusting the Voivode of Biaà Âystok Voivodeship with ensuring the smooth operation of the future university.
At the end of 1983, Order No. 48 of the Minister of Science, Higher Education, and Technology created a working group to refine the programmatic and organizational concept for the planned University of Biaà Âystok. The team brought together representatives from scientific, administrative, and political bodies across three neighbouring voivodeships. Their findings, compiled in the document Programmatic and Organizational Concept of the University of Biaà Âystok were submitted to the Minister in June 1984. A month later, the Patriotic Movement for National Rebirth established the Citizensâ Committee for the University of Biaà Âystok. In December 1984, during its third session, the Biaà Âystok Voivodeship Council endorsed these efforts and tasked the Voivode of Biaà Âystok Voivodeship with preparing a detailed timetable for further development.
In the early 1990s, none of the departments at the Biaà Âystok Branch held the right to confer habilitation degrees, and only the Faculty of Economics was authorized to award the doctoral degree in economics. This situation created a significant obstacle to changing the Branch's institutional status. During discussions on the matter, the idea also emerged of integrating five higher education institutions in the city: the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw, the Medical Academy, the Branch of the Academy of Music, the , and the . In January 1992, the Temporary Integration Council of Higher Education Institutions was established. In June of that same year, preliminary assumptions for the statute of the University of Biaà Âystok were prepared. Subsequently, in March 1993, the Senate of the University of Warsaw, with the support of the Senate Committee of the University of Biaà Âystok, adopted a resolution requesting the senates of Biaà Âystok's institutions to state their positions on a potential merger that would lead to the creation of the University of Biaà Âystok. Although this initiative was ultimately abandoned, efforts aimed at establishing an independent university continued.
In June 1994, a meeting was held with Deputy Prime Ministers Aleksander à Âuczak and Wà Âodzimierz Cimoszewicz at an extraordinary meeting of the Senate Committee of the University of Warsaw for the Biaà Âystok Branch. Meetings were also held with members of parliament from various political groups in the region, as well as discussions with the voivode and the city mayor, which yielded positive messages and conclusions. On March 15, 1995, the Senate of the University of Warsaw adopted a resolution to grant independence to the Biaà Âystok Branch, contingent upon its compliance with the formal requirements established by the General Council of Higher Education. These requirements included the right to confer postdoctoral degrees in two fields of study and doctoral degrees in one field. At that time, the Biaà Âystok Branch possessed doctoral qualifications in history, economics, and law, and was awaiting the decision of the Central Commission for Academic Degrees in the field of pedagogy.
In February 1997, Minister of National Education Professor Jerzy Wiatr approved a decision that had been rejected just two months earlier. Soon after, led by Prime Minister Wà Âodzimierz Cimoszewicz adopted a resolution to establish the university. On May 14, 1997, the Senate of the University of Warsaw unanimously voted in favour of granting the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw independence with a resolution declaring that the university would be established in October of the same year. The University of Warsaw Senate set the condition that at least one of the faculties would have the right to confer habilitations (the Faculty of Law). The Rector of the University of Warsaw, prof. , though skeptical, agreed. On June 1, the Sejm of the Republic of Poland passed the Act on the Establishment of the University of Biaà Âystok, which was signed-into-law in August by the President of Poland. On October 1, 1997, the university opened the academic for the first time as a fully independent institution.
In March 2006, city mayor, Ryszard Tur, in a letter to Professor Jerzy Nikitorowicz, Rector of the University of Biaà Âystok, proposed a 33-hectare plot on Cioà Âkowskiego Street as the site for the construction of a new campus which would be the future base of the university, uniting a number of buildins located throughout the city. He also promised that the investment would be included in the currently revised spatial development plan. On June 8, 2006, at the Wedding Palace in Biaà Âystok, Tur formally signed an agreement with Professor Jerzy Nikitorowicz regarding the construction of the University of Biaà Âystok Campus. Construction of the campus began in 2008.
The university has a branch in Vilnius, Lithuania.
The early years of the university were characterized by difficult conditions: the rooms in which university classes were held were scattered throughout the city. Most were not suitable for lectures or even tutorials, as before they were transferred to the university, they housed offices and bureaus. There was a shortage of tables and chairs everywhere, and the secretariats lacked equipment such as typewriters and calculating machines. In the 1974/1975 academic year, the Branch had at its disposal buildings on Mickiewicza, à Âwierkowa, Marchlewskiego and Lipowa streets, and on . In that period, plans were developed for the construction of a university campus in Krywlany, and in 1979, plans were made for the construction of new facilities on Mickiewicza Street. This vision, although in a modified form, was not realized until the 21st century with the new campus opening in 2015. In the 1983/1984 academic year, the Branch became the occupier of the premises on Próchniaka Street, leasing the building at 14 . The intention was to acquire the building formerly occupied by the Technical School of Economics on Warszawska Street. In early April 1990, the Independent Students' Association of the Biaà Âystok Branch of the University of Warsaw issued an appeal, recalling that three months had already passed since the occupation of the , and that the mayor of Biaà Âystok was delaying the transfer of the building to the Biaà Âystok university. The threat of squandering the opportunity to improve the housing situation at the University of Warsaw was becoming real. Consequently, the Independent Students' Association called on all employees and students to gather at the Citizens' Committee headquarters on the corner of Lenina (now Branickiego) and Elektryczna Streets to exert pressure and quickly resolve the matter. The students' actions resulted in a positive resolution. In May 1990, city surveyor Zdzisà Âaw Niemotko, acting on the orders of Mayor Czaban, issued a formal decision to transfer the building of the Provincial Committee of the Polish United Workers' Party to the University of Warsaw Branch. The university authorities located the Faculty of Humanities there. After the establishment of the University of Biaà Âystok in 1997, the Faculties of Sociology and History and Philology were housed there.
In 2024 the construction for a new building for the faculty of humanities began in the university campus in Cioà Âkowskiego street.
Faculty of Biology was created in 2019, after split of Biology-Chemistry Faculty. The seat of faculty is in university campus, at 1J Cioà Âkowski Street.
Faculty of Chemistry was created in 2019, after split of Biology-Chemistry Faculty. The seat of faculty is in university campus, at 1K Cioà Âkowski Street.
Economic Faculty was created in 1968. After few transformations, since 2019 exists with current name. During all this time, the seat of this faculty is in historic building at 63 Warszawska Street.
Faculty of Philology was created in 1997, after split of Humanistic Faculty. The seat of this faculty is at 1 NZS Square.
This faculty was created in 2019, after the split of History-Sociologic Faculty. Until 2023, it was the Institut of Philosophy. The seat of this faculty is at 1 NZS Square.
Faculty of Physics was created in 2007, after split of Mathematics-Physics Faculty. The seat of faculty is in university campus, at 1L Cioà Âkowski Street.
Faculty of History was created in 2023. Before this year, History Studies were at: Humanistic Faculty (1968âÂÂ1997), Historical-Sociological Faculty (1997âÂÂ2019) and Faculty of History and International Relation. The seat of this faculty is at 1 NZS Square, at "Home of Party" (former seat of Voivodship Committee of Polish United Worker's Party), currently (in 2025) is building new seat of this faculty at university campus.
This faculty was created in 2019, after the split of Mathematics-Informatics Faculty. Until 2023, it was as Institute of Informatics. The seat of this faculty is in university campus, at 1M Cioà Âkowski Street.
Faculty of Mathematics was created in 2019, after split of Mathematics-Informatics Faculty. The seat of faculty is in university campus, at 1M Cioà Âkowski Street.
High School teaching teachers to their occupation was created in 1968 as High Teacher School. After some changes, it exists with current name since 2019. The seat of this faculty is at 20 Ã Âwierkowa Street.
This faculty was created in 1990. The seat of this faculty is at 1 Mickiewicz Street.
This faculty was created in 2023, after transformation of former Institute of Sociology. The seat of this faculty is at 1 NZS Square.
This faculty was created in 2023, after the split of Faculty of History and International Relations. The seat of this faculty is in university campus, at 1K Cioà Âkowski Street.
This faculty was created in 2019, after split of History-Sociology Faculty. Until 2023, this faculty was the Institute of Cultural Studies. The seat of this faculty is at 1 NZS Square.
This faculty was created in 2019, after the split of Faculty of Economy and Management. Until 2023, this faculty existed as Institute of Management. The seat of this faculty is at 63 Warszawska Street.
This faculty was created in 2007. It was the first branch of Unlituanian university in Lithuania and first branch of Polish university abroad. The seat of this faculty is at 143 Kalvarijà ³ Street.
The University of Bialystok Foundation, Universitas Bialostocensis () is an independent, non-profit, non-governmental organization located in Biaà Âystok, Poland.
Foundation was chartered on April 22, 2004, by founders from the academic circles of the University of Biaà Âystok. Foundation is governed by an independent Board of Directors. Foundation aims organizational, material and financial support for the academic excellence and future development of the University of Bialystok. It runs such activities as: lectures, seminars, conferences, courses and workshops, business and legal consulting, participation in EU funding programs, providing financial support for academic projects and student scholarships, support studentsâ organizations at the University of Bialystok.
International cooperation is also carried out based on about 200 bilateral agreements with institutions from the EU within the framework of the Erasmus programme.
As the first university in the country the University of Biaà Âystok launched a foreign branch in Vilnius, Lithuania; the Faculty of Economics and Informatics has been created there, which educates people of mostly Polish origin, but it is also increasingly popular among the Lithuanian youth.
In 2013 the University of Biaà Âystok initiated the creation of an international consortium of universities from Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine and Russia under the name of Border University Network. It is composed of 10 universities. Cooperation shall include applying jointly for international grants, joint research projects, exchange of research and implementation services.