The history of pharmacy studies in Croatia

Pharmazie. 2014 Feb;69(2):154-60.

Abstract

The first study of pharmacy on Croatian territory was founded in the early 19th century (1806-1813). Vicencio Dandolo (1758-1819), a pharmacist from Venice who was Napoleon's governor of Dalmatia, established a lyceum in Zadar in 1806. It included education for pharmacists. The Lyceum (later the Central School) was closed in 1811. The founding of the modern University of Zagreb (1874) and its Department of Mathematics and Natural Sciences (1876) created the conditions for the development of university education for pharmacists. The study of pharmacy was introduced at the University of Zagreb in 1882 through the efforts of the Croatian-Slavonian Pharmaceutical Association and the professors of the Faculty of Philosophy. The study went through a series of reforms. The most significant one came with the introduction of the four-year study of pharmacy and the establishment of the Pharmacy Department of the Faculty of Philosophy (1928). The independent Faculty of Pharmacy (today's Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry) was founded at the University of Zagreb in 1942. Since 1989, it has had two separate studies (Pharmacy and Medical Biochemistry).

Publication types

  • Historical Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Croatia
  • Education, Pharmacy / history*
  • History of Pharmacy
  • History, 19th Century
  • History, 20th Century
  • History, Medieval
  • Nobel Prize
  • Pharmacies / history
  • Pharmacists / history
  • Universities / history