ART AND CULTURE.

The ten universities that have produced the most Nobel laureates in history

Since its inception in 1901, more than 2,000 Nobel Prizes have been awarded to the world's most pioneering people in their fields. From medicine to literature, chemistry to physics to economics (introduced in 1969), there are many who have made strong contributions to the betterment of humanity.

But where did all these Nobel laureates study? According to a study conducted with great efficiency by "Ceo World", it was possible to trace the study path of Nobel laureates, identifying the universities that, throughout history, have produced the greatest number of them.

It is not all that surprising that, among the top 10 universities in the ranking, as many as eight are on U.S. soil and are those called " of Ivy League". The other top two are in Europe, between Paris and London.

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Harvard University
Located in Massachusetts, in the United States, it is perhaps the most famous university in the world. It has graduated as many as 161 Nobel prizes. The first was won in 1914, more than 100 years ago. The latest Nobel of Harvard was, in 2019, Michael Kremer for economics.
Ajay Suresh - Wikipedia.org
Columbia University
As many as 96 awards have been won by alumni of this prestigious private university at New York. One of the most famous is the economist Joseph Eugene Stiglitz, who won it in 2001 for his studies on market trends.
bryan... - Wikipedia.org
University of Cambridge
One of the oldest universities in the world (founded in 1209), it boasts as many as 90 Nobel prizes among its former members. Also from Cambrdge comes the first Muslim Nobel laureate, Pakistani Abdus Salam.
Rick Seidel - Wikipedia.org
University of Chicago
It boasts as many as 89 Nobel award winners , among whom the most famous is undoubtedly the former U.S. president Barak Obama. Chicago also boasts at least one winner in every single category of the award.
DrKenneth - Wikipedia.org
MIT
Massachusetts Insitute of Technology is the world's leading technical school. The Boston faculty boasts no fewer than 83 awards Nobel in its history, the most famous of which is, interestingly, Kofi Annan, not a technician but a humanist, winner of Nobel for peace in 2001.
Beyond My Ken - Wikipedia.org
University of California
Based at Oakland (San Francisco, California), this institute boasts 80 Nobel awards among its former members. Linus Pauling is one of the most famous, twice winning the prize. In 1954 for chemistry and in 1962 for peace.
Keofenlio - Wikipedia.org
Oxford University
58 awards for Oxford, the English university founded in 1096. The most famous Nobel winners for this university are literary figures, such as Thomas Eliot and William Golding ("Lord of the Flies").
King of Hearts - Wikipedia.org
Stanford University
Stanford won the same number of Nobel as Oxford (58). but he is at least 800 years younger. Kenneth Arrow was the youngest winner of Nobel for economics, at only 51.
Ad Meskens - Wikipedia.org
Yale University
Yale is famous for its medical and physiology courses. Among the Nobel (52 in all) best-known writers Sinclair Lewis and economist Paul Krugman.
Dinkum - Wikipedia.org
La Sorbonne
The latest in this special ranking is La Sorbonne, a famous university in Paris, which boasts 51 winners of the Nobel. Jean-Paul Sartre refused the award, but other great alumni have won it, such as the very famous Marie Curie, winner of the Nobel for physics in 1903 (together with her husband) and that for chemistry in 1911.
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