Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agriculture University
Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agricultural University, formerly Rajendra Agricultural University, is an agriculture university and is recognised as Institute of National Importance.It is located in Pusa, Samastipur district, Bihar
Motto in English | Lead me from darkness to light |
---|---|
Type | Public |
Established | 1903 |
Chancellor | Prafulla Kumar Mishra[1] |
Vice-Chancellor | Ramesh Chandra Srivastava[2] |
Location | Pusa, Samastipur , , |
Campus | Rural |
Website | www |
History
Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agricultural University (Earlier, Rajendra Agricultural University) was originally established as India's first-ever Imperial Agriculture Research Institute.
The foundation stone of the Agricultural Research Institute and college was laid by Lord Curzon on 1 April 1905. In his speech, the viceroy had expressed his vision that the seed he was planting would soon blossom out, making Pusa the nucleus of agricultural activities, research and education which would not only benefit Bihar and Bengal but the whole of the country and would attract the best of talents from India and abroad. In separate meeting with the Bihar Planters Association, he fervently hoped that the institute would-be of immense service to them in their grave hour of crisis caused by the German Indigo scientist.
Lord Curzon left by the end of 1905 and Lord Minto was his successor. Till the last minute, he had seen through each and every detail of the Pusa project which virtually was his brainchild. Incidentally, one major issue on which he had not agreed was the architecture of the main building, its wings, vaults, and arches but finally, he gave his consent of course with a stint. Rightfully, Pusa received an imperial status in 1918, being renamed as the Imperial Agricultural Research Institute (IARI).
In 1934, after a major earthquake rocked Bihar and which severely damage the main buildings, the Imperial Institute was shifted to the new Pusa campus in New Delhi and that eventually became Indian Agricultural Research Institute. What remained was downgraded to an agricultural research station until 3 December 1970, when the government of Bihar established Rajendra Agricultural University.
On 11 May 2016 Parliament of India passed the Central University Bill. So RAU, Pusa has been upgraded to Central University and named as Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agricultural University.[3][4]
Academics
There are five faculties in the university in the disciplines of Agriculture, Veterinary & Animal Sciences, Agricultural Engineering, Basic Sciences, Humanities & Home Science, besides the college of agriculture, fisheries and institute of dairy technology. The university offers six undergraduate degree programmes, thirty-three postgraduate programmes and eighteen PhD programmes. It is also the only university to provide an MBA in Agribusiness programme.
Departments of University
- Agronomy
- Entomology
- Agricultural Economics
- Nematology
- Soil Science
- Extension Education
- Plant Breeding and Genetics
- Forestry
- Plant Pathology
- Agril Biotechnology and Molecular Biology
- Microbiology
- Soil and Water Engineering
- Farm Machinery & Power
- Processing & Food Engineering
Constituent Centres of University
- Tirhut College of Agriculture, Dholi, Muzaffarpur
- College of Agricultural Engineering, Pusa
- College of Basic Sciences & Humanities, Pusa
- College of Home Science, Pusa
- College of Fisheries, Dholi, Muzaffarpur
- Sugarcane Research Institute, Pusa. *College of Rural Management, Pusa. * College of Agri Business Management, Pusa.
References
- "Chancellor appointment notification" (PDF). Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agricultural University. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
- "Vice-Chancellor's Profile - Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agricultural University". Dr. Rajendra Prasad Central Agricultural University. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
- https://www.rpcau.ac.in/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/DRPCAU_ACT.pdf
- PTI (13 July 2016). "Cabinet okays name change of Rajendra Central Agricultural University". The Economic Times. Retrieved 29 July 2018.