Taisho University | |
Native Name: | 大正大学 |
Established: | 1926 |
Type: | Private |
City: | Toshima (Tokyo) and Saitama |
Country: | Japan |
Campus: | Urban |
Mascot: | None |
is a private university in Nishi-sugamo, Toshima, Tokyo, Japan. The university was founded in the last year of the Taishō period (1926) by merging the three Buddhist colleges. The three were:
Its school precepts are based on the Tendai school of Buddhism. The concept for the university began when five doctors—Junjiro Takakusu, Masaharu Anesaki, Eun Maeda, Senshō Murakami and Masataro Sawayanagi—who were leaders of Buddhist society in Japan, proposed creating a Buddhist university union.[1]
The undergraduate school consists of the Faculty of Regional Development, Faculty of Psychology and Sociology, Faculty of Human Studies, Faculty of Literature, Faculty of Communication and Culture, and Faculty of Buddhist Studies.
The graduate school offers Advanced Buddhist Studies, Advanced Human Studies, and Advanced Literary Studies.
It has a one-year program in which up to 40 overseas students are admitted each year to a special course. This prepares them for enrollment in undergraduate or graduate programs at Japanese universities.
The closest train stations to the Sugamo Campus are: