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The National Autonomous University of Nicaragua (Spanish: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Nicaragua, UNAN) is a public university in Nicaragua. Its main campus is located in Managua . The original campus, UNAN-Leon , is located in León and is now mainly used for medicine majors.
The Managua campus of UNAN opened in 1969. Since 1982, UNAN-Managua and UNAN-León operates as separate entities. National University of Engineering Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería (UNI) 12 Managua, Estelí: 12261: public: 1983: Architecture, engineering: Nicaraguan Technological University Universidad Tecnológica Nicaragüense (UTN) 21 ...
In 1812, UNAN-León became the second university in Central America and the last one established during the end of the Spanish colony on the continent of America. By government decree in 1983, the campus of the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua in León and Managua, became two separate entities: UNAN and UNAN-León. [2]
– Separation of UNAN in two campus: UNAN-León and UNAN-Managua with the intention that both campuses would be autonomous. – Return to annual regime and blocks system removing the semester regime and the credit system. – Conformation of new curricula and programs of subjects from defining the areas of occupation of each of the specialties.
UNAN Managua was founded in 1983, but did not break into the first division until 1985. [1] UNAN Managua has spent much of its history struggling to earn promotion to the top flight. Their first serious effort came in 2008–2009, when they earned their way into a relegation playoff against Real Madriz. They lost, 7–2 on aggregate.
León is located along the Río Chiquito (Chiquito River), some 90 kilometres (56 miles) northwest of Managua, and some 18 km (11 miles) east of the Pacific Ocean coast. León has long been the political and intellectual center of the nation and its National Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN) was founded in 1813, making it the second ...
UNAN Managua This page was last edited on 29 March 2018, at 18:04 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
He joined the FSLN in its infancy in the 1960s and was a key figure in the organization by the time the uprising came to a head in the late '70s, having built a network of subversives in Managua’s slums. [5] He was the dean of the UNAN's College of Science and Letters until he joined the anti-Somozas effort in 1978. [2]