Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history/military

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Royal Military Academy (Belgium)

Military university of Belgium

Royal Military Academy (Belgium)

Summary

Military university of Belgium

FieldValue
nameRoyal Military Academy
native_namefr
nl
de
image[[File:Armoiries ERM.svg200px]]
established
typeMilitary academy
head_labelCommandant
headMajor general An-Roos De Potter
students850
cityBrussels
countryBelgium
coor
academic_affiliationsISMS
website
logo[[File:X - Ecole Royale Militaire (Belgique) - Polytechnique.svg80px]]
Polytechnique faculty
[[File:Omega - Ecole Royale Militaire (Belgique) - Promotion toutes armes.svg80px]]
S.M.S. faculty

nl de Polytechnique faculty
S.M.S. faculty

The Royal Military Academy (, ; , ) is the military university of Belgium. The institution is responsible for the education of the officers of the five components of the Belgian defence (Army, Air Force, Cyber, Navy, Medical) and is located in Brussels in a building constructed by the architects Henri Maquet and Henri Van Dievoet. The courses are given in French, Dutch, and English. The institution's predecessor was the Royal Military and Mathematics Academy of Brussels.

The academy comprises two faculties:

  • The Faculty of Applied Sciences (Polytechnique, X): Master of Science in engineering sciences; comparable to the French École polytechnique (also nicknamed "X" and founded by one of its ex-students, Jean Chapelié)
  • The Faculty of Social and Military Sciences (S.M.S.): Master in Social and Military Sciences

The Royal Higher Institute for Defence], the highest military academic institute in Belgium is also located at the RMA campus (cf. Defence College, previously War College).

Admission

Admission to the university is only possible through public exams.

First, candidates must pass a military test common to all Belgian military categories (Medical, Endurance and physical tests, and a psychologic evaluation). After passing these, applying students have to compete with each other in public exams. These consist of mathematics and French & Dutch written language tests. The university can only accommodate a certain number of students each year (rough estimate: 150/year) (strongly influenced by the need for officers of the Belgian military). Applicants compete with each other for these limited places.

Bologna

Since 2003, the academy made some changes to its faculties to conform with the Bologna Process. Both degrees are now taught within a five-year span. After the first three years, students receive a bachelor degree. The master's degree can be attained in succeeding the following two years. In contrast to the common Bologna implementation, flexibility in attaining the degrees is not greatly augmented. Student can only fail for one year within all five. Re-exams are, however, possible. Student cannot take courses with them to the next year; they have to pass the re-exams. Before 2003 most courses were fixed, but students had a limited choice of optional courses. A lot of flexibility regarding course choices was added by implementing course modules. Students can opt for certain modules which each hold specific and related courses. For example:

  • Law module
  • Psychology module
  • Weapon systems module (ballistics)
  • Management module
  • Marine science module
  • History module
  • Communication & Information Systems module (telecom, computer security, electricity)

The choice of course module is not always free, but is related with the chosen military speciality of the student (infantry, logistics, transmission, air traffic control, artillery, naval forces..) and often mandatory. The majority of the courses remains fixed in the bachelor years. In the master's years, the students follow more modules than fixed courses.

Nationalities

Officers-Students at the Royal Military Academy on parade on [[Belgian National Day]], 2011

The vast majority of the students have Belgian nationality, but cooperation with other countries has opened up the university to other nationalities. Many Luxembourgish officers receive their education in the university and have a long history in it.

The parade uniform

More recently the university received military students from Canada, Lebanon, United States, Niger, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Morocco, Tunisia and Rwanda, thanks to military cooperation, training and development programs. However, these students often belong to the social elite of their home country. The foreign students, in contrast to the Belgian students, have no obligation to follow the Dutch language courses.

Notable alumni

Royal family

The tradition of the royal princes to study at the academy is continuous.

[[File:Omega - Ecole Royale Militaire (Belgique) - Promotion toutes armes.svg40px]]

Others

[[File:X - Ecole Royale Militaire (Belgique) - Polytechnique.svg40px]]

Notable faculty

  • Émile Janssens (1902–1989), history
  • Oscar Michiels (1881–1946), military staffing
  • Jean Stas (1813–1891), chemistry

Affiliation

The Belgian Staff College was voted into the International Society of Military Sciences during the November 2011 meeting.

References

References

  1. [https://www.defence-institute.be/en/about-us/ Royal Higher Institute for Defence]
  2. "International Society of Military Sciences".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Royal Military Academy (Belgium) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report