The area of Pisa has been inhabited since the seventh century BC, due to its strategic proximity to the sea and location on the Arno river. In 180 BC, it became a Roman colony and port for naval enterprises against Ligurians, Gauls, and Carthaginians. During the Roman domination it was connected to Rome by the Via Aurelia. Remains of Roman shipyards can now be visited in the western part of the city.
Before the year 1000, the vocation of a seafaring city is demonstrated by the defensive collaborations with the city of Salerno against the Saracens. From the 11th to the early 15th century, Pisa was a Republic that expanded its commercial and military influence across the western Mediterranean. For this reason, it was then associated with the so-called Maritime Republics with Genoa, Venice, and Amalfi, which dominated the Mediterranean for many centuries.
In 1406 it fell under the dominion of Florence, and from that moment, a period of economic, demographic, and cultural decline began in the city. Under the dominion of the Medici, the city was repopulated and some important pieces of art were built. However, the port activity was transferred to Livorno.
The city cultural renaissance takes place with the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, which develops cultural and university activities also intervening on the communication infrastructures (railways and roads) and on the reclamation of the marshes along the Tyrrhenian coast. In the short period of Napoleonic domination, the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa was founded as a replica of the Ecole Normale in Paris.
Pope Clement VI founded the University of Pisa in 1343 with the mark “In supremae dignitatis” (a wording still present in the University logo). After closure from 1406 to 1543, Cosimo I dei Medici reopens the Pisano Studio in the Palazzo della Sapienza, whose construction had been begun by Lorenzo dei Medici. The Medici themselves decreed the University of Pisa as the reference University of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. In 1850 it was one of the first Italian universities to establish engineering studies with a degree course in Civil Engineering and Architecture, and 25 years later with the course of Applications for Engineering. The Application School for Engineers was established in 1913 and later became a Faculty of Engineering in 1935. In 1862 the University of Pisa was recognized as one of the six national primary universities along with Bologna, Pavia, Turin, Naples and Palermo.
The Pisa School of Engineering now offers ten three-year degree courses, 17 master’s degree courses, and a five-year single-cycle degree course in almost all Industrial, Information and Civil Engineering disciplines.