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History
The Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering
was founded as the first department of the School of
Engineering in 1967. Initially its name was Electrical
Engineering Department. It included eight chairs and five
laboratories. In the following period up to 1982, eleven more
chairs and five laboratories were established, while six
chairs were transferred to other departments.
In accordance with the law 1268/-82, the chair system was
abolished and Divisions were created within the Departments
into which all personnel and the laboratories were
incorporated. Three Divisions were formed in the Department of
Electrical Engineering as follows:
Electric Power Division (Electric
Power Systems Laboratory, Electromechanical Conversion
Laboratory, High Voltage Laboratory).
Telecommunications
and Electronics Division (Wireless Communications
Laboratory, Wire Communication Laboratory, Laboratory of
Electromagnetics, Applied Electronics Laboratory).
Systems and Automatic Control
Division (Systems and Measurements Laboratory,
Automatic Control Laboratory).
In the '80s the VLSI-Design Laboratory (Telecommunications and
Electronics Divi-sion), the Electrotechnic Materials
Laboratory (Electric Power Division), and the Automation and
Robotics Laboratory (Systems and Automatic Control Division)
were added to the Department. In addition 39 faculty positions
were established: 19 for Lecturers, 6 for Assistant Professors,
7 for Associate Professors, and 7 for Professors.
In the beginning of '90s one more laboratory, the Laboratory
of Computers (Telecommunications and Electronics Division) and
further faculty positions were established. In 1994, the
Division of Telecommunications & Electronics was split into
two:
Division of Telecommunications &
Information Technology
Division of Electronics & Computers.
In 1995 the Department of Electrical Engineering was renamed
Electrical and Computer Engineering Department
honouring its strong activity in the area of computers.
The Department now has 14 Professors, 13 Associate Professors,
12 Assistant Professors and 7 Lecturers. It offers instruction
and conducts research in the fields of Electric Power,
Telecommunications, Information Technology, Computers,
Electronics, Systems and Automatic Control, which are
described below in detail.
The Department was initially housed in temporary buildings.
Since 1985 it is housed a three-story building, especially
built for the Department of Electrical Engineering in the
University Campus.
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