The University of Birmingham (English Name: University of Birmingham), founded in 1825, is one of the world's top 100 universities located in Birmingham, the second largest city in the UK, and one of the top universities in the UK. In 1900, it obtained the royal charter granted by Queen Victoria. It is the first member of the six famous "red brick universities" in Britain and one of the 12 elite universities in Britain. At the same time, he is also a core member of the "Russell university group" of the British Ivy League, a member of the M5 University Alliance, a founding member of the international university organization "Universitas 21", and a member of the Sino British university engineering education and research alliance. In 2017 / 2018, QS World University ranked 84th in the world (the highest 62 over the years). In the 2017 TEF assessment officially organized by the UK, it ranked third in the UK. In the professional ranking of British universities at times, physics and astronomy ranked second, chemical engineering ranked fourth and computer science ranked fifth. Birmingham University was named the "University of the year" in 2013-2014 by the Sunday Times and the times. In addition, the University of Birmingham Business School is the first business school established in Higher Education in the UK. It is one of the world's top 1% elite business schools certified by AACSB, AMBA and EQUIS. At the same time, Birmingham University is quite strong in the fields of medicine and bioscience. Among them, the employment rate of Bioscience is second only to Cambridge University. Since the founding of Birmingham University for more than a century, it has been recognized by the world for its high-quality and multi field research. British prime ministers Stanley Baldwin, Neville Chamberlain and Robert Anthony Eden, Nobel laureate Francis Aston, inventor of mass spectrometer, Li Siguang, father of modern Chinese geology and Yao Tongbin, founder of two bombs and one star, Ke Jun, the founder of Chinese metal physics and metallurgical history, are outstanding alumni of Birmingham University. By the end of 2017, 11 Nobel laureates, 3 British prime ministers and 5 foreign heads of government had emerged from Birmingham University.