It was first established as the Third Naval School on 8 November 1937 on the basis of a resolution Council of People's Commissars of the USSR on the formation of a naval school in the Far East. The school year began in January 1938, with first cadets being freshmen from the Frunze Naval School in Leningrad. It was renamed to the Pacific Naval School (TOVMU) in May 1939, and in 1940, the school was given the status of a university. On 21 April 1954, it received its current honorific name of Admiral Makarov. In September 1951, a navigational faculty and a mine-torpedo faculty was established at the school. Additional faculties were established in 1969, 1978 and 1995. Since 2009, the institute ceased to be an independent educational institution and became a branch of the Kuznetsov Naval Academy. In 2009, 18 females were admitted to the Faculty of Radio Communication for the first time. In 2014, the institute received the status of a Higher Naval School.[1]
Since its foundation, the school has graduated around 13,000 naval officers.[2] Graduation from the school is correlated with higher rates of promotion to the rank of vice admiral.[3]
Structure
Training of cadets is carried out at six faculties and one affiliated school.
Faculty of Navigation
Faculty of Mines and Torpedoes
Faculty of Radio Engineering
Faculty of Radio Communication
Faculty of Coastal Forces and Naval Aviation Weapons
School of Technicians
Heads of the school
Regimental Commissar Alexander Baruzdin (1937-1938)