Lycée Louis-le-Grand
Louis-le-Grand | |
---|---|
Coat of arms of the Collège Louis-le-Grand on a book | |
type of school | high school |
founding | 1564 |
address |
123 Rue St-Jacques |
place | Paris |
Department | Paris |
Country | France |
Coordinates | 48 ° 50 '53 " N , 2 ° 20' 40" E |
student | 1700 |
Website | www.louislegrand.org |
Louis-le-Grand is the name of a renowned elite school in the Latin Quarter in Paris (123 rue Saint-Jacques , 5th arrondissement ), which includes a lycée and preparatory classes for the entrance exams of the Grandes Écoles .
The traditional school emerged from the Collège de Clermont , which was founded by the Jesuits as a scholarship home in 1564 and was formerly known as the Jesuit College of Paris. It was temporarily closed from 1595 to 1618 and in 1762 and has been renamed several times.
Surname
The original Collège derived its name Collège de Clermont from Guillaume Duprat († 23 October 1560), Bishop of Clermont , whose foundations enabled the Jesuits to establish this institution, which was later named as follows:
- Collège Louis-le-Grand (1674) out of honor and thanks for a visit that King Louis XIV paid to the school,
- Collège de l'Egalité (1792) and Collège Prytanée (1794) during the French Revolution ,
- Collège de Paris (1800) under the consulate ,
- Lycée Impérial (1805–1815) during the First Empire ,
- Collège royal de Louis-le-Grand (1815) during the restoration of the Bourbon rule ,
- Lycée Descartes (1848).
The school has had its current name since 1849.
history
The Jesuits had founded a college as early as 1540, but had their pupils - in the absence of a house of their own - accommodated at the Collège du Trésorier , or from 1542 at the Collège des Lombard , until Guillaume Duprat gave them a house ( rue de la Harpe ) in 1550 In 1560 they sent a sum in a will that allowed them to purchase the spacious former residence of the bishops of Langres in rue Saint-Jacques in 1562 . There they opened the actual Collège de Clermont in 1564 , to whose chapel the King Henry III in 1582 . laid the foundation stone.
The assassination attempt by the former student Jean Châtel (1575–1594) on December 27, 1594 on King Henry IV , gave rise to the temporary expulsion of the Jesuits from France and the closure of the Collège de Clermont from 1595 to 1618. In this Year the friars returned, resumed teaching and in 1628 commissioned the construction of their school, into which they later integrated the neighboring buildings of the Collège de Marmoutiers (1641) and the Collège du Mans (1682).
After the Jesuits were expelled again in 1762, the school, which in 1763 was placed under a board of directors chaired by the Archbishop of Reims , took over all the scholarship holders of the 26 so-called petits collèges in the last year mentioned .
The school complex, which was renovated from 1820 to 1822, was annexed in 1822 to the previous buildings of the Collège des Cholets . A part of the old walls was replaced by a new building between 1885 and 1893 by the architect Charles Lecoeur . The facade on the courtyard side is a listed building.
The lycée today
The Secondaire des Lycée, corresponding to the German grammar school classes 10 to 12, currently (2007) attend around 850 pupils, the Classes préparatoires , who prepare for admission to the Grandes Écoles, around 950, of which 15% in the economic sector, 60% in the scientific sector and 25% in the literary branch. The Lycée is known for its high success rate at the Grandes Écoles . Around a tenth of the students are foreigners from around 40 countries (especially in the Secondaire Européenne area ). The school is open to everyone and is free of charge. But there is a strict selection process. The school also has a boarding school with 339 places (boys and girls) for students who are in the Classes Préparatoires. The students are referred to as magnoludoviciens . Extensive renovation work has been going on since 1995.
It is currently (2016) directed by Jean Bastianelli, the former head of the French school ( Lycée français de Vienne ) in Vienna and the Lycée Pierre-de-Fermat in Toulouse .
List of known students and teachers
Well-known students are:
Writers and philosophers
Painter and sculptor
- Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
- Pierre Bonnard
- Edgar Degas
- Eugène Delacroix
- Marcellin Desboutin
- Théodore Géricault
- Georges Méliès
- Claude René Gabriel Poulleau
- Jacques Rigaut
scientist
- Boubakar Ba
- Henri Becquerel
- Jean-Baptiste Biot
- Jean Bernard
- Michel Chasles
- Alfred Croiset
- Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron
- Évariste Galois
- Jacques Hadamard
- Claude Hagège
- Félix Hubert d'Hérelle
- Charles Hermite
- Gabriel Lamé
- Laurent Lafforgue
- Vincent Lafforgue
- Louis Massignon
- Louis Leprince-Ringuet
- Urbain Le Verrier
- Pierre-Louis Lions
- Arthur Morin
- Paul Painlevé
- Henri Poincaré
- Marie-Antoinette Tonnelat
- Jean-Christophe Yoccoz
Politician
Other
- André Citroën , automobile designer
- Claude de la Colombière , Jesuit
- Raoul Diagne , national soccer player
- Louis-Marie Stanislas Fréron , politician
- Louis Fronsac , notary at the Grand Châtelet
- Casimir Gaillardin , historian
- Jules Girard , literary historian
- Cardinal Retz , politician, memoir writer
- Jacques Isorni , lawyer
- Robert Judet , orthopedic surgeon
- Marquis de Lafayette , general and politician
- André Michelin , industrialist
- Francis de Sales , founder of the order, mystic (pupil 1578 to 1588)
Teacher
Teachers at the LLG were a .:
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literature
- Jacques Hillairet: Dictionnaire Historique des rues de Paris . Editions de Minuit, Paris 1963, ISBN 2-7073-0092-6 .
Web links
- "Introducing the Lycée Louis-le-Grand"
- Brief biography of Louis de Fronsac with a description of the living conditions in the Collège de Clermont
Remarks
- ^ Ludovicus magnus , Latin: Ludwig the Great
Individual evidence
- ↑ Presentation en allemand. Retrieved November 2, 2016 .