List of the oldest schools in the German-speaking area
This list shows the oldest schools still in existence in German-speaking countries that were founded in the Middle Ages or in the early modern period (up to 1800). It should be noted that the tradition cannot always be fully documented and the continuity can be broken in many ways. The most traditional schools today are almost without exception high schools and go back to institutions of higher education.
Historical school forms
middle Ages
After the end of antiquity with Roman cities in German-speaking countries, monastery schools supported by Benedictine monasticism were the first schools, from the 8th century also cathedral schools . In 789, Charlemagne had issued an ordinance to set up schools in all monasteries and bishoprics. From the 9th to the 12th century, the episcopal schools increasingly opened up to lay people . In the cities, in addition also created pen schools in ecclesiastical and council schools in urban sponsorship . Council schools were mostly Latin schools and as such institutions of higher education, since Latin was the lingua franca of science. So-called "German schools", where instruction was given in the vernacular , were mostly privately organized as clip or angle schools and imparted practically oriented elementary knowledge. The knight academies for the training of the noble offspring no longer have any after-effects .
Early modern age
The medieval school system underwent considerable structural changes through humanism around 1500 and changed fundamentally through the Reformation . In the now Protestant areas, the church schools passed into sovereign or city administration. In the 16th century, numerous Calvinist countries and cities founded a so-called Gymnasium academicum (also called Gymnasium illustrious or high school ), mostly as a princely school , which was supposed to take on the training of the clergy. These institutions often had a quasi-university character, but were not allowed to award academic degrees, as the Emperor did not grant any university privileges to Calvinist schools . There were similar pre-university educational institutions in the learned schools in northern Germany in particular . In order to react to the challenges of Protestantism and especially of the academic high schools , the Jesuit order, founded in 1540 , set up numerous colleges in the course of the Counter Reformation and determined the Catholic school system for two centuries until the order was temporarily dissolved in 1773 under the influence of the Enlightenment.
Modern times
The next major turning point in education took place in the course of secularization as a result of the French Revolution and the subsequent coalition wars , particularly through the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803. The church schools were now under state administration. Even after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the schools remained largely under state control. B. fundamentally restructured by the Prussian reforms . Now the humanistic grammar school became the typical institution of higher education. After the establishment of the Empire in 1871, the educational system became increasingly differentiated and schools were built in large numbers. Serious breaks in the continuity of school traditions meant the DC circuit of the school system after the seizure of power of the Nazis in 1933 and after the Second World War, the dissolution of the schools in the GDR in favor of the Extended Secondary School .
List of schools
Founding until 1500
Founded | city | School (current name) | School type when it was founded | development |
---|---|---|---|---|
7th century or early 8th century | St. Gallen | Flatbread | Monastery school | Probably founded at the beginning of the 8th century (by Otmar von St. Gallen ?) As a monastery school with an internal and external school. Closed in 1805 when the Prince Abbey of St. Gallen was dissolved. 1808/1809 as a “Catholic high school. Foundation ”and“ Citizens' School ”reopened. Since the founding of the canton school on Burggraben as a secondary school . |
at 740 | Eichstatt | Willibald High School | Monastery and cathedral school | 1564–1614 Episcopal “ Collegium Willibaldinum ”, 1614–1773 Jesuit high school, 1773–1802 again Episcopal Willibaldinum (high school and - for philosophy students - Lyceum ); 1803–1807 state high school and Lyceum Eichstätt; 1808–1839 Royal Study School / Kgl. latin school; Kgl. humanistic grammar school, then humanistic grammar school with upper secondary school ; 1843 New founding of an Episcopal Lyceum as an academic institute for philosophy and theology, which was merged into the Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt . |
at 740 | Freising | Cathedral high school | Monastery and cathedral school | 1697–1803 Freising Lyceum , re-established in 1834 as Freising University of Philosophy and Theology until 1966. Humanistic Cathedral Gymnasium founded in 1828 as a royal university. Until 1960 with upper secondary school , today mathematical and natural science Josef-Hofmiller-Gymnasium. |
748 | Fulda | Rabanus Maurus School | Monastery school | 1572–1773 Jesuit college , 1734–1805 University of Fulda and grammar school. |
at 797 | Muenster | Paulinum high school | Cathedral school | From 1588 Jesuit college, from 1778 state humanistic grammar school . |
799 | eat | Essen-Werden high school | Monastery school | Latin School of Werden Abbey ; full high school and seminary since the 16th century; from 1803 cath. Higher rectorate school; urban since 1906. |
before 800 | Paderborn | Theodorianum high school | Cathedral school | In the 16th century humanistic "Gymnasium Salentinianum"; 1585–1773 Jesuit College; was considered the third faculty of the university founded in 1614 (dissolved in 1819). |
before 800 | Passau | Gymnasium Leopoldinum | Cathedral school | Cathedral school from the 8th century, Latin school from the 14th century; from 1612 Jesuit college and from 1773 grammar school; Briefly European, since 2013 again linguistic and humanistic grammar school |
after 800 | Herford | Friedrichs-Gymnasium | Latin school | Latin School of the Imperial Abbey of Herford ; after the introduction of the Reformation in the city of Herford on June 30, 1540 relocation to the former Augustinian monastery, jointly sponsored by the abbey and city council. Purely urban since the 17th century. 1766 named after Frederick the Great . |
804 | Osnabrück | Carolinum High School | Cathedral school (or mission school) | 1142 first documented mention, 1555 simultaneous school , called “Carolinum” since the end of the 16th century, 1625–1633 and 1650–1773 / 74 Jesuit school, 1628–1633 Jesuit university , 1830 introduction of the Abitur, 1885 state school, since 1927 municipal high school. |
at 815 | Hildesheim | Josephinum High School | Cathedral school | 1595–1773 "Gymnasium Mariano-Josephinum" of the Jesuits. |
852 | eat | Burggymnasium | School for noble ladies | 1819 The Catholic school is merged with the Lutheran grammar school founded in 1564 |
in the 9th century (exact date disputed) | Xanten | Stiftsgymnasium | Collegiate school | Founded in the 9th century as a collegiate school, in the late Middle Ages the Latin school schola latina xantinis . Progymnasium from the middle of the 20th century , full grammar school since 1964 |
975 | regensburg | Music high school of the Regensburger Domspatzen | Cathedral school | Founded in 975 by Bishop Wolfgang von Regensburg, in the mid-1950s an institution for choirs, schools and boarding schools was created |
2nd half of the 10th century | Einsiedeln | Einsiedeln Abbey School | Monastery school | Founding of the grammar school in 1839, since 1872 federally recognized high school diplomas |
before 1002 | Verden | Domgymnasium | Cathedral school | 1578 Reformed as a Protestant school. |
before 1047 | Beromünster | Beromünster Cantonal School | Collegiate school | Cantonal school since 1866 |
1088 | Naumburg (Saale) | Domgymnasium | Cathedral school | Reformed since 1528 , Latin school from 1542, closed in 1950, re-established as a private school in 1991. |
before 1140 | Melk | Melk Abbey High School | Monastery school | Since 1707 a modern humanistic grammar school, since 1976 also upper level grammar school , the oldest school in Austria |
around 1160 | Ratzeburg | Lauenburg school of scholars | Cathedral school | since 1845 school of scholars |
approx. 2nd half of the 12th century | Engelberg | Engelberg Abbey School | Monastery school | collegiate school since 1851 |
1205 | Meissen | Saxon State High School Sankt Afra | School of the Augustinian Canons | Converted into one of three Protestant princely and state schools in Saxony in 1543 (together with Schulpforta and St. Augustin Grimma) |
1212 | Leipzig | Thomas School | Schola pauperum of the Augustinian Canons | Urban since 1539. |
1223 | Saarbrücken | Ludwigsgymnasium | Collegiate School of Sankt Arnual Abbey | High school since 1604. |
no later than 1225 | Hildesheim | Andreanum High School | Latin school | Since 1542 Evangelical - Lutheran , until 1546 ecclesiastical, then municipal, since 1977 again Evangelical Lutheran. |
1236 | Guestrow | Güstrow Cathedral School | Latin school | 1236 collegiate school for the training of the young clergy, in 1553 the new cathedral school was established with the merger of the old cathedral collegiate school and the council school, a Protestant school for scholars, merged in 1902 with the secondary school to form the "United John Brinckman School and Cathedral School". |
1249 | Kirchheim unter Teck | Ludwig-Uhland-Gymnasium and Schlossgymnasium | Latin school | Documented evidence in 1249, Latin and Realschule in 1833, Realgymnasium in 1909, Gymnasium in 1953, 1966 division into Schlossgymnasium and Ludwig-Uhland-Gymnasium |
around 1250 | Freiburg in Breisgau | Berthold High School | Latin school | Since 1457 preparatory school for the university, 1620 taken over by the Jesuits as a grammar school academicum (as part of the university). |
1253 | Helmstedt | Julianum high school | Latin school probably the Dominicans | City school since 1362. |
1267 | Esslingen am Neckar | Georgii High School | Latin school | |
before 1274 | Tübingen | Uhland high school | Latin school | "Schola anatolica" since the 16th century, in 1818 promoted to high school, 1855 to high school, in 1937 awarded the name Uhland-Gymnasium |
1276 | Reutlingen | Friedrich List High School | Latin school | Lyceum since 1842. |
1278 | Biberach | Wieland high school | Latin school | The first written mention of a Latin school and a Latin schoolmaster in Biberach is documented in 1278. |
before 1280 | Duisburg | Landfermann High School | Latin school | 1559 municipal grammar school (predecessor of the old University of Duisburg founded in 1566 ); 1821 collegiate grammar school; 1885 Royal High School; 1918 State high school |
1281 | Luckau | Bohnstedt high school | Latin school | 1818 high school; since 1953 extended high school; Closed in 1982; 1990 reopening |
1282 | Horb am Neckar | Martin-Gerbert-Gymnasium | Latin school | |
1285 | Then after | Kurfürst-Salentin-Gymnasium | Latin school | 1574 Foundation of the Elector of Cologne, Count Salentin von Isenburg ; 1952 State high school |
1293 | Bielefeld | Ratsgymnasium Bielefeld | Latin school | Foundation by Count Otto III. from Ravensberg |
1294 at the latest | Ulm | Humboldt Gymnasium | Latin school | originally Latin school of the Reichenau monastery, since 1383 municipal. High school since 1613. |
no later than 1300 | Dresden | Cross school | Latin school for the singers of the capella sanctae crucis , today's Dresden Kreuzchor of the Kreuzkirche | Today the Kreuzschule is a Protestant high school with boarding school. |
1302 | Neuss | Quirinus High School | Latin school | 1302 first written mention of the Latin school; since 1562 humanistic grammar school; 1616 foundation of a Jesuit grammar school, from 1783 Franciscan grammar school; 1802 merging of both schools and conversion into a college based on the French model; 1814 Progymnasium; since 1852 full high school |
1305 | Krems at the Donau | Bundesgymnasium and Bundesrealgymnasium Krems (Piarist high school) | Latin school | 1232 first documentary mention of a schoolmaster; 1305 first surviving school rules of the Latin school; 1579 designation of the five-class Latin city school as a grammar school; 1616 foundation of a six-class Jesuit grammar school; 1776 takeover by the Piarist Order; 1802–1849 management of a philosophical school (university institution); 1849 Extension of high school education to eight years; 1871 The state takes over the Piarist High School |
1307 at the latest | Schleswig | Cathedral school | Cathedral school | First documented mention in 1307; Establishment of the school around 1100 probably. |
1307 | Salzwedel | Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium | Latin school (in the old town of Salzwedel) | First documented mention in 1307. 1744 merged with the new town's Latin school. 1882 The grammar school moves to the current building in front of the Lüchower Tor. |
1319 | Plauen | Diesterweg High School | Latin school | First documented mention in 1319 of the Latin school under the command of the Teutonic Order of Plauen. Around 1800 high school, since 1835 high school. From 1946/53 high school, from 1960 extended high school, since 1990 high school again. |
1320 | Kiel | Kiel school of scholars | Latin school | School of scholars since the 16th century. |
1325 | Aschersleben | Stephaneum | Latin school | |
1328 | Celle | Ernestinum | Latin school | Probably goes back to an older Latin school |
no later than 1329 | Wangen in the Allgäu | Rupert-Neß-Gymnasium | Latin school | |
no later than 1329 | Warendorf | Laurentianum high school | Latin school | High school since 1675. |
1330 | Stadthagen | Council high school | Latin school | 1610 Illustrious grammar school, 1619 foundation of the Ernestina University , 1621 relocation of the university to Rinteln . |
1333 | Uelzen | Herzog-Ernst-Gymnasium | Latin school | 1333 first mentioned; since 1816 citizen school, since 1926 reform high school, since 1937 high school, since 1955 high school |
1337 | Rheinberg | Amplonius High School | Latin school | Closed in 1889; 1903 re-established as a private rectorate school for the Catholic parish; urban since 1912; high school for boys since 1939; from 1946 Progymnasium; since 1957 high school |
before 1342 | Wesel | Konrad-Duden-Gymnasium | Municipal Latin School | probably 1241 or 1277; Evangelical Reformed since 1540; referred to as a grammar school since 1612. |
1348 | Hanover | Ratsgymnasium Hannover | Latin school | After 1532 Protestant-Reformed humanistic high school. |
before 1354 | Markgröningen | Hans-Grüninger-Gymnasium | Church Latin School | probably in the 13th century. furnished (documented evidence for 1354); since the 16th century evangelical reformed, then urban; Closed in 1922, replaced by a grammar school in 1966. |
1354 | Quakenbrück | Artland High School | Latin school | |
before 1373 | Wertheim | Dietrich Bonhoeffer High School | Latin school | First documented mention in 1373. |
before 1376 | Hann. Münden | Grotefend High School | Council school | 1376 first mentioned in the city register; 1542 high school; 1829 downgraded to secondary school ; since 1897 high school |
1379 | Möckmühl | Möckmühl high school | Latin school | 1379 founding of a canon monastery with a Latin school; 1840 Start of a high school orientation |
1380 | Sibiu | Samuel-von-Brukenthal-Gymnasium | school | 1380 first mentioned; 1555 high school; 1578 Gymnasium academicum; 1779–1781 construction of the current school building; In 1919, in addition to the classical grammar school department, a "real department" where Greek is replaced by geometry, chemistry and biology; since 1921 school name "Brukenthalgymnasium"; to this day a school in the German language of instruction for the German minority in Romania |
1385 | On the mountain | Erasmus high school | Latin school | 1385 Latin school near St. Martin, under the supervision of the Franciscan order, later under municipal sponsorship. Both the city and the state administration recruited their employees from the graduates; the town's bourgeois sons attended Latin school and were given the tools that would later enable them to attend university. 1556 conversion of the Catholic school to Protestant teaching; 1626 conversion to a Jesuit grammar school, from 1773 electoral grammar school; from 1806 royal high school; from 1914 humanistic grammar school. |
1390 | Buxtehude | Halepaghen School | Monastery school | A rector scholarium was first mentioned in a document in 1390 , in 1552 reformatory "church and school regulations" / curriculum with catechism instruction, from 1641 instruction by arithmetic masters such as Nicolaus and Matthias Rohlfs , 1836 only "rector school" between elementary school and Progymnasium, 1881 recognition as a higher middle school after unification with the secondary school for girls (founded in 1853), since 1927 Reform Realgymnasium and coeducation , 1932 first Abitur class, 1947 "Städtische Oberschule", 1952 renaming to Halepaghen School |
1392 | Marbach am Neckar | Friedrich-Schiller-Gymnasium | Latin school | |
1393 | Kulmbach | Markgraf-Georg-Friedrich-Gymnasium | Latin school | 1802 upper middle school, 1893 royal secondary school, since 1950 grammar school |
before 1393 | Rendsburg | Herderschule | City school | 1590 Latin school; 1820 school of scholars; 1854 secondary school; 1947 "Herderschule" (old-language grammar school until 1973) |
1393 | Stade | Athenaeum | Monastery school | Latin school since the Reformation. |
1395 | Sindelfingen | Goldberg High School | Latin school | |
around 1400 | Bad Windsheim | Georg-Wilhelm-Steller-Gymnasium | Latin school | Since 1611 referred to as a grammar school. |
1406 | Luneburg | Johanneum | Municipal Latin School. | |
1407 | Dresden | Dreikönigschule grammar school | Latin school in Altendresden | Disbanded in 1947, re-established in 1992 |
1414 | Bark | Remigianum high school | Latin school. | First mention of the Borken “Latin School” in a deed of donation from Johann Walling , the first dean of the Borken collegiate chapter |
1415 | Braunschweig | Martino-Katharineum | Latin school | Martineum since 1415; Martineum and Katharineum high schools since 1745; since 1828 a comprehensive high school, from 1866 as Martino-Katharineum . |
before 1421 | Recklinghausen | Petrinum high school | Latin school | Franciscan school since 1729, municipal since 1820. |
1432 | Landau | Eduard Spranger High School | Latin school | first documented mention in 1432 |
1445 | Eppingen | Hartmanni High School | Latin school | first documented mention 1445 |
1446 | Schleusingen | Henneberg High School | Latin school | High school from 1577 |
1450 | Cologne | Dreikönigsgymnasium | Private Latin School | Taken over by the city of Cologne in 1552; 1557 to 1778 Jesuit high school. |
1450 | Ludenscheid | Zeppelin High School | ecclesiastical Latin school | Latin school 1450–1858, rectorate school from 1685. From 1858 higher boys' school under municipal sponsorship, from 1930 Realgymnasium and Oberrealschule. |
1458 | Goerlitz | Augustum high school | Monastery school | 1565 municipal Latin school; Closed in 1945; 1990 re-establishment; since 2008 merged to form the Anne-Augustum grammar school |
1477 | Northeim | Corvinianum high school | Latin school | |
1479 | Schwabach | Adam Kraft High School | Latin school | Progymnasium since 1894, upper secondary school with grammar school since 1948. |
16th Century
Founded | city | School (current name) | School type when it was founded | development |
---|---|---|---|---|
around 1500 | Weinberg | Justinus-Kerner-Gymnasium Weinsberg | Latin school | 1540 construction of a new school house proven; present name since 1970 |
around 1500 | Heidenheim an der Brenz | Hellenstein High School | Latin school | 1899 Inauguration of today's school building; 1914 first Abitur; present name since 1953 |
around 1500 | Attendorn | Rivius High School | Humanist school | current name since 1975 |
1505 | Emden | Johannes-Althusius-Gymnasium | Latin school | 1483 first mention of a Latin school; High school since 1836 |
1505 | regensburg | Albertus Magnus High School | Latin school | Reichsstädtisches Gymnasium Poeticum (1505); 1811 merger with the Jesuit grammar school St. Paul (1589); 1962 today's naming |
1510 | Meiningen | Henfling High School | Latin school | Originated from an older trivial school ; Elevated to Lyceum illustrious in 1705; Renamed in 1821 to the Bernhardinum high school; 1945 today's naming |
before 1510 | Simmern / Hunsrück | Herzog-Johann-Gymnasium | Latin school | 1965 today's naming |
1512 | Leipzig | Nikolaischule | Latin school, citizen school | From 1995 Gymnasium Neue Nikolaischule Leipzig |
1515 | Freiberg | Geschwister-Scholl-Gymnasium | Latin school | From 1876 Albertinum grammar school; after 1945 EOS “Geschwister-Scholl”; after 1990 Geschwister-Scholl-Gymnasium |
1520 | Frankfurt am Main | Lessing-Gymnasium and Goethe-Gymnasium | Latin school | In 1897 divided into the old-language Lessing-Gymnasium and the Reformed Goethe-Gymnasium |
1521 | Gemmingen | Latin School Gemmingen | Latin school | |
1522 | Altenburg | Friedrichgymnasium | Municipal Latin School | Since 1713 "Herzogliches Friedrichgymnasium"; 1947 dissolution and conversion to the Extended High School (EOS) " Karl Marx "; 1991 re-establishment as a grammar school |
1523 | Bad Bergzabern | Grammar school in the Alfred Grosser school center | Latin school | closed during the French Revolution, reopened in 1836 |
1524 | Gotha | Ernestinum High School | High school illustrious | Dissolved in 1945, re-established in 1991; until 1947 the oldest grammar school in the German-speaking area |
1524 | Lemgo | Engelbert-Kaempfer-Gymnasium | ||
1524 | Nordhausen | State high school "Wilhelm von Humboldt" | Humanistic high school | 1945 The Oberlyzeum and Gymnasium Nordhausen merged to form the "Humboldt Oberschule"; |
1526 | Nuremberg | Melanchthon High School | Municipal high school | since 1808 state high school; present name since 1933; the closure of the Ernestinum grammar school, the oldest grammar school in the German-speaking area, since 1947 |
1526 | Ingolstadt | Reuchlin High School | Pedagogy | From 1571 Jesuit school |
1526 | Zerbst | Francisceum High School | Originally a Franciscan monastery, which was built from 1235/45. From 1582 to 1798 it was a Gymnasium Illustre (Anhalt State University with Latin School). Today the school is a state high school. | |
1527 | Marburg / Lahn | Philippinum Grammar School | Pedagogy of the University of Marburg | From 1833 as an electoral grammar school independent of the university |
1527 | Husum | Hermann Tast School | Evangelical City School (Latin School) | |
1527 | Bautzen | Philipp Melanchthon High School | Evangelical Council School (Latin School) | |
1527 | Worms | Rudi-Stephan-Gymnasium | Municipal Latin School | |
1528 | Goslar | Council high school | Municipal school | |
1528 | Ansbach | Carolinum High School | Latin school, municipal school | From 1737 illustrious high school; 1792–1806 Royal Prussian High School |
1528 | Lindau | Bodensee grammar school | Latin school | |
1529 | Hamburg | Scholars' school of the Johanneum | Scholar school | |
1529 | Bremen | Old high school | High school illustrious | |
1530 | Minden | Council high school | Municipal school | |
1530 | Willows in the Upper Palatinate | Augustine High School | Latin school | From 1530 to 1627 there was a Latin school in Weiden , whose attendance allowed entry into a university. This was followed by several Latin schools of various denominations until 1868 , in 1877 the opening of a secondary school with affiliated Latin classes, in 1903 a six-class Progymnasium and a humanistic grammar school |
1531 | Lübeck | Katharineum | Latin school | |
1531 | augsburg | High school near St. Anna | Scholar school | |
around 1532 | Einbeck | Goethe School Einbeck | Evangelical Council School (Latin School) | today's naming 1949 |
1534 | Soest | Archigymnasium | Latin school | |
1535 | Anklam | Lilienthal high school | Latin school | |
1536 | Wins | Gymnasium Am Löhrtor | Latin school | A municipal parish school was first mentioned in 1342 as a predecessor institution; Converted to a Latin school by Erasmus Sarcerius in 1536 |
1537 | Windsbach | Johann-Sebastian-Bach-Gymnasium Windsbach | Latin school | Progymnasium in 1898, full institution in 1949, today's naming in 1966 |
1537 | Blankenburg (Harz) | High School Am Thie | Latin school | 1677 Herzogliches Gymnasium Rudolph-Augusteum , 1877 Humanistic Gymnasium, 1927 Reformrealgymnasium, 1969 Polytechnic and Advanced High School, since 1991 Gymnasium "Am Thie" |
1539 | Meissen | Franziskaneum Gymnasium in Meissen | Latin school | |
1540 | Meldorf | Meldorfer School of Academics | Scholar school | |
1540 | Speyer | Gymnasium at the Kaiserdom | Latin school | Founded as a Latin council school, since then it has existed almost continuously (although with some name and form changes, including the school was already a grammar school, a secondary school or both at the same time, a college or the only complete royal college in the Palatinate). |
1540 | Weilburg | Philippinum Grammar School | Latin school | |
1541 | Wismar | Big city school | Evangelical Lutheran Latin School | From 1948 extended secondary school, since 1989 grammar school again |
1542 | Linz | Academic Gymnasium Linz | Evangelical landscape school | |
before 1543 | Düren | Stiftisches Gymnasium Düren | Latin school | Proven school house for 1543 that was damaged in the city fire |
1543 | Ronnenberg | primary school | Termenei / Central School | 1922 with advanced department (middle school)
1955 with differentiated central structure 1966 Recognition as a secondary school official name "elementary school with support level and Realschulzug" 1976 division into elementary school and secondary school. |
1543 | School gate | Pforta State School | Saxon Protestant Princely and State School (1 of 3, together with Sankt Afra Meißen and St. Augustin Grimma) | 1935–1945 National Political Education Institute (NPEA, also: Napola) |
1543 | Meissen | Saxon State High School Sankt Afra | Saxon Protestant Princely and State School (1 of 3, together with Schulpforta and St. Augustin Grimma) | Closed in 1950, re-established in 1992 |
1543 | Friedberg (Hesse) | Augustinian School | Convent school of the Discalced | |
1543 | Dortmund | City high school | Archigymnasium (Protestant school for scholars) | |
1543 | Wolfenbüttel | Great school | Latin school | |
1544 | Eisenach | Martin Luther High School | Schola Provincialis | The St. Georgen Latin School had existed since 1185; 1707 elevation to grammar school illustrious; 1950 conversion to extended secondary school; 1960 dissolution; since 1991 high school again |
1545 | Halberstadt | Martineum high school | Parish school | In 1545 it was converted from a parish school to the first municipal school in Halberstadt |
1545 | Dusseldorf | Görres high school | Ducal state school | From 1625 to 1773 under the direction of the Jesuits; then electoral high school |
1545 | Öhringen | Hohenlohe high school | Hohenlohe State High School | Founded during the Reformation by the Counts of Hohenlohe after there had previously been a school of the Öhringer Canon Monastery; from 1811 Latin school without upper secondary school; from 1847 lyceum; from 1903 Progymnasium; from 1928 Progymnasium and Realschule; since 1956 high school |
1546 | Eisleben | Martin Luther High School | Higher state school | founded by Martin Luther |
1546 | Heidelberg | Kurfürst-Friedrich-Gymnasium | Pedagogy | founded by Elector Friedrich II. |
1546 | court | Jean Paul High School | humanistic-reformatory high school | founded by Margrave Albrecht Alcibiades of Brandenburg-Kulmbach |
1549 | Kremsmünster | Stiftsgymnasium Kremsmünster | Convent school, Latin school | founded by Abbot Gregor Lechner, emerged from a monastery school that had already existed (since 777?) |
1550 | Grimma | St. Augustin High School | Saxon Protestant Princely and State School (1 of 3, together with Sankt Afra Meißen and Schulpforta ) | |
1550 | Bad Homburg vor der Höhe | Kaiserin-Friedrich-Gymnasium | Latin school | Developed from an existing elementary school |
1550 | Dillingen on the Danube | Johann-Michael-Sailer-Gymnasium | Jesuit high school | Founding of the prince-bishop, Jesuit until 1773, state since 1803 |
1552 | Klagenfurt | European high school | Reformed high school | Founded as a school of scholars . From 1604 Jesuit college , from 1773 Lyceum |
1553 | Vienna | Academic high school | Jesuit College | |
1553 | Schwerin | Fridericianum | Princely School | |
1554 | Rossleben | Roßleben monastery school | Boys school | 1949–1990 EOS Goetheschule Roßleben |
1555 | Laubach | Laubach College | Latin school | |
1556 | Maulbronn and Blaubeuren | Protestant seminars / high schools with boarding | Protestant monastery schools | Maulbronn since 1807, Blaubeuren since 1817 called "seminar". Today state high schools with church boarding for grades 9 to 12. |
1556 | Loerrach | Lever High School | Latin school | |
1559 | Munich | Wilhelmsgymnasium | Pedagogy | |
1559 | Offenhausen (Upper Austria) | Offenhausen primary school | Village school | 1559 by Jörg III. Donated by Perkheim in his will as "common school" |
1561 | Erfurt | Evangelical Ratsgymnasium | Pedagogy | initially “paedagogium in Coenobio Augustiniano”, from 1624 “Gymnasium evangelicum”, closed in 1950, reopened in 1992 |
1561 | Greifswald | Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gymnasium | Municipal school | initially schola senatorium , 1820–1947 and again since 1991 grammar school, 1947–1991 extended secondary school |
1561 | trier | Friedrich Wilhelm High School | Jesuit College | since 1896 under its current name |
1561 | Mainz-Neustadt | Rabanus-Maurus-Gymnasium | Jesuit College | Humanistic Electoral Mainz Emmerizian High School since 1773 ; 1618–1782 the grammar school is housed together with the university in the Domus Universitatis . |
1561 | Oppenheim am Rhein | High school in St. Katharinen | Latin school | The establishment of the reformed Latin school of the Katharinenstift was carried out by Elector Friedrich III. von der Pfalz, who commissioned the Heidelberg humanist Friedrich Zorn to run a grammar school. After the Franciscans were driven out, the school moved into the monastery (today St. Bartholomew). The students' training prepared them for studying at Heidelberg University. |
1561 | Weimar | Goethe high school | Latin school | 1561 town and country school, from 1712 “Wilhelminum Ernestinum”, since 1716 Wilhelm-Ernst-Gymnasium Weimar , 1887 move to a larger new school, after 1945 Soviet military school, 1951 to 1991 polytechnic high school “ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe ”, since 1991 Goethegymnasium. |
1561 | Wurzburg | Wirsberg high school | Latin school | |
1562 | innsbruck | Academic high school | Latin school and Jesuit college | |
1564 | Ohrdruf | Gymnasium Gleichense | Latin school | Lyceum illustrious since 1623; 1870–1946 Gräflich Gleichensches Gymnasium; 1854–1945 Loss of the title of Lyceum and the direct university entrance qualification |
1564 | Parchim | Friedrich-Franz-Gymnasium | Latin school | first large city school, 1827 Friedrich-Franz-Gymnasium |
1566 | Flensburg | Old high school | ||
1566 | Eutin | Johann Heinrich Voss High School | Scholar school | A Latin school has been in use since 1309 |
1566/67 | north | Ulrichsgymnasium | Latin school | Paedagogium illustrious since 1631, making it possible to acquire a general university entrance qualification; Naming after the East Frisian Count Ulrich II. |
1569 | Holzminden | Campe high school | Reformed boarding school | |
1570 | Bad Hersfeld | Konrad Duden School | Trivial school | School in the Franciscan monastery ; 1570 deed of foundation from Abbot Michael and letter of protection from Emperor Maximilian II. |
1572 | Jülich | Citadel high school | Particular school | From 1664 Jesuit school |
1572 | Memmingen | Elsbethenschule | Latin school | From 1802 also German school; elementary school since 1969 |
1573 | Hall in Tirol | Franciscan high school | Jesuit College | After the Jesuit order was abolished in 1773, it was taken over by the Franciscans |
1573 | Traben-Trarbach | Traben-Trarbach grammar school | Latin school | From 1649 high school illustrious |
1573 | Oldenburg | Old high school | Latin school | |
1573 | Graz | Academic high school | Jesuit College | since the University of Graz was founded in 1585, academic high school; state since 1773 |
1573 | Jever | Mariengymnasium | Latin school | |
1573 | Grünstadt | Leininger high school | Latin school | 1573 Höninger Latin School , 1630 cessation of school operations due to the war, 1729 reestablishment in Grünstadt, 1752 conversion to grammar school, 1802–1811 École Secondaire, 1811–1817 Collège, 1817–1933 bay. Progymnasium, high school 1933–1945, secondary school 1945–1950, Progymnasium 1950–1962, since 1962 Leininger grammar school |
1574 | Berlin | Gymnasium for the Gray Monastery | State school | |
1575 | Copenhagen | German School St. Petri | School for the poor ; German school | Oldest still existing German school abroad |
1575 | Merseburg | Domgymnasium | Collegiate school | 1830 Stiftsschule, 1830–1945 Domgymnasium, 1946–59 Ernst-v.-Harnack-Oberschule, 1959–1991 Ernst-Haeckel-Oberschule (EOS), since 1991 again Domgymnasium |
1578 | Neustadt an der Weinstrasse | Kurfürst-Ruprecht-Gymnasium | High school illustrious | |
1577 | Schleusingen | Henneberg High School "Georg Ernst" | high school | Founding by Count Georg Ernst von Henneberg with alumnate, after 1945 "Max-Greil-Oberschule", since 1992 grammar school "Georg Ernst" |
1579 | Korbach | Old state school | High school illustrious | Founding of the Counts of Waldeck, the forerunner of the Count's School was a municipal school (since at least 1266), there was a spatial and partly personal continuity between the two |
1579 | Wuppertal - Barmen | Sedanstrasse Grammar School | German school | Founded by the citizens of Barmer and the lender of the Bergisches Amt Beyenburg, Countess Maria von Waldeck. Latin school since around 1600 |
1580 | Rostock | Big city school | Latin school | |
1582 | Moers | Adolfinum high school | Schola illustris | A Latin school had existed since 1574; Progymnasium from 1821 , grammar school from 1874 |
1582 | Freiburg in Üechtland | St. Michael College | Jesuit College | |
1582 | augsburg | High school near St. Stephan | Jesuit College | Jesuit College St. Salvator , repealed in 1807; 1828 as cath. Citizens' school newly founded in the building of the secularized St. Stephan women's monastery; Handed over to the Benedictines in 1835; as a "gymnasium sui generis" since the re-establishment of the state high school with privileges of the monastery with regard to the school management |
1582 | Gars on the Inn | Gymnasium Gars | Latin School of the Augustinian Canons | |
1582 | Koblenz | Görres high school | Jesuit College | |
1584 | Leer (East Frisia) | Ubbo-Emmius-Gymnasium | Latin school | |
1586 | Goettingen | Max Planck High School | Pedagogy | |
1586 | Bamberg | Kaiser-Heinrich-Gymnasium | Collegium Ernestinum; Seminary with grammar school | Jesuit school since the beginning of the 17th century |
1586 | Durlach | Margrave high school | High school illustrious | Relocated to Karlsruhe (new residential city) in 1724, the Durlach high school continued to exist |
1586 | Zittau | Christian-Weise-Gymnasium | Latin school | |
1588 | Steinfurt | Arnoldinum high school | High school illustrious | |
1589 | Basel | High school on Münsterplatz | Municipal high school | |
1592 | Wuppertal - Elberfeld | Wilhelm-Dörpfeld-Gymnasium | Latin school | German schools existed before the Reformation. 1592 Connection of a Latin class with its own rectorate. |
1595 | Osnabrück | Council high school | City school | |
1596 | St. Blasien | College of St. Blasien | Jesuit College | Founded in Friborg in the Üechtland in Switzerland , moved to Feldkirch (Vorarlberg) in 1856, and moved to St. Blasien in 1934 |
1597 | Schwelm | Märkisches Gymnasium Schwelm | Latin school | In 1807 the church lost its school supervision to a state school commission. The best known school principal (1946–1951) was the reform pedagogue Fritz Helling |
1597 | Siegburg | Anno high school | Latin school | 1593/1594 decree establishing a Latin school; 1855 Progymnasium; 1886 state-sponsored grammar school, 1974 the city of Siegburg took over the sponsorship |
1599 | Gundorf | Primary school Gundorf | Evangelical school | 1599 first sexton Bartholomäus Heinrich; over 400 years of fully documented school history; After 322 years, in 1921 transition to state supervision |
17th century
Founded | city | School (current name) | School type when it was founded | development |
---|---|---|---|---|
1601 | Aachen | Kaiser-Karls-Gymnasium | Jesuit school | Urban from 1773. |
1601 at the latest | Büdingen | Wolfgang Ernst High School | Latin school | |
1602 | Detmold | Gymnasium Leopoldinum | Provincial School | From 1833 Leopoldinum (after the founder of a new school building, Prince Leopold II. Zur Lippe ); 1949–1987 separated into Leopoldinum I and II |
1604 | Constancy | Heinrich-Suso-Gymnasium | Jesuit College | |
1605 | to water | Landgraf-Ludwigs-Gymnasium | Latin school | |
1605 | Coburg | Casimirianum | high school | |
1607 | Hanau | High state school | ||
1608 | Gera | Goethe-Gymnasium / Rutheneum | high school | |
1609 | Iserlohn | Märkisches Gymnasium | Iserlohnense Lyceum | 1609–1703 schola sancta , 1703–1727 school of scholars, 1793–1840 Latin school, 1840–1863 upper secondary school, 1863–1890 secondary school 1st order and secondary school, 1919–1933 reform secondary school and upper secondary school in the Weimar Republic |
1609 | Duisburg - Meiderich | Heinrich Bongers School | Free school | 1609–1709 Protestant school, since 1875/79 municipal elementary school, since 1968 elementary school, since 1978 municipal community school with school kindergarten and municipal Catholic elementary school |
1612 | Stockholm | German school | German school | Stockholm's oldest school; Foundation by the St. Gertruds Community; Closed 1939–1953 |
1614 | Buckeburg | Adolfinum high school | Latin school | |
1614 | Stuttgart | Collegium Ambrosianum | Latin school | Later episcopal late vocational seminar, in 1983 moved to the Episcopal College St. Josef in Ehingen (Danube) and renamed Ambrosianum , in 2010 moved to Tübingen and renamed the Theological-Propaedeutic Year Ambrosianum |
1616 at the latest | Neuburg on the Danube | Descartes high school | Latin school | Founded as a Latin school in the 16th century, it was taken over by the Jesuits as a grammar school in 1616 |
1617 | Salzburg | Academic high school | Humanistic high school | |
1618 | Mönchengladbach | Stiftisches Humanistic Gymnasium | Latin school | 1315 school facility of the Benedictine abbey, since 1877 grammar school |
1619 | Husum (district Rödemis ) | Iven Agßen School | Elementary school | Elementary school since 1978 , oldest elementary school listed here |
1620 | Aschaffenburg | Kronberg High School | Jesuit school | |
1620 | Heilbronn | Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium | high school | Developed from the Latin school, which has been attended since the 15th century, grammar school 1620–1827, Karlsgymnasium 1827–1938, Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium since 1950 |
1625 | Bad Münstereifel | St. Michael High School | Jesuit school | The founding resolution was passed on September 29, 1625 (Michaelmas Day) at the instigation of the City Council of Münstereifel by the Jesuit order . |
1626 | Bonn | Beethoven high school | Minorite high school | From 1673 Jesuit college. |
1627 | Coesfeld | Nepomucenum high school | Jesuit College | |
1628 | Warburg | Marianum High School | Monastery school | Dominican; from 1826 royal Progymnasium; from 1874 municipal high school |
1628 | Hamburg-Heimfeld | Friedrich-Ebert-Gymnasium | ||
1629 | Landshut | Hans-Carossa-Gymnasium Landshut | Jesuit College | |
1629 | Burghausen | Kurfürst-Maximilian-Gymnasium | Jesuit College | |
1629 | Darmstadt | Ludwig-Georgs-Gymnasium | Pedagogy | |
1630 | Rottweil | Albertus Magnus High School | Lyceum of the Dominicans | |
1631 | Straubing | Johannes Turmair High School | Jesuit school | Jesuit high school since 1631; urban since 1773; 1966 today's naming after the Bavarian historian Aventin, called Turmair. |
1632 | Schweinfurt | Celtis high school | Humanistic high school | Founded under the name "Gymnasium Gustavianum" after the Swedish king Gustav Adolf, renamed the Gymnasium Ludovicianum in 1833 after the new father Ludwig I., again renamed in 1964 after the humanist Konrad Celtis . |
1637 | Rheda-Wiedenbrück | Council high school | City school | |
1639 | Schöningen | Anna-Sophianeum | Latin school | 1956 today's naming |
1639 | Cologne | Ursuline School | Archbishop's School | |
1640 | Schöningen | Anna-Sophianeum | Latin school | Abolished in 1808 and continued as a city boys' school; since the end of the 19th century Progymnasium or Realgymnasium |
1642 | Dorsten | Petrinum high school | Progymnasium since 1823 , state school administration in 1837, full grammar school since 1900. | |
1642 | Meppen | Windthorst High School | Jesuit high school | In the Royal High School since 1820. |
1643 | Arnsberg | Laurentianum high school | Premonstratensian high school | |
1644 | Admont | Admont Abbey High School | Benedictine high school | |
1646 | Aurich | Ulricianum high school | ||
1649 | Feldkirch | Federal high school | Jesuit College | |
1652 | Hadamar | Prince Johann Ludwig School | Jesuit high school | |
1652 | trier | Auguste-Viktoria-Gymnasium | Convent school of the Augustinian nuns for girls | |
1652 | Vechta | High school Antonianum Vechta | Franciscan monastery school | Full high school since 1719. |
1655 | Brilon | Petrinum high school | Convent school of the Friars Minor for boys | Monastery school until 1804; 1821 re-establishment as a municipal Progymnasium ; Full high school since 1858. |
1655 | Schwäbisch Hall | High school near St. Michael | High school illustrious | 1318 Latin school in Hall |
1656 | Schleiz |
Rutheneum high school since 1961 Dr.-Konrad-Duden-Gymnasium Schleiz |
high school | A Latin school existed since the 13th and 14th. Century. The Dudengymnasium continues the school tradition. |
1657 | Hamm | Hammonense high school | Gymnasium academicum | Since 1781 humanistic grammar school after merging with the Latin school. |
1657 | horn | Federal high school | Piarist high school | Founded in 1657 as Schola Hornana, in 1872 converted into a state high school, 1883/84 extension of a student dormitory, 1921 conversion into a federal grammar school, 1928 extension of the first Austrian advanced grammar school . |
1658 | Rheine | Dionysianum high school | ||
1658 | Paderborn | St. Michael Paderborn High School | Free school | Girls' high school of the Augustinian choir women |
1658 | Ellwangen | Peutinger high school | Emerged from a monastery school founded in 764, in 1658 it was converted into a Jesuit school, which is considered the official foundation. Full grammar school in the royal Württemberg since 1802. | |
1659 | Kempen | Thomaeum high school | Municipal high school | Until 1802 only spiritual headmasters. |
1660 | Münnerstadt | Johann-Philipp-von-Schönborn-Gymnasium | Until 1680 under the direction of the Bartholomites , then until 1803 the Augustinians . | |
1662 | augsburg | Maria Ward High School | Higher daughter school in the English Institute | Until 1992 school of the Congregatio Jesu , today a linguistic and economic high school for girls sponsored by the Diocese of Augsburg. |
1662 | Brig | College Brig | Jesuit school | |
1664 | Bayreuth | Christian-Ernestinum high school | High school illustrious | In the 19th century the Royal College of Bayreuth, since 1891 the Royal Bavarian Gymnasium, since 1952 again under the old name of the Christian-Ernestinum Gymnasium, today a linguistic, humanistic and scientific-technological gymnasium |
1667 | Emmendingen | Goethe high school | Latin school | 1695 re-establishment by the bad. Margrave Fridericus Magnus, after 1848 high school, 1895 high school, 1934 high school, 1937 Dietrich Eckart high school for boys, 1946 high school, 1948 high school, from 1974 Goethe high school |
1670 | Baden-Baden | Convent School of the Holy Sepulcher | Girls boarding school | 1952 Progymnasium, 1970 Full Gymnasium, co-education since 1982. |
1672 | Mannheim | Karl-Friedrich-Gymnasium | Reformed pedagogy | From 1720 Jesuit high school. |
1675 | Magdeburg | Domgymnasium | From 1928 United Cathedral and Monastery High School, from 1949 Humboldt School (later Humboldt School EOS), from 1989 Humboldt High School, closed in 2007. The private school Ökumenisches Domgymnasium, newly founded in 1989, refers to the tradition of the cathedral grammar school. | |
1677 | Dusseldorf | St. Ursula High School | Ursuline girls' school | |
1677 | Vreden | Georgianum High School | Foundation by Franciscan Observates | |
1680 | Lingen (Ems) | Georgianum High School | Trivial school | 1697–1819 grammar school academicum, then grammar school |
1681 | Düren | St. Angela School | Ursuline girls' school | Girls' elementary school since 1829 ; 1927 private middle school for girls , since 1931 junior high school and high school |
1683 | Burghausen | Maria Ward Realschule | secondary school | Private secondary school, until May 2018 the monastery of the English Misses, member of the Maria Ward School Foundation Passau |
1686 | Stuttgart | Eberhard-Ludwigs-Gymnasium and Karls-Gymnasium | High school illustrious | |
1686 | Bensheim | Old electoral high school | ||
1686 | Ehingen | Ehingen high school | School of the Benedictine monks | State since 1825 |
1686 | Geseke | Antonianum high school | Franciscan high school | Later a municipal high school with a focus on modern languages |
1688 | Tauberbischofsheim | Matthias-Grünewald-Gymnasium Tauberbischofsheim | Franciscan high school | 1688 The Prince-Bishop of Mainz authorizes the city of Bischofsheim to establish a grammar school under the leadership of the Franciscans ; 1954 New school name: Matthias-Grünewald-Gymnasium |
1689 | Berlin | French high school | French-speaking grammar school for the Huguenots | |
1690 | Muenster | Annette-von-Droste-Hülshoff-Gymnasium | ||
1691 | Leipzig | August Bebel School (Leipzig) | ||
1691 | Saarlouis | Gymnasium am Stadtgarten | College of the Augustinian monks | Prussian college since 1815. |
1694 | Frankfurt Oder | Friedrichsgymnasium | Latin school | Founded on July 1, 1694 by Elector Friedrich III of Brandenburg. Closure in 2008. Building continues to be used as a primary school. |
1696 | Freiburg | St. Ursula High School | School of the Ursulines | Today private high school in the sponsorship of the school foundation of the Archdiocese Freiburg |
1698 | Hall | Latina | Orphan school | 1946 transfer to an EOS ; 1991 a state high school again |
1699 | Dorsten | St. Ursula High School | Daughters' school of the Ursuline monastery | In the 19th century it was converted into a lyceum, later upper lyceum; state high school during the Third Reich; since 1946 high school |
18th century
Founded | city | School (current name) | School type when it was founded | development |
---|---|---|---|---|
1704 | Plön | Gymnasium Schloss Plön | Latin school | Until 1821 named after the founder Christoph Gensch von Breitenau “Breitenauiarium” or “Breitenauisches Gestift”. Was raised to the rank of a school for scholars in 1814, merged with the cadet school in 1922 . From 1933 to 1945 it was a national political educational institution , from 1946 “Boarding School Schloss Plön” and in 2001 it was renamed “Gymnasium Schloss Plön”. |
1709 | Dresden | St. Benno High School | Latin school for the Dresden Kapellknaben | Dissolved in 1939; Newly founded in 1991 |
1712 | Fritzlar | Ursuline School Fritzlar | Girls school | Closed during Bismarck's Kulturkampf and during the Third Reich . Today a full-time co - educational comprehensive school |
1712 | Herford | Wilhelm Oberhaus School | Catholic elementary school | Since 1968 the former Catholic elementary school or elementary school and today's Catholic elementary school has been the only municipal denominational school. |
1712 | Uetersen | Rose City School | Rector School / Latin School | In 1712, the rector's school from 1542, which had been destroyed in the previous war, was rebuilt through a bequest from Ida Hedwig von Brockdorff . This school was later replaced by a rectorate, which was closed due to lack of space. In 1866 the following school became the “Schule am Roggenfeld”, today's “Rosenstadtschule”. |
1715 | Rastatt | Ludwig Wilhelm High School | Piarist College | June 22nd 1715 Foundation of the Rastatt Piarist College by Margravine Augusta Sybilla |
1723 | Niederalteich ( Lower Bavaria ) | St. Gotthard High School | Monastery school of the Benedictine monks of Niederaltaich | School tradition since the foundation of the monastery (731 and 741 respectively). 1723 named after St. Gotthard , 1803 secularization of the monastery and closure of the school, 1918 re-establishment of the monastery and school (1925), closure ordered by the National Socialists in 1937, reopening in 1946 |
1724 | Karlsruhe | Bismarck High School | High school illustrious | moved from Durlach to the new royal seat; 1836 associated with the higher middle school |
1724 | Meran ( South Tyrol ) | Benedictine high school Merano | High School of the Benedictine | Became a public school in 1946 and has been a grammar school since 1987 with two subjects: humanistic and modern language. In 2011 the original school was merged with the Josef-Ferrari-Gymnasium. |
1735 | Schwerin | Niels Stensen School | Catholic school | Was illegally closed in 1939. The primary school was reopened in 1994 and the secondary school in 2006. |
1738 | Potsdam | Helmholtz high school | City school | grammar school since 1812; since 1946 extended high school; 1991 re-establishment as a grammar school |
1738 | Altona | Christianeum | Gymnasium Academicum | Latin school as a forerunner since 1683 |
1743 | Rietberg | Nepomucenum high school | Franciscan high school | Progymnasium since the beginning of the 19th century; since 1972 full high school |
1745 | gain | Gymnasium Fridericianum | Illustre high school | |
1746 | Vienna | Public high school of the Theresian Academy Foundation | Imperial Academy (Knight Academy) | Led by Jesuits until 1773; Dissolved in 1783, an engineering academy is housed in the Favorita; 1797 re-establishment of the "Theresian Knight Academy" under the direction of the Piarists ; 1849 grammar school under state supervision, opening to the bourgeoisie; 1938 Dissolution of the Theresiana and establishment of a national political educational institution ; since 1957 high school again |
around 1755 | Bruchsal | Schönborn High School | Latin school run by Jesuits | 1773 to 1797 merger with the seminary, then headed by Augustinians , from 1870 no longer purely Catholic |
1758 | Vienna | HTL Spengergasse | kk commercial drawing academy | The oldest vocational school in Austria and one of the oldest technical schools in the world. |
1761 | Bonn-Bad Godesberg | KGS Castle School | Catholic elementary school | Village school approved in 1761 by Cologne Elector Maximilian Friedrich von Königsegg-Rothenfels ; later elementary school. Catholic primary school since 1968. |
1764 | Boppard | Kant high school | Franciscan Latin School | Founded in 1764 as a Latin school and passed into the sponsorship of the city in 1805 |
1764 | Gummersbach | Grotenbach high school | Rector's school for boys and girls | |
1770 | Schopfheim | Theodor-Heuss-Gymnasium Schopfheim | Founded as a Latin school | In 1838 it was converted into a higher middle school, 1922 into an upper secondary school , since 1948 grammar school |
1775 | Blieskastel | From the Leyen high school | ||
1778 | Donaueschingen | Fürstenberg high school | Latin school | Founding by Prince Joseph Wenzel zu Fürstenberg on October 1, 1778, commencement of classes on November 25, 1778, subordination to the Grand Ducal Government of Baden in 1807, conversion from six-year to seven-year high school in 1837, 1872 advanced high school, 1903 expansion to nine-year full high school (first Abitur in 1904 ), 1937–1945 graduation to upper secondary school (loss of basic Latin), re-establishment of the humanistic train in 1956, introduction of a scientific and a linguistic profile in 1997 |
1779 | kassel | Friedrichsgymnasium | Lyceum | Took into the tradition of an existing Latin school |
1780 | Bolzano | Franciscan high school | high school | |
1784 | Waltershausen , Schnepfenthal district | Salzmann School | Educational institution | Establishment of Christian Gotthilf Salzmann ; today state special high school for languages |
1785 | Bocholt | St. Georg High School | Latin School of the Minorite Order | In 1903 the Ministry decreed that it was recognized as a full high school. |
1795 | Neustrelitz | Carolinum High School | High school | |
1799 | Wetzlar | Goethe School | private high school | 1810 conversion into a public institution and association with a catholic school run by the Jesuits since 1695 to form the royal grammar school; after the introduction of the integrated comprehensive schools in the district of Wetzlar in 1969 it was an upper secondary school |
1799 | Hagen | Fichte-Gymnasium Hagen | Action, community and Latin school | 1882 ministerial recognition as "Realgymnasium und Gymnasium" |
See also
Individual evidence
- ^ Website of the Einsiedeln Abbey School, history
- ^ Albert Hug: Einsiedeln (Benedictine Abbey). In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- ↑ Urban Hodel, Rolf De Kegel: Engelberg (monastery). In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- ^ Rolf De Kegel: Frowin. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
- ↑ http://www.oberpfaelzerkulturbund.de/cms/media/Festschriften/38.NGT/FS38_S_129_134_b.pdf
- ↑ Home. In: melanchthon-gymnasium.de, accessed on April 23, 2019.
- ↑ Anna Günther, Hans Kratzer: “There is humanistic education without Latin and Greek”. In: sueddeutsche.de, April 18, 2017, accessed on April 23, 2019.
- ^ Karl Kayser: The reformatory church visits in the Guelph lands 1542-1544 . Ed .: Landeskirchenamt Hannover. Second part - The Reformation church visits in the Duchy of Kalenberg-Göttingen, under the Duchess Elisabeth from November 17, 1542 to April 30, 1543. Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, Göttingen 1897, p. 416-418 .
- ↑ The Ronnenberg School Center - History of a 475-year-old school tradition on the church hill 2017 Author: Karl-Fr. Seemann, publisher: Heimatbund Ronnenberg
- ^ Page of the Friedrichsgymnasium Frankfurt
- ↑ A. Heggen (Ed.): 300 Years of the Plön Castle Gymnasium . Neumünster, 2004, pp. 15-18.
- ↑ Festschrift 250 Years of Burgschule in Bad Godesberg (1762–2011) . KGS Burgschule, Bonn-Bad Godesberg, 2011.
- ^ Johann Josef Klein: History of Boppard . 1909, p. 249 , urn : nbn: de: 0128-1-36929 .
- ^ Andreas Hund: The Gymnasium Donaueschingen 1778-1928 . Danubiana, Donaueschingen 1930.