Albertinum study seminar

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The Albertinum study seminar is a church foundation under public law under the supervision of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising . It serves the maintenance of the same day care center in Munich district Sendling-Westpark . The nearby schools are the Ludwigs- and the Erasmus-Grasser-Gymnasium .

Since 2015, the seminar has also had an after-school care center for primary school children.

history

The Bavarian Duke Albrecht V (1553–1579) founded the Domus Gregoriana in 1574 under the direction of the Jesuit order in order to give him a supremacy in school education, which he held until the middle of the 17th century. “The instruction of children and ordinary people in Christianity” was intended to enable a wider class of people to obtain a higher education. After a few decades, the name unofficially changed to Albertinum after the founder . After the Jesuits were banned in 1773, Augustinian canons and Benedictines took over the house.

Since secularization in Bavaria, the Albertinum has been headed by secular priests under the supervision of the “highest school trustees” of the Kingdom of Bavaria . Under the direction of Benedikt von Holland , the house was renamed the "Royal Educational Institute for Students in Munich" around 1810, also known unofficially as the Hollandeum . 1806 was from its founding in the Neuhausergasse in the building of the Carmelite Church in the Karmeliterstraße resettled, where it remained until its destruction by Allied bombers on April 25 1944th In the meantime, the Royal Educational Institute was officially renamed "Albertinum" in 1905.

Thanks to the connection to the Wittelsbach family , they made their Tegernsee Castle in Tegernsee available after the war . In the summer of 1950 the boarding school could be resumed there.

From July 16, 1963, Prince Franz von Bayern established a new home in Munich, which resumed its operations in Munich in the 1964/65 school year with 150 Catholic students. It was located on what was then the southwestern edge of the city on part of the property of the former Neufriedenheim sanatorium . A general renovation (1990) of the house brought a significant modernization and expansion. The Albertinum no longer only accepted male, Catholic students, but also female and non-Catholic children and young people. Finally the boarding school was closed in 1994 and a day care center was run. At the same time, the foundation supervision changed from a state administered foundation (under the supervision of the government of Upper Bavaria ) to a church foundation under public law under the supervision of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising. After more than 50 years, Duke Franz von Bayern gave up his membership in the Board of Trustees at the end of 2013 and left his place and duties to Princess Beatrix of Bavaria .

In the spring of 2015, the Albertinum opened a day care center with 125 places for primary school children.

literature

  • Hannelore Putz : The Domus Gregoriana in Munich. Education and training in the vicinity of the Jesuit College St. Michael until 1773 (series of publications on Bavarian history 141), Munich 2003
  • Benedikt Weyerer: The Albertinum study seminar 1900-1990. The path of a Catholic boarding school in Munich , Geschichtswerkstatt Neuhausen eV, 2011

Web link

Individual evidence

  1. Süddeutsche Zeitung: Learning, "free from all food worries". Accessed January 31, 2020 .
  2. ^ Muenchen.de: Childcare facilities: Studienseminar Albertinum Munich