Sorbonne
The Sorbonne is a building in Paris' Latin Quarter . The Sorbonne emerged from a Catholic educational institution founded around 1250 and in the Middle Ages was the seat of the college of the Sorbonne - a part of the old Paris University - and thus became a synonym for the old (until 1793) and later also for the new in common parlance Paris University (1896–1971).
The name and the central building complex in the 5th arrondissement are currently shared by three of the thirteen Paris universities that emerged from the university reform of 1970/71 : Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne , Paris III Sorbonne Nouvelle and Paris IV Paris-Sorbonne . The Sorbonne building also houses parts of the University of Paris V Descartes and the École pratique des hautes études , the École nationale des chartes and the joint rectorate ( Chancellerie ).
location
The Sorbonne is located on the Rive Gauche , the left bank of the Seine, on the slopes of the Montagne Sainte-Geneviève hill in the 5th arrondissement . It forms the center of the student quarter Quartier Latin . The main entrance is on Rue Victor Cousin , side entrances are on Rue Cujas and Rue Saint-Jacques . The entrance to the Rector's Office is on Rue des Écoles .
historical overview
Middle Ages and Modern Times
The foundation of the Sorbonne as a college of the University of Paris is on Robert de Sorbon (1201-1274), the chaplain King Louis the Saint , returned, a university however, there were already about 1200. The confirmation bull by Pope Clement IV. In 1268 sealed. Originally an alumnate for poor theology students , the Sorbonne (a name that the institution only took on in the 14th century) developed an ever greater reputation through famous teachers who worked on it, as well as through its comparatively rich foundation assets. At the beginning of the 14th century, the Sorbonne supported King Philip IV in the legal proceedings against the Knights Templar .
In the Sorbonne the meetings of the theological faculty of the Paris University took place regularly , so that at the latest by the end of the 15th century it became customary to refer to this faculty itself as the Sorbonne . Many of the decisions that were decisive for the formation of Catholicism, not only in France , from the Middle Ages to modern times are linked to this name .
By 1500 at the latest, however, the Sorbonne developed the tendency to shut itself off from new developments, such as the humanism radiating from Italy at that time . Later she tried in vain to prevent the growth of the Pope's power and the introduction of the Jesuit order in France (1562) and made herself a champion of Gallicanism , a kind of French national church. Her bitter struggle against Jansenism also marginalized her further and cost her a lot of sympathy, especially among aristocratic and upper-class civil servants. It completely lost its authority when it embarked on the fight against the Enlightenment in the 18th century and increasingly came under the reputation of intolerance and obscurantism.
From the 13th to the 15th centuries, the university's meetings were held in the church of Saint-Julien-le-Pauvre , where the rectors were also elected.
First university strike
In the Middle Ages, students in the Parisian population were considered turbulent subjects who populated the taverns and brothels. In 1229, a student drinking binge caused the first university strike in European history - with far-reaching consequences. During the Carnival season, some students broke into a fight in a public house. The mayor's soldiers, who had long been waiting to beat the students' arrogance, stormed the Latin Quarter and started the hunt. Two recognized masters also fell victim to their anger. The teachers of the Sorbonne saw this as an attack on the university as a whole and called a lecture strike. Because the city refused to pay the victims adequate compensation, the university remained closed. Many lecturers emigrated to other French cities or to England, where they settled at Oxford University . The lecture strike lasted three years; until Pope Gregory IX. , himself a former Paris student, published the bull Parens scientiarum on April 13, 1231 , in which he endowed the university as the mother of science with various privileges in order to prevent the students from being bullied. The Sorbonne only resumed its work in 1232, when the young King Louis IX. guaranteed her far-reaching privileges and independence.
Dissolution and re-establishment
At the beginning of the French Revolution , its extensive, magnificent buildings (which were rebuilt from 1635 to 1653 under Cardinal Richelieu and Cardinal Mazarin ) were confiscated as national property. In 1808 they were transferred to the centrally restructured Napoleonic educational body, the "université impériale" (a state organization that controls all educational institutions in France and has nothing in common with universities in today's sense). Only during the Third Republic under Félix Faure was the nouvelle Université de Paris re-established in 1896 ; The current university buildings were also built in these years.
1968 and 2006
In May 1968 , the temporarily occupied university was the focus of the student movement. The student revolution at the time ensured that the Sorbonne changed more than ever before. It was divided into 12 different and independent universities. The Sorbonne no longer exists in the form previously described, only its 19th century building now houses three capital city universities: Paris I, Paris III and Paris IV.
In the spring of 2006, the Sorbonne was occupied again by students in protest against the loosening of the protection against dismissal for persons under 26 years of age ( Contrat première embauche ). The occupation was ended by the police on the night of March 11, 2006 at the request of the rector. On the night of March 15, after a march on the Sorbonne, violent riots broke out again, in which at least nine demonstrators were arrested and at least nine officers were injured. On the night of March 17, the protests broadened. 40 police officers were injured and over 180 protesters arrested.
Famous Graduates
- Lotario dei Conti di Segni (1160 / 1161–1216), important canon lawyer and Pope
- Albertus Magnus (around 1200–1280), German scholar and bishop
- Bonaventure (1221–1274 in Lyon), Catholic Church Doctor, General Minister of the Franciscans and Cardinal
- Thomas Aquinas (around 1225–1274), Catholic church doctor
- Siger von Brabant (around 1235–1284), ( Averroist dispute with Thomas Aquinas )
- Meister Eckhart (around 1260–1328), late medieval theologian
- Vojtěch Raňkův z Ježova (around 1320–1388), Czech theologian and philosopher
- Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (around 1450–1536), French reform humanist and Bible translator
- Pedro de Lerma (around 1461–1541), first chancellor of the University of Alcalá
- Ignatius von Loyola (1491–1556), founder of the order of the Societas Jesu
- Johannes Calvin (1509–1564), French reformer, founder of Calvinism
- Denis Diderot (1713–1784), French encyclopaedist, philosopher, author and educator
- Alfred Binet (1857–1911), French physician and educator, founder of psychometrics
- Saionji Kimmochi (1849–1940), Japanese Prime Minister
- Pierre Curie (1859–1906), French physicist, Nobel Prize in Physics (1903)
- Pierre Janet (1859–1947), French philosopher
- Marie Curie (1867–1934), Polish-French scientist, Nobel Prize in Physics (1903) and for Chemistry (1911)
- Hasan Tahsin (1888–1919), Turkish national hero
- Oka Kiyoshi (1901–1978), Japanese mathematician
- Emmanuel Mounier (1905–1950), French philosopher, founder of Esprit magazine , main exponent of French personalism
- Jan Patočka (1907–1977), Czech philosopher
- Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986), French writer and feminist
- Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908–2009), French ethnologist and anthropologist
- Michel Aflaq (1910-1989), Pan-Arab socialist
- Peter Scholl-Latour (1924–2014), Franco-German journalist and publicist
- Gilles Deleuze (1925–1995), French philosopher
- Michel Foucault (1926–1984), French philosopher, psychologist, historian, sociologist and founder of discourse analysis
- Luigi Colani (1928–2019), German industrial designer
- William Klein (* 1928), French-American photographer, including "New York"
- Françoise Sagan (1935-2004), French writer
- Georges Perec (1936–1982), French writer and director, member of the Oulipo
- Elizabeth Teissier (* 1938), Swiss-French astrologer
- Nano Ruzhin (* 1952), Macedonian sociologist, ambassador and university rector
- Marie-Aude Murail (* 1954), French writer
- Sarah Biasini (* 1977), French actress
literature
- Duvernet: Histoire de la Sorbonne . Strasbourg, 1792, (German, 2 volumes)
- Franklin: La Sorbonne . 2nd Edition. Paris, 1875
- Méric: La Sorbonne et son fondateur . Paris, 1888
- Sorbonne . In: Meyers Konversations-Lexikon . 4th edition. Volume 15, Verlag des Bibliographisches Institut, Leipzig / Vienna 1885–1892, p. 44.
- Laetitia Boehm : Paris I . In: TRE . Volume 26. 1996, pp. 1-12.
Web links
- Homepage of the Sorbonne (French)
- Daily news report about the occupation and evacuation of the Sorbonne on March 11, 2006 (tagesschau.de archive)
Individual evidence
- ^ Eckhart knowledge: Paris
- ^ Tear gas against students in Paris , NZZ of March 11, 2006, last accessed on March 29, 2019
- ↑ Student protest at the Sorbonne ended violently , Telepolis of March 12, 2006, last accessed on April 20, 2009
- ↑ Police officers injured during protests in Paris , RP of March 15, 2006, last accessed on April 20, 2009
Coordinates: 48 ° 50 ′ 55 " N , 2 ° 20 ′ 36" E