Collège-lycée Jacques-Decour
Appearance
(Redirected from Collège Rollin)
Collège-lycée Jacques-Decour | |
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Location | |
12 avenue Trudaine, Paris France | |
Coordinates | 48°52′54″N 2°20′40″E / 48.88167°N 2.34444°E |
Information | |
Former names | Collège Sainte-Barbe Collège Rollin Lycée Rollin |
Established | 1821 |
Website | Official website |
The Collège-lycée Jacques-Decour (French pronunciation: [kɔlɛʒ lise ʒak dəkuʁ]) is a school in Paris, France, on avenue Trudaine.
History
[edit]The school was founded as the private Collège Sainte-Barbe in 1821 and renamed Collège Rollin in 1830. It was transplanted in 1876 from the Quartier Latin to avenue Trudaine, near Montmartre. The old building on rue Lhomond became the site of the Protestant Faculty of Theology in Paris in 1877. Collège Rollin was granted municipal status,[1] and became Lycée Rollin in 1919. It is the only secondary school in Paris to have taken the name of a former teacher, Jacques Decour, a French Resistance fighter in 1944.
Selected alumni
[edit]- Jean de Botton[2]
- Charles Forbes René de Montalembert
- Lucien Lévy
- Édouard Manet[3][4]
- Benoît Mandelbrot
- Félix Ravaisson
- Georges Sorel[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Great Britain. Charity Commission – 1890 "And, in addition to these, there is the celebrated ancient Rollin College, which has been taken over by the municipality. The Rollin and Chaptal Colleges are rather of a literary type, and are in reality secondary schools."
- ^ Jean de Botton, Retrospective, exhibition catalogue, San Francisco: California Palace of the Legion of Honor, 1944. p. 15.
- ^ Gilles Néret Édouard Manet, 1832–1883: The First of the Moderns 2003 p. 93 "1841 Secondary education at the College Rollin, where he meets Antonin Proust (1832–1905), a lifelong friend"
- ^ Beth Archer Brombert Édouard Manet: Rebel in a Frock Coat 1997 p. 8 "The observation of the inspector who visited the College Rollin in 1847 is very revealing, both of the school and of the political viewpoint of the writer: "In the teaching of rhetoric at the College Rollin, particularly in the upper .. ."
- ^ Gervasoni, Marco (1997). Georges Sorel, Una Biografia Intellettuale. Milan: Edizioni Unicopli. ISBN 8840004920.