Collège-lycée Jacques-Decour

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Collège-lycée Jacques-Decour, Avenue Trudaine

The collège-lycée Jacques-Decour is a school in Paris on the avenue Trudaine.

History[]

The school was founded as the private Collège Sainte-Barbe in 1821, renamed Collège Rollin in 1830. The school 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 who was a Resistance fighter in 1944: Jacques Decour.

Alumni[]

Alumni include:

The school today[]

Collège-Lycée Jacques-Decour is located in the 9th arrondissement of Paris, where some 2000 people work or live: pupils, students, teachers, as well as school life, administration and management staff. A Chinese international section was opened in 2017.

References[]

  1. ^ 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."
  2. ^ 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"
  3. ^ 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 .. ."
  4. ^ Gervasoni, Marco (1997). Georges Sorel, Una Biografia Intellettuale. Milan: Edizioni Unicopli. ISBN 8840004920.

Coordinates: 48°52′54″N 2°20′40″E / 48.88167°N 2.34444°E / 48.88167; 2.34444


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