Collège Saint-Michel
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2012) |
Collège Saint-Michel | |
---|---|
Location | |
Switzerland | |
Coordinates | 46°48′26″N 7°09′28″E / 46.80725°N 7.1577°ECoordinates: 46°48′26″N 7°09′28″E / 46.80725°N 7.1577°E |
Information | |
Established | 1582 |
Website | csmfr |
Collège Saint-Michel (German: Kollegium St. Michael) is a Gymnasium school located in Fribourg, Switzerland. It was established in 1582 by the Jesuit order as a boys' school.[1]
Personalities[]
Rectors[]
- Pierre Michel (1582–1888)
- Jean-Baptiste Jaccoud (1888–1924)
- Hubert Savoy (1924–1939)
- Romain Pittet (1939–1952)
- Mgr Edouard Cantin (1952–1971)
- Abbé André Bise (1971–1983)
- Michel Corpataux (1983–1989)
- Jean Baeriswyl (1989–1996)
- Nicolas Renevey (1996–2004)
- Jacques de Coulon (2004–2008)
- Matthias Wider (since 2008)
Notable teachers[]
- Jean-Pierre Dorand
- Fabrice Hadjadj
- Félicien Morel
- Claude Schorderet
- Denis Clerc
- Michel Bugnon-Mordant
Notable alumni[]
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (April 2021) |
- Patrick Aebischer (1954– ), president of the EPFL
- Abbé Joseph Bovet (1879–1951), composer
- Dominique de Buman (1956– ), national councilor
- Jacques Chessex (1934–2009), writer
- Michel Dénériaz (1928–1999), radio host and game show
- Joseph Deiss (1946– ), former federal councilor
- Antoine Dousse (1924–2006), bookseller, teacher and writer
- Claude Frochaux (1935), writer, publisher
- Emile Gardaz (1931–2007), poet and writer
- Félix Glutz, vaudois politician
- François Gross (1931–2015), journalist
- Pierre Hemmer (1950–2013), one of the Internet pioneers in Switzerland
- Armin Jordan (1932–2006) orchestra conductor
- Cardinal Charles Journet (1891–1974)
- Anthony Kohlmann (1771–1836), Jesuit educator
- Mgr Pierre Mamie (1920���2008), bishop
- Jules Marmier (1874–1975), Swiss composer, cellist, organist and choirmaster
- Georges Python, conseiller d'État, principal founder in 1891 of the University of Fribourg
- Gaston de Raousset-Boulbon (1817–1854), adventurer, conqueror of the desert of Sonora (Mexico)
- Count Gonzague de Reynold (1880–1970), historian and writer
- Léon Savary (1895–1968), writer and journalist
- Peter Scholl-Latour (1924–2014), journalist
- Vladimir Serbinenko, Switzerland's first gold medallist at the International Mathematical Olympiad
- Father Joseph-Marie Timon-David (1835–1842), founder of Congregation of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
- Ernst Wilczek (1862–1948), botanist
See also[]
- List of Jesuit schools
References[]
- ^ "University of Fribourg Ranking and Address". http://www.universityreview.org. 10 April 2012. External link in
|journal=
(help)
External links[]
Categories:
- Secondary schools in Switzerland
- Jesuit schools in Europe
- 1852 establishments in Switzerland
- Educational institutions established in 1852
- European school stubs
- Swiss building and structure stubs