Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Lycée Louis-le-Grand

The Lycée Louis-le-Grand (French elocution: ​[lise lwi lə ɡʁɑ̃]) is an open optional school situated in Paris, broadly viewed as a standout amongst the most prestigious in France. Established in 1550 as the Collège de Clermont, it was renamed in King Louis XIV of France's honor after he extended his immediate support to it in 1682. It offers both a 6th structure school educational programs (as a lycée with 800 understudies), and a post-optional level educational modules (classes préparatoires with 900 understudies), planning understudies for access to the tip top Grandes Écoles, (for example, the École Normale Supérieure, the École Polytechnique, Centrale Paris, HEC Paris or ESSEC Business School). Understudies at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand are called magnoludoviciens. 

Louis-le-Grand, established in 1563, is situated in the heart of the Quartier Latin, the conventional understudy's territory of Paris. Rich ever, structural engineering, culture, this range is home to a portion of the most established and most prestigious instructive foundations in France including the Sorbonne and the Collège de France. The lycée is arranged near the spot du Panthéon, which is the area of its verifiable adversary, the Lycée Henri-IV. These two lycées are home to the most established preliminary classes in France, which are generally seen as the most particular in the nation. 

As a result of this, Louis-le-Grand is considered to assume a critical part in the training of French elites. A large portion of its previous students have ended up statesmen, ambassadors, prelates, marshals of France, individuals from the Académie française, and men and ladies of letters. "The Jesuit College of Paris", composed Élie de Beaumont in 1862, "has for quite a while been a state nursery, the most rich in incredible men". In fact, previous understudies have included authors Molière, Voltaire, Victor Hugo and Charles Baudelaire, progressives Robespierre and Camille Desmoulins, previous French presidents Raymond Poincaré, Paul Deschanel, Alexandre Millerand, Alain Poher, Georges Pompidou, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and Jacques Chirac and also numerous different clergymen and head administrators, scholars, for example, Denis Diderot, Emile Durkheim, Jean-Paul Sartre and Jacques Derrida, researchers Évariste Galois, Henri Poincaré and Laurent Schwartz, and craftsmen Eugène Delacroix, Edgar Degas and Georges Méliès. Prestigious outside understudies of the lycée incorporate King Nicholas I of Montenegro, Léopold Sédar S

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