Classical Lyceum Anavryton
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The Classical Lyceum Anavryton (official name "Ethniko Ekpaideftirio Anavryton", but commonly known as Anavryta) was an elite Greek lyceum (originally a boarding school only for boys ) that was established shortly before the beginning of the World War II in 1940, in order to provide education to the members of the Greek royal family and notable Athenian families and reestablished after the war in 1949. Since that year the school was named a "Lyceum Aristouhon" which only admitted students who distinquised themselves in other schools. After several educational reforms in Greece the school lost its elitistic character in 1976, but continued to have higher admissions standards until the end of the 90's.
Anavryta was originally based on the educational principles of Kurt Hahn, and modelled on Hahn’s own creations the Schule Schloss Salem and Gordonstoun. The effort to create an elite high school in Athens inspired by Hahn’s principles had originated from King George II of Greece following the tradition of the Greek royal family, members of which had attended Hahn’s schools. The effort was supported by the Greek academic society mainly because of the strong relationship of Hahn’s theories with ancient Greek philosophy. The main goal of the Lyceum was to focus on the pursuit of the Hahnian ideals and the study of Greek classics.
The school complex is located in the area of Maroussi, near Athens, in the middle of the beautiful forest of Anavryta, for which the school was named. The main building was the former mansion of Greek billionaire Andreas Syggrou (closed in the late 90's for safety concenrs) and the school also included other facilities including a small theater and a chapel.
The fate of the Lyceum was closely tied with the Greek royal family but the only king of Greece who actually graduated from the Lyceum was Constantine II of Greece, in the class of 1955. After the support of Constantine to the military junta in the early months of 1967 and with the public strongly opposing monarchy, a referendum vote established the system of presidential democracy and denounced the king in 1974. (In an extraordinary turn of events, the graduate society of Anavryta chose not to support the king, an event that had an effect on the vote.)
Under circumstances that followed in the next years and especially in the 1980s it was increasingly difficult for a public school to maintain an elitist approach in Greece. Anavryta lost its exclusive character, but remained a school with a solid reputation for academic excellence. Eventually at the end of the 1990s the school was prohibited from setting any kind of admission standards and requirements. Thus the Lyceum completely lost its original characteristics.
The Anavryta experiment ended mainly because of the hostility that the democratic Greek governments have shown to what was considered to be the reminder of the previous regime and the complete transformation of Greek society in the decades that followed. Nevertheless the importance of the Lyceum and its educational role cannot be underestimated. The impressive alumni of the Classical Lyceum shows distinguished members since generations of spiritual leaders, academics, spokesmen, businessmen, and other prominent members of the Greek society had graduated from the Classical Lyceum in the decades following 1940.
The school still exists but was renamed in 1998. The “Peiramatiko Lyceum Anavryton” [1] is a small Greek public school on the site of the former Classical Lyceum. Sadly the school estate and facilities are now in a state of decay, since the buildings received almost no attention for thirty years. Furthemore any restoration seems improbable due to the lack of funding and needed governmental support. The unavoidable abandonment of the historic buildings will eventually officially end what can only be described as the most important public school of modern Greece.
[edit] Sources
- Greek royal family (English)
- Greek royal family (Greek)
- Anavryta (Greek)
- City of Maroussi (Greek)