Lycée Saint-Louis

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Lycée Saint-Louis, Paris VIe (Photo from 1929).
Lycée Saint-Louis, Paris VIe (Photo from 1929).

The lycée Saint-Louis is a higher education establishment located in the VIe arrondissement of Paris, in the Quartier Latin. It is the only public French lycée exclusively dedicated to classes préparatoires aux grandes écoles (CPGE, the preparatory classes for the Grandes Écoles). It is known for the quality of its teaching and the results it achieves in their intensely competitive entrance examinations (concours).

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[edit] History: the College d'Harcourt

Until 1820, the lycée Saint-Louis was named Collège d'Harcourt. The latter was founded in 1280 by Robert and Raoul d'Harcourt to offer food and lodgings to some forty impoverished students. It was not originally a teaching establishment, but this became an increasingly important part of its function over the years.

The original building was demolished in 1795 and the present one erected on its site in 1814.

In the course of the 19th century, the lycée was successively a prison, barracks and reformatory.

[edit] Famous former pupils

[edit] References

  • L'ancien collège d'Harcourt et le lycée Saint-Louis, Bouquet, H.L., Paris, Delalin frères, 1891.
  • Du collège d'Harcourt, 1280, au lycée Saint-Louis, 1980, Fusellier, E., Euvrard, M., Paris, A.P.E. du lycée Saint-Louis, 1980.
  • Septième centenaire !, Humblot, H., in Bulletin d'information de L'association des parents d'élèves du lycée Saint-Louis. 1978/1979.

[edit] External links

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