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  1. The Academy of Sedan (Fr.: Académie de Sedan) was a Huguenot academy in Sedan in the Principality of Sedan, founded in 1579 and suppressed in 1681. It was one of the main centres for the production of Reformed pastors in France for a hundred years.

  2. In 1560, they declared Sedan's independence from the Kingdom of France. Particularly in the wake of the 1562 Massacre of Vassy, Sedan became one of the leading refuges for French speaking Protestants. The Academy of Sedan, founded in 1579, became one of the chief Huguenot academies.

  3. 25 de feb. de 2016 · Sylvius was sent to the Calvinist Academy of Sedan in the Ardennes region, where he studied philosophy and medicine. He pursued his medical studies in Leiden under the tutorship of Adolphus Vorstius (Adolf Vorst, 1596-1663) and Otho Heurnius (Otto van Heurn, 1577-1652) from 1632 to 1634.

    • André Parent
    • 2016
  4. Academy of Sedan; Universidad de Leiden; Universidad de Basilea; Supervisor doctoral: Adolphus Vorstius: Información profesional; Área: Medicina, Anatomía: Conocido por: Estudios de biología sobre sistema circulatorio y nervioso. Cargos ocupados: Rector de la Universidad de Leiden: Empleador: Universidad de Leiden; Universidad de Leiden ...

  5. 15 de feb. de 2022 · Abstract. As a teacher of philosophy at the Protestant Academy of Sedan (1675–1681), Pierre Bayle composed a course arranged according to the usual quadripartite schema of the curriculum, logic, ethics, physics, metaphysics. Bayle’s Systema totius philosophiae, however, was not an ordinary textbook in philosophy.

    • Martine Pécharman
    • martine.pecharman@ehess.fr
  6. Academy of Sedan Leiden University University of Basel (M.D., 1637) Known for: Sylvian fissure Aqueduct of Sylvius: Scientific career: Institutions: Leiden University: Theses

  7. The suppression of the Huguenot academy of Sedan by decree of Louis XIV, in July 1681, led the already renowned 34-year-old scholar to emigrate to the United Provinces, together with the theologian Pierre Jurieu (1637–1713), the other of the two most noted Protestant professors then teaching in France.