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  1. La pequeña universidad fue fundada en 1620 por Juan A. Guerrero, un oficial español, con el nombre de Colegio de Niños Huérfanos de San Juan de Letrán y seguía los sistemas de los hermanos dominicos. Hoy en día es una institución católica y privada de alto nivel. Se ubica en el histórico centro de Manila, en Intramuros. Historia

    • History
    • Campus
    • Academics
    • Athletics
    • Other Campuses
    • Gallery
    • Official Publications
    • External Links

    Beginnings

    The name San Juan de Letran is derived from the Basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome, considered as the Mother Church of Christendom. Early in the history of Letran, its chapel was granted many of the privileges enjoyed by the major basilica. Saint John the Baptist, for whom the basilica is named, is the patron saint of Letran. The college was founded by Don Juan Geromino Guerrero in 1620, a retired Spanish officer and one of the Knights of Malta, in Intramuros as Colegio de Niños Huerfanos d...

    18th century

    In 1738, under the reign of King Philip V of Spain opened the Colegio de San Juan de Letran and University of Santo Tomas, and six scholarships were granted by the king for Chinese, Japanese, and Tonkinese students. Vicente Liem de la Paz, Letran's foremost alumnus, was among the students who enjoyed this scholarship taking up trivium and quadriviumalong with four Tonkinese namely: Jose de Santo Tomas, Juan de Santo Domingo, Pedro Martir and Pedro de San Jacinto.

    19th century

    In May 1865, Letran was graded as a College of the First Class by royal decree ordered by Queen Isabella II and, as a result, the school population rose considerably. In 1886, rector Fr. Bernardino Nozaleda re-organized the school's curriculum into the Lower, Middle, and Superior grades (Infima, Media y Superior) to conform to modern European and American teaching patterns.

    St. John the Baptist Building

    Also known as the administration building, it houses the office of the rector and president. It houses the admission office, financial affairs office, the Letran Center for Intramuros Studies (LCIS) office, guidance counselor office, the information technology center, College of Business Administration and Accountancy, College of Education, and the Institute of Information Technology. The bookstore, lobby, and chapel are also in this building. The St. John Lateran convent of the Letran Domini...

    Our Lady of Aranzazu Building

    The former St. Antoninus Building is dedicated in honor of Our Lady of Aranzazu, where the Arch-confraternity of Nuestra Senora de Aranzazu was solemnly established in Letran on December 16, 1772, by virtue of a pontifical brief issued by Benedict XIV on September 18, 1748. It holds the promenade and Salon de Actos(student lounge).

    St. Dominic de Guzman Building

    The building who was named after the founder of the Order of Preachers (Dominicans). This building houses classrooms, Science and Psychology Laboratory, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and The Institute of Communication.

    College of Business Administration and Accountancy

    The College of Business Administration and Accountancy offers a wide range of business courses especially in management. Letran's CBAA was known as the flagship college of the institution. The college produced many alumni and students who excelled in the field of business: one of these is the prominent Filipino businessman Enrique Zobel de Ayala[citation needed] — the first patriarch of the Zobel de Ayalafamily.

    College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

    Same as the CBAA, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or CLAS is the flagship college offering courses in the Colegio. Its Liberal Studies program offers required subjects in the Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, Mathematics, Languages and Health, and Physical Education. It also offers majors in Communication Arts, Psychology, Political Science, AB Advertising, AB Public Relation, AB Journalism, and AB Broadcasting. It likewise offers subjects required in all courses such as Sem...

    College of Education

    The College of Education began as an area in the College of the Liberal Arts, Sciences, and Education in 2002 with an initial enrollment of seventeen students and six teachers in its Bachelor of Science in Secondary Education program. In 2006, the education area separated to become an independent college.

    Letran is a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Associationfrom 1928 to 1932, and since 1936. The Colegio currently participates in basketball, volleyball, football (soccer), track and field, taekwondo, Lawn Tennis, and table tennis. The varsity teams are called Letran Knights (for seniors division), Squires (for juniors division) and Lady K...

    Colegio de San Juan de Letran – Abucay, Bataan

    Rev. Fr. Rogelio Alarcon, O.P., former rector and president of Colegio de San Juan de Letran in Intramuros, Manila, and an alumnus proposed the idea of having another campus in the north. The province of Bataan was chosen. Initially, two sites in Bataan were presented: Hermosa and Balanga. After three years in the conceptualization stage, a third site, Abucay, was also considered. By what could be described as heavenly intercession and providential twists, Abucay was selected. The community o...

    Colegio de San Juan de Letran – Calamba, Laguna

    When the government declared its policy of decongesting Metro Manila, the Dominican Province of the Philippines instituted long-term plans which included the establishment of an extension school in Laguna. This plan was prepared by the Commission for the Planning of the Ministry of the Word.[citation needed] An 11-hectare tract of land along the foothills of the legendary Mount Makiling in Bucal, Calamba, Laguna, was chosen as the site. The school was founded on March 11, 1979. Rev. Fr. Ramon...

    Colegio de San Juan de Letran – Manaoag, Pangasinan

    The Holy Rosary Academy of Manaoag was founded in 1947 by Fr. Teodulo Cajigal, a Spanish Dominican priest. In 1990, the Dominican Fathers requested the help of the Dominican sisters in Pangasinan to teach Christian Living subjects in the Holy Rosary Academy of Manaoag. In response, two sisters were assigned in San Manuel for this purpose. In 1992, the Fathers entrusted the management of the school to the sisters. From then on, the sisters resided in the vicinity of the school. The sisters wor...

    Two-point view
    Letran from the air
    Center part of the Facade
    Details of the Windows
    The Lance, the official student publication of Colegio de San Juan de Letran – Manila
    Esplendente, the official student publication of Letran Senior High School Department
    The Letran Scrollfor the High School Level
    Letran Pagefor the Elementary Level
    • Johnny The Big Knight
    • God, Fatherland, Letran
    • Deus, Patria, Letran (Latin)
  2. De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. El Colegio de San Juan de Letrán fue una institución académica fundada en la Ciudad de México por el virrey Antonio de Mendoza . A mediados del siglo XIX fue la sede de una de las primeras sociedades literarias del país al fundarse en 1836 la Academia de Letrán.

  3. El Colegio de San Juan de Letrán comenzó llamándose «Colegio para mestizos» y fue creado en 1548, por iniciativa de los españoles peninsulares que vieron aumentar el número de los mestizos nacidos en la Nueva España que requerían de educación.

  4. La Catedral Archibasílica Papal del Santísimo Salvador del Mundo, y de los Santos Juan Bautista y Juan Evangelista en Letrán, más conocida como Archibasílica de San Juan de Letrán, es la catedral de la diócesis de Roma, donde se encuentra la sede episcopal del obispo de Roma (el papa ).

  5. De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. El Colegio de San Juan de Letrán es la segunda institución educativa de grado superior más antigua de Asia y de Filipinas, tras la Universidad de Santo Tomás (Filipinas), aunque sí es la primera en cuanto a educación básica.