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  1. History. It was founded as a Jesuit college in 1651, [2] and still has a chapel and an astronomical and astrological sundial dating to 1673. In 1987, an international section was added but has since relocated to the Cité Scolaire Internationale de Grenoble ( CSI Europole ).

    • Paul F. Grendler
    • 5 Jesuit Islands
    • 16 Roman National Colleges
    • 17 Jesuit Schools in France
    • 18 Jesuit Schools: Conclusions
    • 7 Jesuit Universities
    • Acknowledgment

    University of Toronto, Emeritus paulgrendler@gmail.com

    Ignatius of Loyola directed his fellow Jesuits to pay close attention to locating their colleges. He wanted the Jesuits to choose a good site, to acquire a prop-erty large enough for college and church, and to make sure that there was room to expand. If possible, the college should be situated in the center of the city, not far from “the conversati...

    A unique version of the Jesuit boarding school was the national college, which was a seminary for future secular priests from a specific linguistic region or po-litical state in Europe. Historians usually call them national colleges, although they might also be called linguistic colleges or national seminaries.120 They educated young men for the pr...

    Although boarding schools and national colleges were important, the heart of Jesuit education was the network of day schools supported by civil authorities in the major Catholic states of Europe. For reasons of space, it is not possible to discuss Jesuit schools everywhere. But a closer look at the schools in France illuminates their place in the m...

    Jesuit schools began when Ignatius of Loyola accepted an invitation to found a school in Messina. It flourished and was followed by others, most notably the Roman College. Diego Laínez, the second superior general of the Society, then decided that the schools would be the most important ministry of the Society. He mandated that almost all Jesuits w...

    Next came Jesuit universities. With the approval and support of civil authori-ties, the Jesuits founded new universities in which the Society ruled the entire university. They were small collegiate universities in which the Jesuit school teaching the humanities, philosophy, and theology might be the entire univer-sity. Or it might include two or th...

    I wish to thank Robert A. Maryks for the invitation and his help on this essay. Bibliography

  2. teaching. When Borja became a Jesuit in 1548 and moved to Rome in 1550, both the school and university at Gandía declined greatly.3 The Gandía school was barely a school, let alone a university. The school at Messina was the true beginning of Jesuit education. On De-cember 17 and 19, 1547, the Senate of Messina, with the warm endorsement of

  3. Children. 1. Jacques de Vaucanson ( French: [jak də vocɑ̃sɔ̃]; February 24, 1709 – November 21, 1782) [1] was a French inventor and artist who built the first all-metal lathe. This invention was crucial for the Industrial Revolution. The lathe is known as the mother of machine tools, as it was the first machine tool that led to the ...

  4. Below are listed notable Jesuit high schools or secondary schools, many of which grew into Jesuit colleges or universities, or formed in association with them. This list includes schools at the sixth form level, as distinguished from four-year colleges and universities (above).

  5. 10 de dic. de 2020 · This is the point where the effect and illustrative power of Maps come into play. The newly published Printable Map called the “Jesuit World of Universities and Schools” (2020) brings together the different Jesuit Education networks of the six Jesuit Conferences worldwide.

  6. 3 de jul. de 2020 · Comparison of Jesuit schools and universities in Europe with those created outside Europe—such as Quebec City in the 1630s—is not attempted. Grendler examines the period from the founding of the first Jesuit school at Messina, in 1548, to the suppression of the Jesuits in 1773.