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  1. The Warsaw Lyceum (Polish: Liceum Warszawskie; German: Königlich-Preußisches Lyzäum zu Warschau) was a secondary school that existed in Warsaw, under the Kingdom of Prussia and under the Kingdom of Poland, from 1804 to its closing in 1831 by Imperial Russia following the Polish November 1830 Uprising.

  2. The Saxon Palace housed the Warsaw Lyceum, in which Chopin’s father Nicolas worked as a French teacher, and the Chopin family lived in a staff apartment there. Unfortunately, the palace no longer exists today as it was demolished during World War II. However, you can visit the Saxon Garden, where Fryderyk played over 200 years ago.

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  3. chopin.nifc.pl › en › chopinWarsaw Lyceum

    During his three years at the Warsaw Lyceum, housed in the main building of Kazimierz Palace, he was friendly with Dominik Dziewanowski, Jan Matuszyński, Wilhelm Kolberg, Julian Fontana, Marceli Celiński and Konstanty Pruszak, and also became much closer with Tytus Woyciechowski, whom he had met earlier.

  4. 19 de ago. de 2020 · Chopin grew up in Warsaw; his mother was Polish, his father a French émigré who had been a tutor to the children of the Polish nobility and taught at the Warsaw Lyceum, which Frédéric (or ...

  5. 22 de feb. de 2024 · Tags: composers classical music fryderyk chopin Frédéric Chopin józef elsner Jan Stefani karol mikuli chopinsworld. One of the most prominent Polish composers, born on 1st March, 1810 (or 22nd February, 1810) in Żelazowa Wola, died on 17th October, 1849 in Paris.

  6. History. The school's history starts with the founding of the Stefan Batory Gymnasium (now called Lyceum) on 1 September 1918 with Zdzisław Rudzki as its first headmaster. It was originally located at 21 Kapucyńska Street.