The Lycée Lamartine is a French institute of secondary education in the 9th arrondissement of Paris. It combines a collège, a lycée, and a Classe préparatoire aux grandes écoles (prep school for the Grandes écoles). The school is named for the 19th-century writer Alphonse de Lamartine.

Lycée Lamartine
Address
Map
121 rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière


Paris
,
75009

France
Coordinates48°52′42″N 2°20′56″E / 48.87847°N 2.34902°E / 48.87847; 2.34902
Information
Founded1893
Websitelyc-lamartine.scola.ac-paris.fr

History

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The lycée was founded in 1893 in a former folly owned by Pierre Beauchamps. Some parts of the current building date from a renovation done in 1740 by Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne; the panelling in one of the ancient rooms is designated a National Heritage.[1] The national department of education acquired the building in 1891 and turned it into a lycée for girls. In 1914, a baccalauréat in science was first awarded; one of the students receiving it, Jeanne Lévy, became the first woman professor at the medical school of the University of Paris, in 1934.[citation needed] The directrice from 1917 to 1919 was Marguerite Canon, an educator who also directed two other Parisian schools, the Lycée Jules-Ferry (1919-1922) and the Lycée Fénelon (1922-1930).[2]

From June to August 1940 the school provided for the many refugees fleeing the German advance. During the war, dozens of the school's Jewish students were deported.

In the 1960s the entrance exam was dropped and combined with the population increase resulting from the baby boom the number of students at the school increased greatly. An adjoining building was annexed. During the unrest of the May 1968 events in France, the students managed to rewrite the old student regulations, which were deemed too strict.

Notable students

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In fiction

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Further reading

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  • Bonnardot, J. (1933). Un lycée des jeunes filles dans un vieil hôtel parisien, le lycée Lamartine.
  • Roux, J. (1997). Le Lycée Lamartine (1891-1996). Histoire d'un lycée parisien de jeunes filles. Lille: Presses Universitaires du Septentrion.

References

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  1. ^ Base Mérimée: Lycée Lamartine, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
  2. ^ Margadant, Jo Burr (2019). Madame le Professeur: Women Educators in the Third Republic. Princeton University Press. p. 283. ISBN 9780691656786.
  3. ^ Milligan, Jennifer E. (1996). The Forgotten Generation: French Women Writers of the Inter-war Period. Berg. p. 97. ISBN 9781859731185. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  4. ^ Uglow, Jennifer, ed. (1991). "Marie Laurencin". Macmillan Dictionary of Women's Biography. Springer. p. 314. ISBN 9781349127047.
  5. ^ Cipolle, Alex V. (28 February 2013). "A Tale of Two Women: Local author Barbara Corrado Pope explores Belle Epoque Paris in an elegant murder mystery". Eugene Weekly. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  6. ^ Keith, Ellen (February 2013). "Rev. of The Missing Italian Girl". Historical Novels Review (63): 33.