Quantum redactiones paginae "Collegium Franciae" differant
Content deleted Content added
mNo edit summary |
m Collége--->Collège + du France--->de France. ("France" is feminine, but "du" works only with masculine nouns.) (Are we sure it isn't "Collegium Francicum"?) + Lutetia--->Lutetiae. |
||
Linea 1: | Linea 1: | ||
[[Imago:College de France.jpg|thumb|300px|''Collegium Franciae in Lutetia.'']] |
[[Imago:College de France.jpg|thumb|300px|''Collegium Franciae in Lutetia.'']] |
||
'''Collegium Franciae''' ([[Francice]]: '' |
'''Collegium Franciae''' ([[Francice]]: ''Collège de France'') est. . . . |
||
==Historia== |
==Historia== |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
<!--- |
<!--- |
||
The '''Collège de France''' is a higher education and research establishment (''[[Grand établissement]]'') located in [[Paris]], [[France]], in the [[5th arrondissement]], or Latin Quarter, across the street from the historical campus of [[La Sorbonne]] at the intersection of Rue Saint-Jacques and Rue des Ecoles. |
The '''Collège de France''' is a higher education and research establishment (''[[Grand établissement]]'') located in [[Paris]], [[France]], in the [[5th arrondissement]], or Latin Quarter, across the street from the historical campus of [[La Sorbonne]] at the intersection of Rue Saint-Jacques and Rue des Ecoles. It also provides teaching, but to professors and researchers. |
||
It was created in 1530 at the request of [[Francis I of France|King Francis I of France]]. Of [[Humanism|humanist]] inspiration, this school was established as an alternative to the [[Collège de Sorbonne|Sorbonne]] to promote such disciplines as [[Hebrew language]], [[Greek language|Ancient Greek]] and [[Mathematics]]. Initially called ''Collège Royal'', and later ''Collège des Trois Langues'' (Latin: Collegium Trilingue), ''Collège National'', ''Collège Impérial'', it was named ''Collège de France'' in 1870. |
It was created in 1530 at the request of [[Francis I of France|King Francis I of France]]. Of [[Humanism|humanist]] inspiration, this school was established as an alternative to the [[Collège de Sorbonne|Sorbonne]] to promote such disciplines as [[Hebrew language]], [[Greek language|Ancient Greek]] and [[Mathematics]]. Initially called ''Collège Royal'', and later ''Collège des Trois Langues'' (Latin: Collegium Trilingue), ''Collège National'', ''Collège Impérial'', it was named ''Collège de France'' in 1870. |
Emendatio ex 16:24, 6 Ianuarii 2008
Collegium Franciae (Francice: Collège de France) est. . . .
Historia
Collegium Franciae Lutetiae constitutum est anno 1530.
Vide: (Academici historiae ab 1530 apud Pagina officialis):
- Raymond Aron
- Ioannes Fransiscus Boissonade de Fontarabie
- Stephanus Baluze
- Rolandus Barthes
- Emilius Benveniste
- Henricus Bergson
- Claudius Bernard
- Marcelin Berthelot
- Yves Bonnefoy
- Petrus Boulez
- Petrus Bourdieu
- Fernandus Henricus Cardoso
- Ioannes Fransiscus Champollion
- Georgius Cuvier
- Maria Henricus d'Arbois de Jubainville
- Ioannes Darcet
- Iacobus Arsène d'Arsonval
- Petrus Gilles de Gennes
- Emilius Deschanel
- Georgius Dumézil
- Lucius Febvre
- Oronce Fine
- Michel Foucault
- Ferdinandus André Fouqué
- Stephanus Fourmont
- Ioannes Baptiste Gail
- Carolus Gide
- Ian Hacking
- Eugenius Augustus Ernest Havet
- Fransiscus Héritier
- Fredericus Joliot
- Stanislas Julien
- Sylvestrus François Lacroix
- René Laënnec
- Paulus Langevin
- René Leriche
- Emmanuelus Le Roy Ladurie
- Claudius Lévi-Strauss
- Andreas Lichnerowicz
- Edmondus Malinvaud
- Henricus Maspero
- Ludovicus Massignon
- Maurice Merleau-Ponty
- Iulius Michelet
- Ioannes Baptiste Morin
- Alexis Paulin Paris
- Paulus Pelliot
- Fransiscus Pétis de la Croix
- Guillaume Postel
- Edgar Quinet
- Petrus Ramus
- Henricus Victor Regnault
- Ioannes Petrus Abel Rémusat
- Ioannes Baptiste Say
- Ioannes Petrus Serre
- Fransiscus Simiand
- Paulus Valéry
- Ioannes Petrus Vernant