College de France
Posted on July 7th, 2008 by admin
The College de France, originally known as the College des Trois Langues, is one of the most celebrated academic centres of teaching and research in France. The Original building, with three wings round an arcaded courtyard (designed by Chalgrin, 1778), was considerably extended in the 19th century and again in 1930.
The College des Trois Langues (College of the Three Languages), also known as the College des Lecteurs Royaux (College of the Royal Lecturers), was founded in 1530 by Francois I, who thus established his reputation as “father and restorer of learningâ€. An admirer of the Italian Renaissance, he desired to create a center of learning independent of the Church in which the three languages of antiquity—Hebrew, Greek and Latin—would be studied, as in Italy, on the basis of original texts. The lecturers were paid by the king himself and not by the students, as was the normal practice.
The freedom of the teaching staff from any academic constraints and the students’ freedom of access to lectures without payment of any fee have been maintained down to the present day. The College de France, however, differs from the Sorbonne in granting no degrees, diplomas or titles. Its teaching program now extends to almost all the humanities and the natural sciences.
Among the best known professor who have taught the College de France are the physicist Andre Ampere, the historian Jules Michelet, the writer and poet Paul Valery, the philosopher Henri Bergson, the ethnologist Claude Levi-Strauss, the philosopher Michel Foucault and the literary critic Roland Barthes.
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