Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Lycée Jules-Ferry is a public secondary and higher education school located in the 9th arrondissement of Paris. It is famous especially since it was used in Diane Kurys's film, Peppermint Soda (Diabolo menthe, 1977). This public school of Paris is composed by a collège, a lycée and by CPGE.
閩南語 / Bân-lâm-gú; Català; Cebuano; Čeština; Deutsch; Español; Esperanto; Euskara; Français; Հայերեն; Italiano; Kurdî; Ladin; Latina; Magyar ...
Anita Conti (Armenian: Անիթա Գոնթի; [1] née Caracotchian) (17 May 1899 – 25 December 1997) was a French explorer and photographer, and the first female oceanographer in her country.
Lycée Jules-Ferry (Versailles), Versailles Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about schools, colleges, or other educational institutions which are associated with the same title.
Jules Ferry, the Minister of Public Instruction in 1881, is widely credited for creating the modern school (l'école républicaine) by requiring all children between the ages of 6 and 12, both boys and girls, to attend.
Line A serves collège Jules-Ferry and hospital; line D serves the borough. [3] Entrance from Beausoleil. D 6E road in Pont Boutiron neighborhood toward Vichy.
The radicals passed the Jules Ferry laws, which established first free education (1881) then mandatory and secular education (1882). Proposed by the Republican Minister of Public Instruction Jules Ferry , they were a crucial step in the secularization of the Third Republic (1871–1940). [ 8 ]
Ferrat was born in Vaucresson, Hauts-de-Seine, the youngest of four children from a modest family which moved to Versailles in 1935, where Ferrat studied at the Jules Ferry College. His Russian -born father (naturalized in 1928) was forced to wear the yellow star and deported to Auschwitz in 1942, where he died.