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The college, originally called Collège des Aicelins, was founded in 1314 by Gilles I Aycelin de Montaigu, Archbishop of Narbonne and Archbishop of Rouen. [1] It changed its name after it had been restored in 1388 by his relative Pierre Aycelin de Montaigut, Bishop of Nevers and Laon.
On 30 May 1483, he became Master of the Collège de Montaigu, a home for poor students from far away.The College had been founded in 1314 by Gilles Aycelin, [1] in Normandy, France—who was the Archbishop of Rouen from 1311 to 1319).
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.
Gilles I Aycelin de Montaigu was Archbishop of Narbonne (1287–1311) and Archbishop of Rouen (1311–1318). He was one of the most influential counselors of King Philip IV of France. [3] He negotiated the Treaty of Tournai (1298) and Treaty of Montreuil (1299) with the English, and created the Collège de Montaigu in 1314. [4]
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 ]
Collège de Montaigu, a constituent college of the Faculty of Arts of the University of Paris; Counts of Montaigu, a French noble family of the 11th and 12th centuries; Sofia Achaval de Montaigu, Argentine designer, stylist, editor, and model; Thibault de Montaigu, French writer and journalist
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.
Anticlerical cartoon from 1881 depicting Mgr. Freppel confronting Jules Ferry. From the beginning, the Catholic right strongly opposed the Ferry laws. Mgr. Freppel, who was the bishop of Angers and a member of parliament for Finistère, spoke out against state-run education in the Chamber of Deputies. He believed that it was "useless ...