College of Juilly
Collège de Juilly | |
---|---|
Orior I rise | |
Address | |
7 rue Barre Juilly, Seine-et-Marne, 77230 France | |
Information | |
Religious affiliation(s) | Oratoire de France |
Established | 1638 |
The College of Juilly (French: Collège de Juilly) is a Catholic private teaching establishment located in the commune of Juilly, in Seine-et-Marne (France). Directed by the French Oratorians, it was created in 1638 by the congregationists headed by Father Charles de Condren.
According to the legend, Saint Geneviève stopped in the village of Juilly in 470, and a water source suddenly emerged where she prayed. The spot quickly became a pilgrimage place, and the College was built around it. An abbey established itself there during the 12th century, while Blanche of Castile, the mother of Saint-Louis, decided in the 13th century to establish there an orphanage which hosted the children of those knights killed during the Crusades. Joan of Arc might have sojourned there while coming back from Orleans.
The monks quit the abbey in 1637 and handed it out to the Oratorians, who created an internship for the education of the French nobility. The abbey then became a Royal Academy, and retains to this day the three fleur-de-lys on its arm. The Juilly College also served many times as a war hospital.
It hosts a beautiful library notably composed of a reproduction of the United States Declaration of Independence, which was offered to La Fayette, as well as Diderot's original Encyclopédie.
Famous former students
- Barthélemy de Villars
- Louis Coudray
- Gaston de Sonis
- Jean de La Fontaine (1621–1695)
- Richard Simon (1638–1712)
- Henri de Boulainvilliers (1658–1722)
- James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick (1660–1734)
- Montesquieu (1689–1755)
- Pierre Victor, baron Malouet (1740–1814)
- Étienne-Denis Pasquier (1767–1862)
- Jean-Baptiste Benoît Eyriès, (1767–1846)
- Alexandre-Étienne Choron (1771–1834)
- Jérôme Bonaparte (1784–1860)
- Antoine Pierre Berryer (1790–1868)
- Claude Sosthène Grasset d'Orcet (1828–1900)
- Jean Fourastié (1907–1990) (inventor of the expression Trente Glorieuses)
- Claude Brasseur (1936–)
- Jacques Mesrine (1936–1979)
- Michel Polnareff (1958-1959)
Former teachers
- Louis Eugène Marie Bautain (1796–1867)
- Joseph Fouché (1763–1820)
Coordinates: 49°00′40″N 2°42′22″E / 49.011°N 2.706°E