Lycée Janson de Sailly
Lycée Janson de Sailly is a lycée located in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, France. The lycéens of Janson are called les jansoniens and they usually refer to their high school as Janson, or JdS. It is the biggest academic institution in the region: 3,200 boys and girls from 11 to 20 attend classes ranging from junior high school to Classes Préparatoires.
History
Monsieur Janson de Sailly was a wealthy Parisian lawyer, who found out that his wife had a lover. Therefore, he decided to disinherit her and to bequeath all of his fortune to the State, under the condition that it be used to establish a modern high school that would offer an excellent education and in which no women would be allowed.
The lycée was built in the 1880s. Victor Hugo who lived nearby made a speech for the inauguration. A decade later it was opened to girls as well. The lycée Janson de Sailly was the first Republican lycée of France (the others were royal or imperial establishments); it aimed at training the future French scientific, literary, military, industrial, diplomatic and political male élites of the young Third Republic.
It gained a national reputation, and attracted students from around the country. It also became one of the lycées of Parisian high society. The motto of the lycée was Pour la Patrie, par le livre et par l'épée (For the Homeland, by the book and by the sword). Many alumni joined the military, and participated in the conquest of the French Colonial Empire, especially in Africa.
In 1944, a few hundred Jansonians managed to leave the lycée and joined the French Free Forces (the 1st Army of Jean de Lattre de Tassigny): they founded le 2ème Bataillon de Choc, also known as Bataillon Janson-de-Sailly. They faced the German divisions in Alsace (especially in the battles of Masevaux and Colmar) during the counter-attack of Ardennes, and entered Germany with General Patton's forces in 1945.
Commemorative plaques near the entrances of several classrooms and halls in the school buildings honor the memories of its alumni - including the war hero Roland Garros.
Teaching
Nowadays, the 3,200 students are equally divided into the three traditional formations of the French Education System : collège (30 classes with collégiens from 11 to 14), lycée (30 classes with lycéens from 14 to 18) and Classes Préparatoires aux Grandes écoles or prépas (30 classes with students from 18 to 20).
In France, students must study two foreign or regional languages. The first choice at Janson is English or German. The second choice is larger: English, German, Spanish, Italian, Chinese or Russian. In classes préparatoires, there is even more choice with German, English, Arabic, Spanish, Italian, Russian as first language and all the aforementioned languages plus Japanese and Chinese as a second language. A student in Classes préparatoires can also take another second language not amongst those above. But those languages are available only through a partnership (the "Langues Inter-établissement") with other lycées with a wilder range of languages. The student would then study at Janson but go to another lycée to attend its foreign language class. For instance, the lycée Montaigne provides Portuguese and Polish and the lycée Buffon offers Hebrew and Swedish.
The Lycée offers an ABIBAC section, with German history classes taught by a native speaker. The students taking part in the section will take the Abitur and the Baccalauréat exams at the end of 12th grade.
Ranking
Due to its geographical location, and to the important number of its alumni, Janson de Sailly has a high reputation. Its scholastic ranking puts it at or above the median for area schools.[1] According to sociologists Michel Pinçon and Monique Pinçon-Charlot, the school is predominantly attended by children from the upper class or from the aristocracy because of its location (the prestigious XVI arrondissement in Paris).
External links
- Official website (in French)
Coordinates: 48°51′55.28″N 2°16′47.60″E / 48.8653556°N 2.2798889°E
Noted alumni
- Robert Abdesselam (1920–2006), French international tennis player
- Richard Anthony (1938–2015), French singer
- Gilbert Amy
- J. R. D. Tata (1904–1993), Indian aviator and business tycoon
- Philippe Ariès
- Pierre Assouline
- François d'Astier de La Vigerie (1886–1956), French General
- Jacques Attali, French economist
- Claude Autant-Lara
- Claude Aveline
- Robert Badinter, French minister of Justice known for his struggle against the death penalty.
- François-Marie Banier
- Ralph Baruch, First CEO of Viacom [2]
- Christian Bérard
- Alain Bernheim
- Richard Berry (actor)
- Pierre Bertaux
- Jean-Louis Bianco
- Mathieu Blanc-Francard ("Sinclair") (born 1970), French singer-songwriter
- Vincent Bolloré
- Édouard Bonnefous (1907–2007), French politician
- Jean-Louis Borloo, French Minister for Ecology, Energy, Sustainable Development and Town and Country Planning (2007–2010)
- Cyril Bourlon de Rouvre
- Martin Bouygues, CEO of Bouygues
- Pierre Brossolette
- Carla Bruni, wife of former French president Nicolas Sarkozy
- Laurent-Emmanuel Calvet, economist
- Élie Cartan
- Roger Chastel
- René Crevel
- Jean-Loup Dabadie
- Pierre Daninos
- Olivier Dassault, French deputy
- Serge Dassault, CEO of the Dassault group
- Jean Daujat
- Bernard Debré, French deputy
- Régis Debray
- Robert Debré, first Prime Minister of the Fifth French Republic
- Alain Decaux
- Michel Déon
- Jean Dutourd
- Henri Honoré d'Estienne d'Orves (1901–1941), French Navy officer
- Laurent Fabius, French socialist politician, current Foreign Minister
- Émile Faguet
- Edgar Faure, French politician
- Jean Favard
- Franc-Nohain
- François Furet
- Jean Gabin
- Général Pierre Marie Gallois
- Roland Garros (1888–1918), early French aviator
- Bertrand Gille (historian)
- José Giovanni
- Olivier Giscard d'Estaing
- Valéry Giscard d'Estaing (born 1926), French president 1974–81.
- Bruno Gollnisch
- Prince Peter of Greece and Denmark
- Julien Green
- William Grover-Williams
- Sacha Guitry
- Paul Guth
- Georges Hugnet
- Sébastien Izambard
- Jean-Marcel Jeanneney
- Lionel Jospin, French prime minister from 1997 to 2002.
- Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, currently President of Mali.
- Pierre Klossowski
- Philippe Labro
- Jacques de Lacretelle
- Arnaud Lagardère, General and Managing Partner of Lagardère SCA
- Amiral Jacques Lanxade
- Georges Lautner
- Patrick Leclercq
- Michel Leiris
- Henri Lepage (economist)
- Claude Lévi-Strauss, French anthropologist
- Robert Louis-Dreyfus
- Philippe Malaud
- Martin Malvy
- Roger Martin du Gard
- Lennart Meri, Estonian president from 1992 to 2001.
- Robert Merle
- Maurice Merleau-Ponty, French phenomenological philosopher
- Oscar Milosz
- Frédéric Mitterrand, French minister of Culture from 2009 to 2012.
- Henry de Montherlant
- Philippe Noiret
- Raoul Nordling
- Germain Nouveau
- Gérard Oury
- Claude Perdriel
- Jean Baptiste Perrin
- Jean Piat
- Maurice Rheims
- Matthieu Ricard
- Raymond Roussel
- Jean-Christophe Rufin
- Raul Saez, Chilean civil engineer
- Jean Sainteny
- Maurice Schumann
- Ernest-Antoine Seillière
- Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber
- Jean-Claude Sikorav
- George Steiner
- Benjamin Stora
- Preston Sturges
- Hervé This
- Alejandro Tomasini Bassols, Mexican philosopher
- Pierre-Yves Trémois
- Paul Vaillant-Couturier
- Ray Ventura
- Jean Wahl
- Mohammed Zahir Shah (1914–2007), last King of Afghanistan.
- Léon Zitrone (1914–1995), French journalist and TV presenter
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lycée Janson de Sailly. |
References
- ↑ France Examen "Analyse des résultats En 2015, les candidats du lycée Janson De Sailly qui se sont présentés au bac ES (série économique et sociale) ont été 98,6 % à décrocher leur diplôme et 59,7 % à se voir décerner une mention. Comparés aux résultats du département (taux de réussite de 95,8% et taux de mention de 65,8 %), les résultats du lycée Janson De Sailly sont en dessous de la moyenne pour le bac ES. Son taux de mention étant inférieur à 60%, le lycée Janson De Sailly n'obtient pas de dinstinction dans le palmarès du bac ES."
- ↑ Autobiography