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Lycée Henri IV
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lycée_Henri_IV" .
Lycée Henri-IV: Clovis bell tower
The Lycée Henri-IV [1] (sometimes called HIV , H4 , or Henri-Quatre ) is a public secondary school located in Paris . Along with Louis-le-Grand , it is widely regarded as one of the most demanding in France.
The school has more than 2,500 pupils from collège (the first four years of secondary education in France ) to classes préparatoires (classes to prepare students for entrance to the elite Grandes écoles ).[1]
At the yearly competitive entrance examinations for the various scientific, humanities, and business Grandes Écoles , students from the Lycée Henri-IV's classes préparatoires regularly have the highest rate of admission.
Henri-IV is located in the nationally-historic buildings of the former Sainte Geneviève abbey .[1] After the French revolution , it was transformed into a public lycée , the first one in France. It is located in the heart of the Latin Quarter [1] on the left bank of the river Seine , near the Panthéon , the church Saint-Étienne-du-Mont , and the rue Mouffetard . The Latin Quarter is the traditional academic neighborhood of Paris. Rich in history, architecture, and culture, this area encompasses the oldest and the most prestigious educational establishments in France: (the École Normale Supérieure , the Sorbonne , the Collège de France , the Lycée Louis-le-Grand , etc.)
Famous alumni
Entrance to
Lycée Henri-IV on the rue Clovis.
Guy Béart , singer
Jean-Marie Benoist , anthropologist
Léon Blum , French prime minister (of the Front populaire party)
Jean-Louis Bory , novelist and film critic
Jacques de Bourbon Busset , co-founder of CERN , member of the Académie française
Patrick Bruel , composer (who refers to the lycée in his song, «Place des grands hommes»)
Isambard Kingdom Brunel , British engineer
Camille Dalmais , singer
Emmanuel Chain , journalist and television producer
Pierre Puvis de Chavannes , painter
Gilles Deleuze , philosopher
Léon-Paul Fargue , poet
Michel Foucault , philosopher
Paul Fournel , writer and bicyclist
Georges Friedmann , sociologist
Albert Gardes , artist
André Gide , writer
Julien Gracq , writer
Georges-Eugène Haussmann , baron, préfet, and city planner
Alfred Jarry , writer (of Ubu Roi , for example)
Pierre Loti , sailor and writer
Jacques Maritain , philosopher
Guy de Maupassant , writer
Prosper Mérimée , writer (of Carmen , for example)
Alain Minc , writer, reporter, engineer and businessman
Alfred de Musset , playwright
Paul Nizan , philosopher and writer
Jean d'Ormesson , novelist
Mazarine Pingeot , novelist and journalist
Plantu , cartoonist for Le Monde
Éric Rohmer , New Wave director, writer and actor
Jean-Paul Sartre , philosopher
Maurice Schumann , fellow of the Académie française , minister, and senator
Jorge Semprun , Spanish Minister for culture
Bertrand Tavernier , actor, director, producer
Albert Thibaudet , essayist and critic
Pierre Vidal-Naquet , historian
Alfred de Vigny , poet
André Vingt-Trois , current Archbishop of Paris
Simone Weil , philosopher
the sons of the king Louis-Philippe , among whom was the Duke of Aumale , governor-general of Algeria, member of parliament, member of the Académie française , the Académie des Beaux Arts and the Académie des Sciences morales et politiques
Famous teachers
See also
Notes
^ a b c d
"Lycée Henri-IV à Paris" (institution website),
Address: 23, rue Clovis, 75005 PARIS
Website: LycHenri4-Paris-web .
External links
Coordinates : 48°50′45″N 2°20′52″E / 48.84583 , 2.34778
© jGames.co.uk 2007 (some content from Wikipedia under GDL )
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