The école Massillon is a private educational establishment under contract with the state with 1380 students (in 2015). The establishment is under the control of the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri. It is located in the hôtel Fieubet and the Gratry Building, in the 4th arrondissement of Paris.

École Massillon
Location
Map
2 bis quai des Célestins, Paris

Coordinates48°51′07″N 2°21′44″E / 48.85184°N 2.362263°E / 48.85184; 2.362263
Information
TypePrivate school under contract of association with the State
Motto"L’école n’est pas seulement un lieu de transmission du savoir, elle est aussi un lieu de communication des consciences".
("The school is not only a place of transmission of knowledge, it is also a place of communication of consciousness")
Established10 October 1877 (1877-10-10)
PrincipalL. Genou (2005-2012)
T. Michon (2012-)
Websitewww.ecolemassillon.com

The establishment bears the name of Jean-Baptiste Massillon (1663-1742), a celebrated orator who gave the funeral oration for Louis XIV. There is also a rue Massillon in the same arrondissement, located on the île de la Cité.

The school

edit

The teaching covers classes from kindergarten to High School.

The establishment is twinned with the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany) ; it is also a Cambridge exam centre.

The UAI code for the establishment is 0 752 920 S for the college.

International dimension

edit

The school has a native German and a native English section. Non-native students can also follow advanced German and English language classes. The school also prepares students for language exams such as the Cambridge English Advanced (CAE) and the Deutsches Sprachdiplom 1 and 2 (DSD).

Ranking of the lycée

edit

In 2022, the lycée was ranked 17th on the national level.[1] and 11th on the departemental level. Students obtained a 100% admission rate at the baccalauréat with 99% obtaining a mention.

History

edit

The hôtel Fieubet[1] was built by Jules Hardouin-Mansart, between 1676 and 1681, for Gaspard Fieubet, Chancellor of Queen Marie-Thérèse, as part of the former Royal Hotel of Saint-Pol. The hotel was then frequented by Jean de La Fontaine and Madame de Sévigné. The hotel was decorated by Le Sueur and Vicotte.

From 1814 to 1857, the hotel was a sugar refinery.

In 1857, Count Pierre de Lavalette bought the hotel and with architect Jules Gros transformed it into a Baroque Italo-Spanish pastiche, doubling the size of the right wing with sculpted decoration.

At the end of 1872, rue de Turenne, some priests from the Oratory began to educate youth. However, it was only from 10 October 1877 that the école Massillon began. On 3 April 1877, abbé Nouvelle bought the hôtel Fieubet. On 10 October of the same year, the building took its first 150 students.[2]

Associations

edit

The école Massillon is rich in cultural and international diversity, and works with numerous associations, including many humanitarian organisations (A.C.K.S.P., Solar Burkina Project...), a student investment club, multilingual debating societies, and educational associations such as a theatre club run by Xavier Maly as well as a chess club which in 2011 won a student tournament and a scout group.

Students

edit

2021: Primary school; 313 students. College; 592 students. Lycée; 460 students.

Former students

edit

Disambiguation

edit

There is also another school named Massillon in Clermont-Ferrand, which also has classes from kindergarten to high school and also prepares for general baccalaureate.

Annex

edit

Other schools run by the Oratorians :

See also

edit

Notes and references

edit
  1. ^ LARHRA : De l'hôtel de Fieubet à l'école Massillon
  2. ^ "École Massillon".
  3. ^ Bruyez, Robert. "L'habit ne fait pas (toujours)...le sexe" in La Cité, February 1, 1959, p. 1: the transgender Poulain found the school "a daily torment."

Alumni site

edit