Academy of Sedan Contents History Famous Professors Famous Alumni References Navigation menu
Educational institutions established in the 1600sReformed church seminaries and theological collegesDefunct universities and colleges in France1601 establishments in France1681 disestablishments in Europe
Fr.HuguenotSedanPrincipality of SedanReformedUniversity of GenevaJohn CalvinFrançoise de Bourbon-Vendôme, Princess of SedanLouis III de Bourbon, Duke of MontpensierHenri-Robert de La Marck, Prince of SedanPrince of SedanNational SynodReformed Church of FranceJargeauLouis XIVEdict of Fontainebleau
The Academy of Sedan (Fr.: Académie de Sedan) was a Huguenot academy in Sedan in the Principality of Sedan, founded in 1579 and suppressed in 1681. It was one of the main centres for the production of Reformed pastors in France for a hundred years.
Contents
1 History
2 Famous Professors
2.1 Before the Organization of the Academy
2.2 Professors of Law (one chair)
2.3 Professors of Greek (one or two chairs depending on the time)
2.4 Professors of Hebrew (one chair)
2.5 Professors of Theology (three chairs)
2.6 Professors of Philosophy (two chairs)
2.7 Professors of Rhetoric (Latin) (one chair)
2.8 Professors of Mathematics (one chair)
2.9 Professors of Physics (one chair)
2.10 Directors of Military Exercises
3 Famous Alumni
4 References
History
The Academy of Sedan was modeled on the Academy of Geneva (which is today the University of Geneva), which was founded by John Calvin in 1559. It was organized by the efforts of Françoise de Bourbon-Vendôme, Princess of Sedan, daughter of Louis III de Bourbon, Duke of Montpensier and wife of Henri-Robert de La Marck, Prince of Sedan (the first Prince of Sedan) in 1579. It was initially known as the College of Sedan (Collège de Sedan). In 1601, the National Synod of the Reformed Church of France, meeting in Jargeau, voted to transform the College of Sedan into its Academy for the training of pastors. The Academy of Sedan was suppressed in 1681 as part of Louis XIV's anti-Protestant measures that would climax in the 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau.
Famous Professors
Before the Organization of the Academy
Mathieu Béroalde, professor of Hebrew, 1573–74
Louis Cappel de Montgemberg, professor of Theology, 1576
Immanuel Tremellius, professor of Hebrew, 1576–79
Austrius Calabrinus, professor of Philosophy, 1579
Jacques Cappel, professor of Hebrew, 1594
Moïse Quadratus, professor of Physics, 1594
Robert de Visme, professor of Philosophy, 1594
Giulio Pace, professor of Law, 1595
Professors of Law (one chair)
Augustin Caillet, 1608–24
Charles Bordelius, 1624–30
Jean Daubert, 1630–44
Claude Pithoys, 1663
J. J. Burkhart, 1673–75
Pierre Billot, 1675
Professors of Greek (one or two chairs depending on the time)
Toussaint Berchet, 1602-24 (Berchet played a large role in the organization of the Academy in 1601)
Didier Héraut, 1602
Gautier Donaldson, 1603–09
Samuel Néran, 1608–11
Jacob Roussel, 1614
Jean Brazi, 1629–51
José Le Vasseur, 1646–71
Jacques Du Rondel, 1654
Professors of Hebrew (one chair)
Jacques Cappel, 1602–24
Jean Huttenius, 1613
Alexandre Colvill, 1619–43
Abraham Rambour, 1620–51
Josué Levasseur, 1646–61
Abraham Colvill, 1661–67
Pierre Jurieu, 1674–81
Professors of Theology (three chairs)
Daniel Tilenus, 1602–19
Jacques Cappel, 1602–24
Aaron Blondel, 1603–05
André Melvin, 1611–19
Abraham Rambour, 1620–54
Pierre Du Moulin, 1621–58
Samuel Maresius, 1625–36
Alexandre Colvill, 1619–43
Louis Cappel, 1633–58
Le Blanc de Beaulieu, 1645–75
Abraham Colvill, 1658–67
José Le Vasseur, 1646–71
Alpée de Saint-Maurice, 1660–81
Paul Joly, 1673–76
Henri Sacrelaire, 1676–81
Pierre Jurieu, 1673–81
Pierre Trouillard, 1676–80
Jakob Abbadie, 1680–81
Professors of Philosophy (two chairs)
John Cameron, 1602–04
Arthur Johnston, 1606–23
Claude Pithoys, 1633–75
Joseph Pithoys, 1655
Adam Steuart, 1622–28- P. Bisterfeld, 1624–26
Alexandre Colvill, 1627–46
Étienne Brazi, 1661–81
Pierre Jurieu, 1671–81
Pierre Bayle, 1675–81
Professors of Rhetoric (Latin) (one chair)
Jean Brazi, 1664
Jacques Du Rondel, 1664–81
Professors of Mathematics (one chair)
Jean de Vesle, 1605
Richard Doussert, 1613
Abraham Colvill, 1661–67
Professors of Physics (one chair)
Gautier Donaldson, 1608
Abraham Du Han, 1640–53
Alexandre Colvill, 1619–43
Directors of Military Exercises
- De Saint-Martin 1613
- Du Gast 1680
- Baron 1681
- Legrand 1681-1685
- also influential was the engineer Jean Errard, who taught in the military academy
Famous Alumni
- Nicolas Antoine
- Jacques Basnages
- Samuel Bochart
- Abraham de Moivre
- Pierre Du Moulin
- Charles Drelincourt
- Nicasius le Febure
- Jacques Le Paulmier de Grentemesnil
- Jacques Moisant de Brieux
- Charles de Sainte-Maure, duc de Montausier
- Pierre Du Prat
- Simon Gaschier
- the nephews of Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne, Duke of Bouillon and Countess Elisabeth of Nassau:
- the sons of Countess Louise Juliana of Nassau: Frederick V, Elector Palatine and his younger brother Ludwig Philipp of Pfalz-Simmern-Kaiserslautern
- the son of John VI, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg: John VII, Count of Nassau
- the sons of Countess Louise Juliana of Nassau: Frederick V, Elector Palatine and his younger brother Ludwig Philipp of Pfalz-Simmern-Kaiserslautern
Joachim Sigismund of Brandenburg, son of John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg
References
- Charles Peyran, Histoire de l'ancienne Académie réformée de Sedan, thèse présentée à la faculté de théologie protestante, 22 juin 1846, Strasbourg : Veuve Berger-Levrault, 1846 [1], 58 p.
Extraits de la Chronique du Père Norbert concernant le Collège de Sedan, dans Revue historiques des Ardennes, Mézières : Edmond Sénemaud/impr. F. Dervin, 1867, vol.5, pp. 39–64 [2], puis pp. 166–187 [3]- Pierre-Daniel Bourchenin, Étude sur les académies protestantes en France au XVIe et au XVIIe siècle (Paris: Grassart, 1882).
- Pierre Congar, Jean Lecaillon et Jacques Rousseau, Sedan et le pays sedanais, vingt siècles d’histoire (Paris: Guénégaud, 1969; Marseille: Laffitte Reprints, 1978)
This article was based on this article on French Wikipedia.
1601 establishments in France, 1681 disestablishments in Europe, Defunct universities and colleges in France, Educational institutions established in the 1600s, Reformed church seminaries and theological collegesUncategorized