List of Jesuit sites

This non-exhaustive list includes past and present buildings, facilities and institutions associated with the Society of Jesus. In each country, sites are listed in chronological order of Jesuit association. The territorial allocation across countries uses contemporary boundaries, which often differ from historical ones.

Church of the Gesu, mother church of the Society of Jesus in Rome
Ruins of Saint Paul's Church, Macau, one of many churches built by the Jesuits in Asia during the 16th and 17th centuries
Birthplace and sanctuary of Saint Ignatius of Loyola, in Azpeitia, Basque Country

Nearly all these sites have been managed or maintained by Jesuits at some point of time since the Society's founding in the 16th century, with indication of the relevant period in parentheses. In some cases, the Jesuits took over a pre-existing institution and/or building. In others, not least with the suppression of the Society of Jesus in the third quarter of the 18th century, they left a building which was then used by another (religious or nonreligious) organization.

Europe

Rome

Albania

Austria

Belarus

Belgium

Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • Jesuit seminar, now Petar Barbarić Catholic School in Travnik (1882-1945 and since 1999)

Croatia

Czechia

  • Clementinum college in the Old Town of Prague (1556-1773), now National Library of the Czech Republic and St. Salvator Church
    • Jesuits also dominated Charles University from 1622, and in 1654 the Clementinum merged with the University's Karolinum to form Charles-Ferdinand University
  • Jesuit college and university in Olomouc (1566-1773), now Palacký University Olomouc and Church of Our Lady of the Snows
  • Jesuit college in Brno (1582-1773), now Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary
  • Jesuit college in Český Krumlov (1588-1773), now Hotel Růže and Church of St. Vitus
  • Jesuit College in Chomutov (1589-1773), now Regional Museum and Church of Saint Ignatius
  • Jesuit college in Bohosudov near Krupka (1591-1773 and 1853-1950), now Episcopal grammar school and Basilica of Our Lady of Sorrows
  • Jesuit college in Jindřichův Hradec (1594-1773), now the National Museum of Photography and Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary
  • Church of St. Catherine in Chomutov (1605-1773), now part of the Regional Museum
  • Nové Město Jesuit college in the New Town of Prague (1622-1773), now part of the General University Hospital and St. Ignatius Church built 1655-1677
  • Bethlehem Chapel in Prague (1622-1773)
  • Church of Our Lady before Týn in Prague (1623-1773)
  • Jesuit college in Kutná Hora (1633-1773), now Central Bohemian Gallery (GASK) and Church of Saint Barbara
    • The Jesuits also established a school in Kutná Hora Castle in 1684, now the Czech Silver Museum
  • Jesuit college in Klatovy (1634-1773), now Klatovy Municipal Library and Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary and St. Ignatius
  • Jesuit college in Březnice (1642?-1773), now Church of St. Ignatius of Loyola and St. Francis Xavier
  • Jesuit college in Uherské Hradiště (1662-1773), now a cultural center and the Church of Saint Francis Xavier
  • Svatá Hora complex near Příbram (1647-1773), now Svatohorská monastery and Basilica of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary
  • Jesuit college in Telč (1662-1773), now a part of Masaryk University, a branch of the Bohemian-Moravian Highlands Museum in Jihlava and the Church of the Name of Jesus
  • Professed house in Prague (1673-1773), now Church of Saint Nicholas in Malá Strana
  • Church of the Annunciation in Litoměřice (1701-1773)
  • Jesuit college in Opařany (1717-1773), now known as Opařany Castle and Church of St. Francis Xavier
  • Velehrad Monastery in Velehrad (1890-1950 and since 1990), now also Stojanovo gymnázium and Basilica of Saints Cyril and Methodius

France

Germany

Greece

Hungary

Ireland

Mainland

Sardinia

Sicily

Kosovo

Latvia

Lithuania

Luxembourg

Malta

Monaco

  • Jesuit college in the former Convent of the Visitation (1862-1910), now Lycée Albert Premier
  • Church of the Sacred Heart (1926-1965)

Netherlands

Poland

Portugal

Romania

Russia

Serbia

  • Jesuit mission in Belgrade under Ottoman rule (1612-1632)[9]

Slovakia

Slovenia

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

Ukraine

England and Wales

Scotland

Jersey

Americas

Argentina

Belize

Bolivia

Brazil

Canada

Chile

Colombia

Cuba

Dominican Republic

Ecuador

El Salvador

Guatemala

Guyana

Jamaica

Mexico

Nicaragua

Panama

Paraguay

Peru

United States

Eastern Seaboard

Middle West and Great Plains

South

West

Puerto Rico

Uruguay

Venezuela

Africa and Middle East

Algeria

Angola

Armenia

Azerbaijan

Burundi

Cameroon

  • Collège Libermann in Douala (since 1957)

Democratic Republic of Congo

Egypt

Ethiopia

  • Jesuit complex in Gorgora (1608-1633), now Ruins of Gorgora Nova

Iran

Iraq

Kenya

Lebanon

Madagascar

Malawi

Nigeria

Rwanda

Syria

  • Jesuit residence and school in Aleppo (mid-17th century), with staellite schools in Sidon (Lebanon) and Damascus[27]

Turkey

Uganda

United Arab Emirates

Zambia

Zimbabwe

South Asia

Bangladesh

Bhutan

Andhra Pradesh

Bihar

Delhi

Daman and Diu

Goa

Gujarat

Jharkhand

Karnataka

Kerala

Madhya Pradesh

Maharashtra

Odisha

Puducherry

Rajasthan

Tamil Nadu

Telangana

Uttar Pradesh

West Bengal

Nepal

Pakistan

Sri Lanka

East & Southeast Asia

China

East Timor

Indonesia

Japan

Malaysia

Philippines

Republic of Korea

Thailand

Vietnam

Oceania

Australia

Micronesia

New Zealand

Palau

See also

Notes

  1. Otto Syre. "December 8th 1927 - Inauguration of the General Curia". SJ Calendar.
  2. Paul F. Grendler (31 October 2019). "Jesuit Schools and Universities in Europe 1548–1773". Brill Research Perspectives in Jesuit Studies.
  3. David Schultenover. "January 11, 2008". Sharing the Experience of the Congregation.
  4. Tracey Primrose (20 June 2016). "Welcome to Our House: Jesuit Curia in Rome Gets Modern Updates". Jesuits of Canada.
  5. "Collège de jésuites de Billom (désaffecté)". Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. 1990.
  6. "Property & Park: The History of Les Fontaines". Serge Kampf Les Fontaines Capgemini Campus.
  7. "The palace of the Jesuit monks in Kalamitsia". MyNaxos.
  8. Béla Vilmos Mihalik (December 2016), "Centuries of Resumptions: The Historiography of the Jesuits in Hungary", Jesuit Historiography Online
  9. Antal Molnár (March 2008), "Die Türkische Mission („Missio Turcica") der Gesellschaft Jesu Im Osmanischen Ungarn", Acta Orientalia, 61
  10. "Jesuit Institutions in Hungary, Page 2". Jesuit Stamps 1898-2016.
  11. "Jesuit History: History of Crescent College Comprehensive SJ". Crescent College Comprehensive S.J.
  12. "Coláiste Iognáid SJ – St. Ignatius College SJ". Global Network of Jesuit Schools.
  13. John Donnelly (1982), "The Jesuit College at Padua: Growth, Suppression, Attempts at Restoration" (PDF), E-Publications@Marquette
  14. "Church of the Jesus". Around Bari.
  15. Paul F. Grendler (1 January 2014), "Jesuit Schools in Europe. A Historiographical Essay", Journal of Jesuit Studies
  16. "Il Collegio dei Gesuiti". Comune di Monopoli. 16 July 2018.
  17. Martín Corral Estrada (14 May 2019). "La primera Casa Profesa de Madrid". Jesuitas Madrid.
  18. Eduardo Valero (9 May 2015). "El 3 de mayo de 1915 y la iglesia de San Francisco de Borja". Historia urbana de Madrid.
  19. Martín Corral Estrada (17 June 2019). "La segunda Casa Profesa de Madrid". Jesuitas Madrid.
  20. José Francisco Serrano Oceja (30 December 2017). "San Francisco de Borja: una parroquia con vocación universal". ABC Madrid.
  21. "A Contribution to the History of Savoy College, London" (PDF). Letters & Notices. CCXLI. April 1926.
  22. Rodrigo Merino Barba (2 December 2017). "El Colegio Nacional de San Gregorio, Institución en la que se establece la Escuela Nacional de Agricultura y Veterinaria". Expresiones Veterinarias.
  23. Jean-Marc Valentin (1998). "Les orphelinats fondés par les Jésuites en Algérie". Revue du GAMT.
  24. Rudi Mathee (December 2015), "Poverty and Perseverance: The Jesuit Mission of Isfahan and Shamakhi in Late Safavid Iran", Al-Qantara, 36
  25. "Who we are?". Jesuit Cultural Center Alexandria.
  26. Rudi Matthee (15 December 2008). "Jesuits in Safavid Persia". Encyclopedia Iranica.
  27. Robert J. Clines (2014), Confessional Politics and Religious Identity in the Early Jesuit Missions to the Ottoman Empire, Syracuse University
  28. Adina Ruiu (12 March 2014), "Conflicting Visions of the Jesuit Missions to the Ottoman Empire, 1609–1628", Journal of Jesuit Studies
  29. Leonard Fernando (November 2016). "Jesuits and India". Oxford Handbooks Online.
  30. Tricky Vandenberg (July 2009). "The Jesuit Church of San Paulo". History of Ayutthaya.
  31. B. Soonthornthum; Wayne Orchiston; S. Komonjinda (September 2012), "The French Jesuit Mission to Thailand in the 1680s and the Establishment of a Major Astronomical Observatory", ResearchGate
  32. Anh Q. Tran (October 2018). "The Historiography of the Jesuits in Vietnam: 1615–1773 and 1957–2007". Jesuit Historiography Online.
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