Vilnius Jesuit High School

Vilnius Jesuit High School is a Lithuanian gymnasium (grades 5 through 12) led by members of the Jesuit order. It is considered to be one of the most renowned schools in Lithuania and is aided by the German Foreign Office.[1]

Vilnius Jesuit High School
Vilniaus jėzuitų gimnazija
Location
Information
Established1579 (1579)
PrincipalEdita Šičaitė
Staff59
Grades5 through 12
Enrollment716
AffiliationJesuit (Catholic)
Websitevjg.lt

History

Vilnius Jesuit High School could be one of the oldest schools in Lithuania, if the current school is considered the successor to the Jesuit Collegium which was turned into Vilnius University during the confrontation between Lithuanian Protestants and Lithuanian Catholics during the Reformation period.

Collegium Vilnense Societati Jesu was established in 1570, with the first rector, Stanislaw Varševickis, S.J., teaching logic, mathematics, theology, and Hebrew. After the suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773, the school did not reopen until 1921 with 135 boys. By 1938 there were 580 in the gymnasium. Disrupted in 1939 during the Soviet occupation, the school was reopened in its present status only in 1995 with 336 students and 54 teachers, classes 5 through 11. Lithuanian, German, and English were taught. In 1999 it received the humanities gymnasium status.

Directors

  • Fr. lt:Antanas Gražulis, S.J.
  • Faust Meškuotis
  • Br. Virgilijus Saulius, S.J.
  • Fr. Arthur Sederevičius, S.J.
  • SJ Edita Sičaitė

Notable teachers

  • Stasė Traigienė
  • Vytautas Poliuškevičius
  • Juozas Mačernis
  • Leonidas Abaris
  • Ariadna Čiurlionytė
  • Vadim Suski
  • Rimas Butėnas
  • Tomas Simutis

See also

References

  1. Foreign Minister visits Vilnius Archived 2014-02-02 at the Wayback Machine. German Embassy Vilnius, November 2010 (German)
  2. "Šv. Ignaco Lojolos kolegija". www.ilk.lt. Retrieved 2017-01-29.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.