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  1. The College of Juilly (French: Collège de Juilly) was a Catholic private teaching establishment located in the commune of Juilly, in Seine-et-Marne (France). Directed by the French Oratorians, it was created in 1638 by the Congregationists headed by Father Charles de Condren.

  2. O colégio de Juilly é um estabelecimento de ensino, colocado sob a tutela do Oratório da França, que funcionou quase ininterruptamente de 1638 a 2012. Localizada em Juilly em Seine-et-Marne ( França ), cerca de trinta quilômetros a nordeste de Paris , incluía uma escola maternal, uma escola primária, uma escola secundária e uma escola ...

  3. 18 de jun. de 2022 · (To us little English girls), The College of Juilly is an educational institution, placed under the supervision of the Oratory of France, which operates almost continuously from 1638 to 2012. It included a kindergarten, a primary school, a college and a high school.

  4. 25 de ago. de 2020 · This was the collège of Juilly, run not by Jesuits but by Oratorians. A school equally as prestigious as La Flèche or Louis-le-Grand, Juilly had produced not only Montesquieu but also military men of the stature of the maréchaux Villars and Berwick.

    • Haroldo A. Guízar
    • haguizar23@alumni.york.ac.uk
    • 2020
  5. The College of Juilly was a Catholic private teaching establishment located in the commune of Juilly, in Seine-et-Marne. Directed by the French Oratorians, it was created in 1638 by the congregationists headed by Father Charles de Condren.

    • 7 Rue Barre, Juilly 77230, France
  6. 29 de fev. de 2016 · Collège de Juilly, Juilly, Ile-De-France, France. 132 likes · 327 were here. The College of Juilly (French: Collège de Juilly is a Catholic private teaching establishment located on the commune of...

  7. 17 de nov. de 2023 · The collège of Juilly and the Gare de Boulainvilliers are connected by more than a circuitous transit route. Henri de Boulainvilliers began his studies at the Collège de Juilly in 1669 and, by a stroke of good fortune, studied under the inimitable Richard Simon (1638-1712), who I wrote about in an earlier article .