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  1. The Irish College in Paris (Irish: Coláiste na nGael, French: Collège des Irlandais, Latin: Collegium Clericorum Hibernoram) was for three centuries a major Roman Catholic educational establishment for Irish students.

    • 1578
    • Irish: Coláiste na nGael, Páris
  2. The Irish College in Paris developed from a tiny, struggling community in the 1660s to become the most important centre for Irish Catholic priests and students on the continent during the ‘penal era’. Listen now.

  3. Online Exhibition. 100 Years of the Games: Irelands journey. This online exhibition marks the centenary of Ireland’s entry onto the sporting stage as an independent nation at the 1924 Paris Olympics and highlights the interaction of sport with international issues.

    • Irish College in Paris1
    • Irish College in Paris2
    • Irish College in Paris3
    • Irish College in Paris4
    • Irish College in Paris5
  4. The Centre Culturel Irlandais offers short-term accommodation to both Irish residents and visitors with an interest in Irish culture. The Centre is easily accessible by public transport and connects directly with Orly and Roissy (Charles de Gaulle) airports as well as the Gare du Nord.

    • Irish College in Paris1
    • Irish College in Paris2
    • Irish College in Paris3
    • Irish College in Paris4
    • Irish College in Paris5
  5. Le Centre culturel irlandais de Paris est une institution culturelle ouverte depuis octobre 2002 et située 5 rue des Irlandais dans le 5e arrondissement dans le bâtiment du collège des Irlandais.

    • CCI
    • 2002
    • 48° 50′ 39″ N, 2° 20′ 46″ E
    • France
  6. 17 de set. de 2022 · The CCI, at 5 rue des Irlandais near the Pantheon in Paris, this autumn celebrates the 20th anniversary of its transformation from the centuries-old Irish College to Ireland’s leading arts...

  7. The Irish College in Paris was co-founded in 1605 by John Lee and John de l'Escalopier, President of the Parlement of Paris. More Colleges were established in Rome (1625), Toulouse , Bordeaux , Nantes , Lille , Brussels , Antwerp and then Prague (1631). [3]