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  1. The Collège des Quatre-Nations ("College of the Four Nations"), also known as the Collège Mazarin after its founder, was one of the colleges of the historic University of Paris. It was founded through a bequest by the Cardinal Mazarin .

  2. O Collège des Quatre-Nations. sede do Institut de France. Cúpula do Collège. O Collège des Quatre-Nations (em português Colégio das Quatro Nações) ou Collège Mazarin, é uma edificação barroca na Rive Gauche, com o Louvre na margem oposta do rio Sena, no centro de Paris ( 6.º arrondissement ).

  3. Paris. Coordonnées. 48° 51′ 26,52″ N, 2° 20′ 13,15″ E. Localisation sur la carte de Paris. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata. Le collège des Quatre-Nations est un ancien collège de l' université de Paris situé quai de Conti et abritant aujourd'hui le siège de l' Institut de France .

  4. O Collège des Quatre-Nations ou Collège Mazarin, é uma edificação barroca na Rive Gauche, com o Louvre na margem oposta do rio Sena, no centro de Paris . Foi projetado e construído de 1662 a 1688 pelo arquiteto francês Louis Le Vau como escola para jovens nobres. É atualmente sede do Institut de France e da Bibliothèque Mazarine.

  5. 14 de jan. de 2003 · Description. Collège des Quatre-Nations, was one of the colleges of the University of Paris. The building itself was built with baroque influences by Louis Le Vau (1612-1670). The completion of the college, its construction, and its opening in 1688 all happened during Louis XIV's reign (1643-1715).

  6. 1661. March 6, 1661, a few days before his death, the Cardinal Mazarin bequeathed 2 million pounds to Louis XIV, his godson, to found a College for young gentlemen from the four nations (Pignerol, Alsace, Artois, and Roussillon) annexed to France by the treaties of Westphalia (1648) and the Pyrenees (1648).

  7. design by Le Vau. In Paris: The Institute of France. …in 1663 to house the College of the Four Nations (Collège des Quatre-Nations), paid for by a legacy from Louis XIV’s minister Cardinal Mazarin, who had brought the four entities in question—Pignerol (Pinerolo, in the Italian Piedmont), Alsace, Artois, and northern Catalonia (the ...