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Lamartine High School - Paris 9th à Paris 1er dans Paris 9ème

Patrimoine classé
Lycée
Paris

Lamartine High School - Paris 9th

    121 Rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière
    75009 Paris 9e Arrondissement
State ownership
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Lycée Lamartine - Paris 9ème
Crédit photo : Vinceloo - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1697
Initial construction
1740
Reconstruction by Mansart de Sagonne
1891
Repurchase by the State
1893
High School Foundation
1923
Classification of woodwork
1940
Refugee Centre
années 1960
Extension and mix
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The trade fair (director's cabinet): classification by order of 4 December 1923

Key figures

Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne - Architect Reconstructed the hotel in 1740.
Louis Phélypeaux de Saint-Florentin - Marquis and Minister Hotel owner in the 18th century.
Pierre Beauchamps - Ballet Master First owner of the hotel (1697).
Charles-Nicolas Duclos du Fresnoy - Royal Notary and patron Owner after 1769, collector of art.
Jeanne Lévy - Doctor and former student First female professor at the Faculty of Medicine in Paris (1959).
Alphonse de Lamartine - Poet and politician Inspire the name of the school.

Origin and history

The Lycée Lamartine is a public school in the 9th arrondissement of Paris, founded in 1893 in a mansion built in 1740 by architect Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne for the Marquis Louis Phélypeaux de Saint-Florentin. This building, originally built in 1697 for Pierre Beauchamps, master of ballet of Louis XIV, was enlarged and transformed into an aristocratic residence before being bought in 1891 by the Ministry of Public Instruction to install a high school of girls.

The private hotel, whose facades and some interiors (such as the woodwork salon classified as Monument Historic in 1923) date from the 18th century, was adapted to accommodate classrooms in place of the old garden. Unlike the high schools of boys of the time, often built ex nihilo in a monumental style, the Lamartine high school reused an existing heritage, reflecting a distinct approach to female education under the Third Republic.

In the 20th century, the high school evolved with its time: it became mixed, annexed an old nearby cotton spinning (known as the "cotton court") to cope with the influx of students in the 1960s, and developed artistic teachings (theatre, plastic arts, music). During the Second World War, he served briefly as a refugee centre during the Exodus (1940) and was subjected to anti-Semitic persecution under the occupation, with the deportation of many Jewish students.

Today, Lamartine High School is distinguished by its dominant literary and artistic options, while offering scientific and economic teachings. Its history reflects the transformations of education in France, from the creation of girls' high schools to mix and cultural openness. The school also houses a preparatory class for large schools (hypokhâgne), although this sector was threatened with abolition in 2024.

The site, located at 121 rue du Faubourg-Poissonnière, preserves traces of its aristocratic past, such as the staircase of the garden or the woodwork of the eighteenth century, while being part of the contemporary Parisian educational landscape. Close to the Gare du Nord and the Saint-Vincent-de-Paul church, it remains an emblematic place in the 9th arrondissement, mixing architectural heritage and educational vocation.

External links