University of Paris Faculty of Humanities

{{Short description|French educational institution, 1808–1970}}

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{{Infobox university

| name = Faculty of Humanities of Paris
The Sorbonne

| native_name = Faculté des Lettres de Paris
La Sorbonne

| native_name_lang = fr

| image_name = Coat of arms of the University of Paris.svg

| image_size = 150px

| former_names = Faculté des Arts (1200–1793)
Faculté des Lettres (1808–1896)
Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines (1896–1971)

| motto =

| motto_lang = fr

| mottoeng =

| type = Public

| established = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1200}}

| closed = {{End date|1971||}}

| founder =

| parent = University of Paris (1896–1971)

| budget =

| dean = Raymond Las Vergnas (last, 1968–1971)

| students =

| city = Paris

| state =

| country = France

| campus = Urban

| language = French, English

| free_label = Current successors

| free = Sorbonne University (in the same building)
Panthéon-Sorbonne University
Paris Cité University
Sorbonne Nouvelle University

| free_label1 =

| free1 =

| website =

}}The Faculty of Humanities of Paris (in French: Faculté des Lettres de Paris), commonly known as the Sorbonne, was one of the four faculties of the University of Paris, refounded in 1896, and an independent entity from 1808 to 1896, based in the Sorbonne building, in Paris. It was the heir to the Faculty of Arts of the old University of Paris, founded around 1200, and to the College of Sorbonne, founded in 1270.

It was set up by the imperial decree regarding the University of France on 17 March 1808. It partly succeeded the Faculty of Arts of the former University of Paris (1150–1793). In 1896, it was joined to four other faculties in Paris to form the new University of Paris. It was dissolved in 1970, at the same time as the University of Paris. Sorbonne University and the Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University are its main successors today.

History

File:Entrée_latérale_Sorbonne.jpg

The Faculty of Humanities was created by the decree of 17 March 1808 on the organisation of the Imperial University of France.George Weisz, The emergence of modern universities in France, 1863–1914 (Princeton University Press, 2014).{{Cite web |title=The Sorbonne in the 19th century – La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris |url=https://www.sorbonne.fr/en/the-sorbonne/history-of-the-sorbonne/la-sorbonne-au-xixe-siecle-le-temps-des-grands-travaux-sous-la-troisieme-republique/ |access-date=2025-01-09 |website=La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris}}

Under the Bourbon Restoration, the faculty welcomed an average of 1,000 to 1,500 students a year, rising to 2,000 under the July Monarchy. But the number of teaching staff remained limited: between 1809 and 1878, only 51 professors taught at the Faculty of Humanities.

In 1896, the University of Paris, also known as the New University of Paris, was re-created as an umbrella organisation for the Faculty of Science, the Faculty of Arts, the Faculty of Law, the Faculty of Medicine, the Faculty of Protestant Theology and the École Supérieure de Pharmacie de Paris. The faculty was renamed the Faculty of Arts and Humanities until 1971.{{Cite web |last=BnF Catalogue général |title=Université de Paris (1896–1968). Faculté des lettres et sciences humaines forme internationale |url=https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb12108429c |access-date=2025-01-09 |website=catalogue.bnf.fr |language=fr}}

Following the loi Faure of 8 October 1970, it was divided into the universities Paris-I (Panthéon-Sorbonne University), Paris-III (Sorbonne Nouvelle University), Paris-IV (Paris-Sorbonne University), Paris-V (Paris-Descartes University) and Paris-VII (Paris-Diderot University) in 1970.Image:Institut de Géographie - Paris, France.JPG

Teaching

Image:Paris 75005 Rue Saint-Jacques La Sorbonne facade 01c.jpg, seat of the faculty.]]

Its first statutes were put in place by the university's council on 16 February 1810. Each professor taught two 90-minute lessons each week. The university year began in December and lasted eight months. The faculty ran nine courses:

  • ancient Greek literature
  • Latin prose or 'éloquence latine'
  • Latin poetry
  • French prose or 'éloquence française'
  • French poetry
  • philosophy
  • history of philosophy
  • ancient and modern history
  • ancient and modern geography

Deans

References