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  1. Le Collège irlandais de Paris (irlandais: Coláiste na nGael, latin: Collegium Clericorum Hibernoram) a été pendant trois siècles un établissement d'enseignement catholique majeur pour les étudiants irlandais.

  2. Un arrêté du Consulat daté du 24 vendémiaire an XI (16 octobre 1802) unifie les collèges irlandais de Toulouse, Bordeaux, Nantes, Douai, Lille, Anvers, Louvain et Paris et les fusionne en un seul établissement avec les collèges écossais de Paris et Douai [1].

  3. Inauguré en 2002, le Centre Culturel Irlandais est situé dans le Collège des Irlandais, ancienne résidence d’une importante communauté irlandaise de prêtres, séminaristes et étudiants laïcs, dont les origines remontent à 1578.

    • collège des Irlandais de Paris1
    • collège des Irlandais de Paris2
    • collège des Irlandais de Paris3
    • collège des Irlandais de Paris4
    • collège des Irlandais de Paris5
    • Foundation
    • Seventeenth Century
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    The religious persecution under Elizabeth and James I lead to the suppression of the monastic schools in Ireland in which the clergy for the most part received their education. It became necessary, therefore, to seek education abroad, and many colleges for the training of the secular clergy were founded on the continent, at Rome, in Spain and Portu...

    Lee was followed by Thomas Dease, who was rector until 1621, when he was appointed Bishop of Meath. By letters patent dated 1623, Louis XIII conferred upon the Irish priests and scholars in Paris the right to receive and possess property. It was during the tenure of Dease's successor, Thomas Messingham, that the Irish college was recognised as a se...

    The Irish College in Paris was open to all the counties and provinces in Ireland. In 1738, the college chapel was rebuilt under the direction of the architect Pierre Boscry. The number of students went on increasing until, in 1764, it reached 160. It was therefore found necessary to build a second college. The building was commenced in 1769 in rue ...

    After the French revolution, the Irish college in Paris was re-established by a decree of the first consul, and placed under the control of a board appointed by the French Government, creating the Fondation Irlandaise in 1805. To it was united the remnants of the property of the other Irish colleges in France which had escaped destruction. The coll...

    In December 1906, the law of separation of Church and State in France came into operation. In the following January, the French government notified the British government of its intention to reorganise the Irish Catholic foundations in France so as to bring them into harmony with the recent legislation regarding the Church. It was further stated th...

    In the three hundred years of its existence, the college has not been without a share in the ecclesiastical literature of Ireland. Among the rectors of the college have been Thomas Messingham, prothonotary Apostolic, author of the "Florilegium Insulæ Sanctorum" (Paris, 1624); Andrew Donlevy, author of an "Anglo-Irish Catechism" (Paris, 1742); Miley...

    Desmond Knowles (1994-1998)
    Pearce Walsh (1998-2002)
    Desmond Knowles (2002-2003)

    The Polish community having re-located in 1997, the college, including the chapel and library underwent a complete restoration funded by the Irish government, and in 2002 it opened as the Centre Culturel Irlandais. The center appoints an artist in residence, and a number of scholars and students from Ireland stay at the college, which has 45 rooms ...

    This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Irish Colleges, on the Continent". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Com...
  4. Le collège irlandais sert aujourd’hui de cadre au Centre Culturel irlandais qui y organise de nombreuses activités destinées à promouvoir la culture irlandaise. Le collège des Irlandais : la chapelle Saint-Patrick. Horaires d’ouverture du centre culturel : lors des expositions, ouvert tous les jours de 14h à 18h, le mercredi jusqu’à 20h.

  5. 100 ans de Jeux : L'épopée irlandaise. A l'occasion des Jeux Olympiques de Paris, l'Ambassade d'Irlande et le CCI célèbrent le centenaire de l'entrée de l'Irlande indépendante sur la scène sportive internationale. Voir

  6. Le Centre culturel irlandais de Paris est une institution culturelle ouverte depuis octobre 2002 et située 5 rue des Irlandais dans le 5 e arrondissement dans le bâtiment du collège des Irlandais. Son objectif est de présenter et promouvoir en France la culture contemporaine irlandaise sous tous ses aspects : arts visuels ...