Massimiliano Massimo Institute

Via Massimiliano Massimo, 7

The Istituto Massimiliano Massimo ( usually just called Istituto Massimo ) is a Catholic school in the Italian capital Rome. It is named after the Jesuit Massimiliano Massimo and comprises from kindergarten to secondary school all provided for in the Italian school system school levels. Schulträger is the Jesuit Order.

History

The origins of the Istituto Massimo go as the Pontifical Gregorian University back to 1551 by Ignatius of Loyola in the former Via Nuova Capitolina (now the Via dell'Aracoeli at the Capitol ) Founded in school, out of the Collegio Romano in 1582 emerged. The school has already received in 1556 by Pope Paul IV the right to award degrees. So they included in the following three hundred years, both a university and a secondary school.

1870 seized by the Italian State, the school building order to set up a public high school ( Liceo Ginnasio " Ennio Quirino Visconti "). For this reason, the Collegio Romano had to move out. The university section was temporarily in the Palazzo Borromeo and developed in the sequence to independent Gregorian University. The high school section of the Collegio Romano, however, was dissolved. Your reconstruction operation of Jesuit Massimiliano Massimo. In 1873 he had the Palazzo Peretti inherited, he In 1879, the Jesuit order to revive the old school. In 1960 he moved the Istituto Massimo because of the increase in enrollment in the modern EUR district (now Europe) southwest of downtown. In 1973, the first student was admitted, since 1987, the classes are mixed.

Profile

The Istituto Massimo is a state schools equivalent educational institution. It is one of the most prestigious schools in Italy. The Istituto Massimo includes all school levels and facilities include a wide range of sports, advanced foreign language classes ( three living languages ​​) and an additional religion offer. In the sixth form there is a humanistic and a scientific branch.

Alumni

Among the many prominent graduates of Istituto Massimo include the Ferrari president Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, President of the ECB Mario Draghi and the architect Pier Luigi Nervi.

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