ArticlesstatesmenPublicationsO.Historylinks
Home Page » Articles » The French Schools in Iran
Keywords :
All words
Each word

 

The Socio- political History of Bushire, 1948-1988

Author : Alireza Mozaffarizadeh

Number of pages: 434

Price: 5000 Tomans

 

 

The Memories of Saadollah khan Darvish

Edited by : Jahanguir Darvish

Number of pages: 275

Price: 3000 Tomans

 

 

 

Bibliography of Babism and Bahaism   | Chronology of Babism and Bahaism  |  Imam Mahdi, the Twelfth Imam of Shiites and the Pretenders of Mahdavism  |  Ali Mohammad Bab, from Challenges ahead to Repentance and Denial of the Claims | Ketab al Aghdas (the most holy book)  | The Ultimate, Denial of Babism and Bahaism | Bahaism, Losses and the Continuant Crises …

 

 

 

Bahaism; Connection to the World Arrogance | Bahaism and the Russian Tsarist Empire |  The Tsarist Russia; the Greedy and Aggressive Empire  |  Bahaism, All embracing and Deep Relationship with t he Tsarist Imperialism | The Leading Figures of Bahaism, the Servants of the Tsarist Russia | The Strange Promises and Prophecies of Bahai Leaders about the Tsarist Russia ...

 

 

 

 

 

Iranian Contemporary History CD ROM

Winner of the Golden Statue of the Second Festival of National Digital Mass

 

  The French Schools in Iran 

Niloufar Kasra

 

The French missionaries played a major role among foreign missionaries who founded schools in Iran.

The main French schools in Iran were Saint Louis School, Franco-Persane, Saint Josef, Jeanne d'Arc, Alliance Bani Israelit.

 

Saint Louis

It was founded by Lazarist Catholics in 1862 for Armenian boys, its main intention was to change their religion to Catholicism. It was closed in late years of Reza Shah's reign.

 

Franco-Persane

It was founded by M. Yousef Khan Richard (Moaddab-ol-molk) in 1908. It was the first school in constitutionalism which accepted girl students. After 1941, it changed its name to Razi School.

 

Saint Josef

It was founded by French Catholic missionaries in 1887 in Tehran. At first it only accepted girl students, but later they formed boy's classes. Later it was known as Manouchehri School.

 

Jeanne d'Arc

It was founded by French nuns for the Armenian and other minority girls and it was administered as an orphanage.

 

Alliance Bani Israelit

It was founded by M. Kazers, an agent of Alliance Israelit in 1898 for the purpose of gathering the children of Jewish families in an educational center. Nasseraddin Shah in his travel to Europe in 1873 had given the permission for this. The students entered the school without paying any tuition fee. The books were brought from France. Two Jewish priests were employed to teach the students the Hebrew language and for Persian language some Moslem teachers were employed. Through the helps of Jewish merchants it opened some branches in Hamedan, Isfahan, Tuysarkan, Kermanshah, Sanandaj and Shiraz.




Send Feedback
Name:
Email:  
Subject:
Message:


Contact us : (9821+) 2260 4037-38 -

Copyrigth © 2008 IICHS. All Rigths Reserved
The opinions expressed by contributors pertain solely to them and do not represent the views of IICHS
The reproduction of articles is free by announcing the resource
Designed by RayanKaveh co.


 
www.iichs.org