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  1. Type. Gymnasium. Established. 16 August 1698. ( 1698-08-16) Closed. 1944. The Collegium Fridericianum (also known as the Friedrichskolleg, Friedrichskollegium, and Friedrichs-Kollegium) was a prestigious gymnasium in Königsberg, Prussia. Alumni were known as Friderizianer.

    • 1944
    • Gymnasium
    • 16 August 1698
  2. Kant began attending the Collegium Fridericianum with the semester beginning Easter 1732, having just turned eight. This required that he walk rather further each morning and afternoon than his neighborhood school at St. George’s (the Collegium was about half a kilometer east of the castle, and young Kant would have needed to walk north and east, following the Grüne Brücke onto the ...

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  4. The Collegium Fridericianum [top] The Collegium Fridericianum served as a model Latin school in Königsberg and all of Prussia during the 18th century. It is also of particular interest because Immanuel Kant spent eight years here as a student, from the age of eight until sixteen, when he entered the university.

  5. Saucken was born on 16 May 1892 in Fischhausen, East Prussia. He was the son of Landrat ( the chief administrative officer of a Landkreis) Wilhelm Eduard Erich von Saucken. As a child, Saucken attended the Collegium Fridericianum, a prestigious gymnasium in Königsberg, present-day Kaliningrad, where he graduated with his Abitur ( university ...

  6. Collegium Fridericianum. Children hoping to attend the university would eventually need to study at one of the three city schools or else the Collegium Fridericianum — a Pietist Latin school that Kant entered as an eight-year-old at Easter 1732, and where he was allowed to study free of charge [Borowski 1804, 27].

  7. May 20, 2010 · Kant’s parents were Pietist and he attended a Pietist school, the Collegium Fridericianum, from ages eight through fifteen. Pietism was an evangelical Lutheran movement that emphasized conversion, reliance on divine grace, the experience of religious emotions, and personal devotion involving regular Bible study, prayer, and introspection.

  8. The Fridericianum is an open house that wishes to provide access to as many visitors as possible. People with over 50% disability pay a reduced admission fee of EUR 4. People accompanying individuals with a “B” on their Disability Card are admitted free of charge. Guide dogs are allowed throughout the building.

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