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The Collegium Fridericianum (also known as the Friedrichskolleg, Friedrichskollegium, and Friedrichs-Kollegium) was a prestigious gymnasium in Königsberg, Prussia. Alumni were known as Friderizianer. [1]
Il Collegium Fridericianum è stato un prestigioso gymnasium tedesco situato Königsberg (oggi Kaliningrad, Russia), il quale ospitò alcuni dei più importanti pensatori moderni.
See the description of the Collegium Fridericianum. For a much fuller account of the school, see Klemme [1994], and for Kant’s experiences as a student, see especially pp. 32-60, as well as Kuehn [2001, 45-52].
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.
è una corrente religiosa, che nasce in ambiente protestante nella se-conda metà del Seicento, sotto la spinta di discussioni e dispute che accusavano la Chiesa protestante di eccessivo formalismo e di un iste-rilimento dei principi su cui si era edificata.
El Collegium Fridericianum, según un grabado del siglo XVIII, era el colegio de la ciudad natal de Kant. En él pasó el filósofo ocho años de su formación escolar cuando estaba dirigido por el predicador pietista Franz Albert Schultz.
The Collegium Fridericianum, given its name by Friedrich I, was founded in 1698 — the first Latin school in Königsberg, and unattached to any local church — by Theodor Gehr (1663-1705) on the model of the Pietist schools in Halle founded by Franke, and with whom Gehr was acquainted.