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  1. Westminster is a safe, stimulating and supportive environment: pupils enhance their intellectual, physical, spiritual and social development by taking full advantage of the many opportunities available to them in art, drama, music, sport and volunteering in the community.

  2. The Royal College of Saint Peter in Westminster, más conocida como la Westminster School, es una de las escuelas independientes más importantes del Reino Unido. Situada en el recinto de la Abadía de Westminster en Londres , [ 1 ] fue inaugurada en 1179 cuando el papa Alejandro III obligó a los monjes de la Orden Benedictina de la abadía a ...

  3. Westminster School is a public school in Westminster, London, England, in the precincts of Westminster Abbey. It descends from a charity school founded by Westminster Benedictines before the Norman Conquest , as documented by the Croyland Chronicle and a charter of King Offa .

  4. Welcome to Westminster, a leading academic school in the centre of London. A passionate, purposeful and progressive place to study, our pupils discover a deep love for learning and respect for the tradition of scholarship, as well as an openness to fresh ideas and innovative ways of thinking.

  5. Home · Admissions. Each year Westminster School offers Lower School (Years 9 to 11) places to boys at 13+ entry and Upper School (Years 12 and 13) places to boys and girls at 16+ entry, while Westminster Under School admits boys at the 7+, 8+ and 11+ entry points.

  6. The Royal College of Saint Peter in Westminster, más conocida como la Westminster School, es una de las escuelas independientes más importantes del Reino Unido. Situada en el recinto de la Abadía de Westminster en Londres, fue inaugurada en 1179 cuando el papa Alejandro III obligó a los monjes de la Orden Benedictina de la abadía a abrir ...

  7. 20 de mar. de 2024 · Westminster School, distinguished public (privately endowed) school near Westminster Abbey in the borough of Westminster, London. It originated as a charity school (1179) founded by Benedictine monks. In 1540 Henry VIII made it secular, and in 1560 it was refounded by Elizabeth I and extensively.