The Lubrański Academy ( Polish : Akademia Lubrańskiego ; Latin : Collegium Lubranscianum ) was a university college that was established in 1518 in Poznań by Bishop Jan Lubrański . It was the first school with university aspirations in Poznań (in fact it was not a full university).
2-672: The academy's first rector was the Poznań humanist Tomasz Bederman . Another prominent lecturer was Grzegorz of Szamotuły . The Lubrański Academy aimed at independence from the Kraków Academy but was finally transformed into a faculty of the Kraków Academy. Before that the Lubrański Academy comprised six schools: of philosophy, logic, mathematics, languages (Latin, Greek), law, and rhetoric. The academy's main building
4-589: Was remodeled in the 17th and 18th centuries. In 1780 the academy was merged with the Jesuit Collegium Posnaniae . Today the Lubrański Academy's building holds the museum of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Poznań . 52°24′44.78″N 16°56′48.67″E / 52.4124389°N 16.9468528°E / 52.4124389; 16.9468528 This Polish university, college or other education institution article
#164835