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  1. The Colleges of St Omer, Bruges and Liège were successive expatriate institutions for Roman Catholic higher education run by the Jesuits for English students. Founded in 1593 by Robert Parsons as the College of Saint-Omer in Artois (then part of the Spanish Netherlands ), [1] in the 18th century the college was twice forced to ...

  2. St Omers College. On the 9th of August 1762, the English College began its migration from St Omer in Artois, to Bruges. Initially founded in 1593 by Fr Robert Persons SJ as the College of Saint-Omer in Artois, France (then part of the Spanish Netherlands), the school was forced to relocate twice due to the suppression of the Jesuit order, first ...

  3. S.M.H. Catholicism portal. v. t. e. Stonyhurst College as a school dates back to 1593 when its antecedent, the Jesuit College at St Omer, was founded in Flanders to educate English Catholics. The history of the present school buildings dates as far back as 1200 AD. Stonyhurst Hall.

  4. In 1593, the English Jesuit College of St Omers – Stonyhurst’s direct lineal predecessor – was founded by the English Jesuit priest, Fr Robert Persons SJ. The school’s purpose was to provide a safe place of education to the sons of English recusant Catholic families, at a time when such schooling was illegal in the boys’ home country.

  5. 10. Apr. 2017 · The English Jesuit college, founded in 1593 at Saint-Omer because of increasing Elizabethan penal legislation against Catholics, soon became the largest post-Reformation Catholic school in the English-speaking world. This article analyses the organization of the school, with particular emphasis on education in drama and music.

    • Maurice Whitehead
    • 2017
  6. The Colleges of St Omer, Bruges and Liège were successive expatriate institutions for the Catholic education of English students and were run by the Jesuits.. Initially founded in 1593 by Father Robert Parsons SJ as the College of Saint-Omer in Artois, France (then part of the Spanish Netherlands), [1] the school was forced to relocate twice due to the suppression of the Jesuit order, first ...

  7. The Colleges of St Omer, Bruges and Liège were successive expatriate institutions for Roman Catholic higher education run by the Jesuits for English students. Founded in 1593 by Father Robert Parsons SJ as the College of Saint-Omer in Artois (then part of the Spanish Netherlands), in the 18th century the college was twice forced to relocate ...