Lycée Français Anna de Noailles (Romanian: Liceul Francez Anna de Noailles) is a French international school located at 160A București-Ploiești Road, Sector 1, Bucharest, Romania. Named after Anna de Noailles, the French writer of Romanian descent, it serves levels maternelle (preschool) through lycée (senior high school).
History
The first French school in Romania opened in 1920 and was closed in 1949. The first "Lycée français de Bucarest" opened in 1940 and closed in 1949 due to actions from the Romanian communist authorities. A new French school for children of diplomats was permitted to open in 1956. The current French school, an embassy school that was originally the École Française de Bucarest, opened in 1960. It received its current name in 1998.
Construction of the current school began in January 2012 and was completed in 2013.
Student body
As of 2013, 39% of the students were Romanians. There are 23 different nationalities in the school as of 2024.
Alumni
See also
References
- "Plans d’accès." Lycée Français Anna de Noailles. Retrieved on 20 February 2015. "Șoseaua București-Ploiești 160A " and 3. Moyens de transport : Bus = 304 (Liceul Francez) ; 449, 780 et 783 (Aleea Privighetorilor)."
- "Critères d’admission." Lycée Français Anna de Noailles. Retrieved on 20 February 2015.
- ^ "Historique du lycée." Lycée Français Anna de Noailles. Retrieved on 20 February 2015.
- ^ Lența, Cătălin (2013-07-12). "Liceul "Anna de Noailles" – inaugurare cu doi premieri". Radio France Internationale. Archived from the original on 2015-02-20. Retrieved 2016-09-24.
- "Claudiu Năsui, CFA" (PDF). gov.ro. Retrieved December 18, 2024.
External links
- (in French) Official website
International schools in Romania | |
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Bucharest metropolitan area | |
Sibiu County |
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Timișoara metropolitan area | |
Note: The German ZfA does not list the German schools with asterisks (*) in its list of German international schools. |
French international schools in Southern Europe and Southeastern Europe | |
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Bulgaria |
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Croatia | |
Greece | |
Italy | |
Romania |
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Serbia | |
Turkey |
44°31′18″N 26°04′37″E / 44.5216°N 26.0769°E / 44.5216; 26.0769
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