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École Nationale des Chartes

The École Nationale des Chartes (French: École nationale des chartes, literally National School of Charters) is a French grande école and a constituent college of Université PSL, specialising in the historical sciences. It was founded in 1821, and was located initially at the National Archives, and later at the Palais de la Sorbonne (5th arrondissement). In October 2014, it moved to 65 rue de Richelieu, opposite the Richelieu-Louvois site of the National Library of France. The school is administered by the Ministry of National Education, Higher Education and Research. It holds the status of a grand établissement. Its students, who are recruited by competitive examination and hold the status of trainee civil servant, receive the qualification of archivist-paleographer after completing a thesis. They generally go on to pursue careers as heritage curators in the archive and visual fields, as library curators or as lecturers and researchers in the human and social sciences. In 2005, the school also introduced master's degrees, for which students were recruited based on an application file, and, in 2011, doctorates.

École Nationale des Chartes – PSL
Other name
National School of Charters[1]
TypeGrandes Écoles
Established1821; 203 years ago (1821)
DirectorMichelle Bubenicek (since 2016)
Location,
Campus2nd arrondissement of Paris
AffiliationsCampus Condorcet,
Université PSL
Websitewww.Chartes.psl.eu

History edit

The École des Chartes was created by order of Louis XVIII on 22 February 1821,[2] although its roots are in the Revolution and the Napoleonic period. The Revolution, during which property was confiscated, congregations were suppressed and competencies were transferred from the Church to the State, produced radical cultural changes. In 1793 the feudist Antoine Maugard approached the public instruction committee of the Convention with a proposal for a project of historical and diplomatic education. The project was never carried out, and Maugard was largely forgotten.[3] The institution was eventually created by the philologist and anthropologist Joseph Marie de Gérando, baron of the Empire and general secretary to Champagny, the Minister of the Interior. In 1807 he submitted a proposal to Napoleon for the creation of a school to train young scholars of history.[4] Napoleon examined the proposal and declared that he wished to develop a much larger specialist history school.[5] However, Gérando was posted to Italy on an administrative mission, and the project was interrupted. At the end of 1820, Gérando convinced Count Siméon, a philosopher and professor of law who had been state councilor under the Empire and who was at that time Minister of the Interior, of the usefulness of an institution modeled on the grandes écoles, dedicated to the study of "a branch of French literature",[6] the charters. The 1820s were a favorable period for the creation of the École des Chartes. Firstly this was because the atmosphere of nostalgia for the Middle Ages created a desire to train specialists who would, by carrying out a direct study of archives and manuscripts confiscated during the Revolution, be able to renew French historiography. Secondly, the need was also felt to maintain this branch of study, which stemmed from Maurist tradition, since the field was endangered by a lack of knowledgeable collaborators in the "science of charters and manuscripts". And thirdly, during the reign of Louis XVIII, a period which saw the return of the Ultras and during which the constitutional monarchy was called into question, the political context influenced the creation of an institution whose name inevitably made explicit reference to the defense of the Charter.[7]

Under the order of 1821, twelve students were nominated by the Minister of the Interior, based on propositions by the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres,[8] and they were paid[9] during the two years of their studies. They principally studied paleography and philology, with a purely practical aim: to be able to read and understand the documents that they would be responsible for curating.[10] The professors and students of the school were placed under the authority of the curator of medieval manuscripts of the Royal Library, rue de Richelieu, and of the general guard of the Archives of the Kingdom.[11]

This first experience was not very successful, mainly because no job openings were reserved for the students. The first course was implemented in two stages by the ministerial decree of 11 May (for the Royal Library course) and by the decree of 21 December 1821 (for the Archives of the Kingdom course) and was the only one run. The Académie did put forward a new list of candidates,[12] and the course length was set at two years[13] by the Order of 16 July 1823, but lessons had to be suspended on 19 December 1823 due to a lack of students. However, following a long period of inactivity, the Ministry of the Interior decided to re-open the school. Rives, the director of staff of the ministry, together with Dacier, drew up a report on the reorganization of the School and a draft order,[14] proposed to Charles X by La Bourdonnaye, which resulted in the order of 11 November 1829.[15] The school was now open to anyone who had acquired the Baccalaureate, but six to eight students were selected by competitive examination at the end of the first year. They received a salary and followed two further years of training. On completion of their studies, they received the qualification of archivist-paleographer and were reserved half of the available jobs in libraries and archives. The first valedictorian was Alexandre Teulet.

 
The Hôtel de Clisson and entrance to the École des Chartes from 1846 to 1866
 
The new building of the École, located 65, rue de Richelieu

The "Guizot period" benefited the École des Chartes, which soon became an important institution in the field of historical – particularly medieval – studies. On 24 March 1839 the Société de l’École des Chartes[16] was founded by Louis Douët d'Arcq, among others, and it published the Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, one of the oldest French scientific reviews, to disseminate the work carried out in the school. The Order of 31 December 1846[17] implemented a fundamental reorganization of the school and its study program, which then remained unchanged for more than a century. The students, who were holders of the Baccalaureate, were recruited by examination (which shortly afterwards became a competitive examination), and followed a three-year course of studies. Interdisciplinarity, an essential characteristic of the school, was then written into the reform, which required students to study six subjects, some of which were not taught anywhere else. The second innovation, a thesis, was introduced, with the first public defense being held in 1849. A surveillance council was set up, consisting of the guard of the Archives, the director of the Royal Library, the director of the School and five members of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres. The school was finally provided with a new statute. It moved to the Kingdom Archives in the hôtel de Soubise, in the oval hall and adjacent rooms of the hôtel de Clisson.

 
The students of 1857

By now, the École des Chartes had become a point of reference in Europe.[18] Its historical research methodology had been greatly modernized, as had its teaching methods, thanks to the copies of ancient documents to which it had access. The students were taught paleography, sigillography, numismatics, philology, filing for archives and libraries, historical geography, currencies, systems of weights and measures, the history of political institutions in France, archeology, civil law, canonic law and feudal law. The teaching had both a scientific and a professional aim.

Thus, by gradually being integrated into the network of royal then national and departmental archive services, the graduates of the school contributed to the strengthening of the network and to the improvement of archival principles. A career-path for the graduates was thus established in the archives, first implemented by the Order of 31 December 1846, then reinforced by a legislative framework providing them with a means to enforce this law. The decree of 4 February 1850 reserved the posts of departmental archivist to those holding the qualification of archivist-paleographer,[19] while all the positions at the National Archives (except that of senior civil servant) were reserved for them by the decree of 14 May 1887. The same could not be said of libraries. The order of 1839[20] was never applied, and although the order of 1839 reserved places at the Royal Library for École des Chartes graduates, fewer than 7% of them worked in a library in 1867.[21] It was not until the end of the Second Empire, partly thanks to the work of Léopold Delisle, the general administrator of the national library, that the qualifications of the school's graduates were recognized by libraries.[22] Little by little, decrees and orders facilitated their access to jobs in libraries.

The school moved in 1866 into more suitable premises in the hôtel de Breteuil, rue des Francs-Bourgeois, without this move having much effect on the teaching. Seven professorships were instituted by the decree of 30 January 1869: paleography; Latin languages; bibliography; filing for libraries and archives; diplomacy; political, administrative and judiciary institutions in France; civil and canonic law of the Middle Ages and archeology of the Middle Ages. Apart from minor modifications, these remained unchanged until 1955. The school moved once again in 1897, to 19 rue de la Sorbonne, into the premises originally intended for the Paris Faculté de théologie catholique. This move brought the school geographically closer to the other research and teaching institutions based at the Sorbonne, such as the Faculté de lettres and the École pratique des hautes études. The school had a classroom, with windows along both sides and special deep desks for paleography practice, as well as a library, in which books were available for immediate access.[23] Although the premises have been refurbished, the school is still located here today. During the 1920s, a number of moves to other premises were proposed,[24] with suggestions including the hôtel de Rohan in 1924, the garden of the Institution for Deaf-Mutes (suggested by Michel Roux-Spitz), a plot on rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs, a house on rue de Vaugirard, the former Polytechnic School, and the refectory of the Bernardins. The school will move in 2015 to the Richelieu area, into new premises at 65 rue de Richelieu and 12 rue des Petits-Champs. The school was also a founding member of the Campus Condorcet,[25] and for this reason, some of its research activities were conducted at the Aubervilliers campus.

The image of the École des Chartes, in political and social terms, was firmly anchored, even though it has sometimes been classified as a right-wing institution.[26] The image of the "right-wing chartiste" originated in the figure of the "amateur", the son of a well-off family, passing through the school to kill time elegantly, or to "wait", in the words of Robert Martin du Gard,[27] who graduated from the school in 1905. In fact, throughout the 19th century there was a discontinuity between the high-prestige training offered by the École des Chartes and the lower-prestige, modestly remunerated jobs open to graduates. However, this reputation was at least partly unfounded, as demonstrated by several cases. At the time of the Dreyfus Affair,[28] for example, the milieu of the École des Chartes mirrored the divisions in French society: "Nowhere were civic quarrels more completely invested in the job of historian."[29] The few chartistes who were called upon as experts during the Zola trial – Arthur Giry, Auguste Molinier, Paul Meyer, Paul Viollet and Gaston Paris – and those who were involved in the founding of the League of Human Rights were attacked by other archivist-paleographers, including Robert de Lasteyrie, Gabriel Hanotaux and Émile Couard, as well as by their students at the École des Chartes. The variety of engagements at the time of the Dreyfus Affair did not necessarily reflect the political sensitivities of those involved, and their motives were political as well as professional, jeopardizing the very training and methods of the school.[30] Although it was conservative to some extent, the school admitted a female student, Geneviève Acloque, in 1906, long before the other grandes écoles had started admitting women. The École des Chartes may have been perceived as a bastion of the French Action during the interwar period, although several relatively prominent alumni, such as Georges Bataille or Roger Martin du Gard, seem to have been more left-leaning. During the Second World War, there were therefore more École des Chartes students and teachers on the side of the Resistance than on the side of Vichy. Bertrand Joly concludes that the school was largely neutral, in that each "wing" seems to have been equally represented, a neutrality that was also justified by the fact that the school was not big enough for its members to have a significant effect on national politics.

The entrance examination and internal examinations of the École des Chartes were reformed at the beginning of the 1930s.[31] At this time,[32] the school began offering the qualification of diplôme technique de bibliothécaire (DTB) 34, which was required to obtain a job as a librarian in first-category municipal libraries or university libraries. The school opened its classes on the history of books and bibliography to external students preparing for the qualification. This practice continued until 1950, when the diplôme supérieur de bibliothécaire (DSB) replaced the DTB as the qualification for librarians.

The mid-20th century was a difficult period for the school as it struggled to modernize. Its student numbers dropped sharply (there were only 11 archivist-paleographers in the class of 1959[33]). Its training was considered to be outdated and lacking in the latest approaches to history, notably the historiographic revival of the Annales School.[34] It was not until the 1990s, when the entrance examination and teaching were reformed and a new policy was introduced, that the school really saw a revival. It entered a period of development under the direction of Yves-Marie Bercé (1992–2001) and Anita Guerreau-Jalabert (2001–2006). The current development of the school is based on solid training in new technologies and their application to the conservation of cultural heritage, and closer, more structured links with French universities and similar institutions in other European countries. The teaching has also been restructured to be better suited to the current demands of scientific research and evolution in conservation jobs. This approach will be introduced gradually as of the academic year 2014–15.

Since the current director, Jean-Michel Leniaud, took up his post in 2011, the school has once more reformed its entrance examination to focus student recruitment on the specifics of the training, while also expanding the training to a broader field of human and social sciences, adapting it to the European context and recruitment conditions within conservation organizations. The range of subjects taught, which was expanded in the 1990s to include the history of art, now also includes archeology, the history of contemporary law, and history of property law. The course has been extended from three years to three years and nine months, aligning training in fundamental scientific techniques with empowerment in conservation jobs. In no other social and human sciences institution is the study of history, philology and law integrated to this extent into the conservation of archives, books monuments and works of art, be they inventories, historic monuments or museums.

As well as improving the recruitment process and upgrading the training of future archivist-paleographers, the school has introduced specialized Master's programs focusing on digital technologies adapted to the humanities. It has recently introduced a continuing training service that takes into account the validation des acquis de l'expérience (VAE) (a certification accrediting work experience). The school's collaboration with the Établissement Public de Coopération Scientific (Campus Condorcet Paris-Aubervilliers), the ComUE heSam University and the Sorbonne Universities demonstrates the new directions that it has taken in recent years. To this end, it has modernized its administration, implemented ambitious communications programs and established a new campus opposite the National Library on rue de Richelieu. It is thus preparing to fulfill as effectively as possible the public service role assigned to it by the government.

 
Students of the École des Chartes on a study trip to Saint-Leu d'Esserent (1903).

Missions edit

The École nationale des Chartes is regulated by the statute of 27 January 1984, modified by statute no. 2013-660 of 22 July 2013 which relates to higher education and research. Article 3 of decree no. 87-832 of 8 October 1897 modified by decree no. 2005-1751 of 30 December 2005 defines the missions of the school as follows:

The mission of the École nationale des Chartes is to provide training for the scientific staff of archives and libraries. It trains those who contribute to scientific knowledge and the protection of national heritage. It engages in the training and research of students in the human and social sciences, particularly in disciplines relating to critical study, exploitation, conservation and communication of historic sources.

Organization edit

The governing bodies are composed of the director of the School, the administrative council and the scientific council. The director is selected from among the directors of studies of the École pratique des hautes études, the École nationale des Chartes and the École française d'Extrême-Orient, or from among professors of the universities and members of affiliated institutions. The director is appointed by decree of the President of the Republic for a term of five years, renewable once under the conditions of the article. The director is assisted by a director of studies and a general director of services. The administrative council,[35] consists of 21 members, including four unelected members, ten members appointed by the minister responsible for higher education, two of whom are members of the Institute, and seven elected members, three of whom are teachers, two of whom are IATOS (non-teaching staff) and two of whom are students. The scientific council37, headed by the director of the School, includes all the teachers who are directors of studies, as well as other unelected members. It also includes fifteen appointed members, five of whom are members of the Institute, as well as an elected teacher and a student representative. The Paris URFIST (an inter-academic research and training body) and the Committee of Historical and Scientific Work are affiliated with the l'École des Chartes.

Training edit

 
The director's office

Archivist-paleographers edit

Entrance examinations edit

French students are recruited by competitive examination prepared in literary-oriented classes préparatoires in and outside Paris. Since 1991, it has been divided into two sections:

  • Section A, "Classics". This includes, among other subjects, medieval history, modern history and Latin. Studies at the School require fluency in Latin.
  • Section B, "Modern". This is part of the École normale supérieure's banque d'epreuves littéraires (BEL), a set of entrance examinations valid for several schools, and includes modern history, contemporary history and modern languages among its subjects.

Students prepare for the entrance examination in dedicated classes préparatoires, the first year of which is known as "hypoChartes" and the second year "Chartes". Depending on the school, students preparing for examination A and those preparing for examination B may be grouped into a single cohort with different options, or they may be divided into two different cohorts. Those preparing for Section B can be grouped into khâgnes with additional options. Candidates who can provide proof of at least a bachelor's degree in theory may take an examination to be allowed to proceed directly into the second year. This examination is aimed at candidates who are already conducting research at an advanced level. There is now a limit on the number of candidates taking the entrance examination. It was reduced from 30 to 20 in three years, which was lower than the number of jobs available to graduates of the school (in archives, libraries, museums, etc.).

Status of the students edit

 
The "Horseshoe Room" on the first floor of the library

Students recruited by competitive examination can assume the status of trainee civil servants, being paid (currently approximately €1250/month net) in exchange for committing to a ten-year engagement. Those who pass the examination may choose whether or not to accept this status. Foreign students who are recruited by examination or on the basis of qualifications (according to the international selection procedure) are not remunerated while they follow the course, although they can apply for a scholarship.

The course duration is three years and nine months.[36] At the end of their studies, the students submit a thesis, which qualifies them as archivist-paleographers.

Those who have fulfilled their third-year obligations can apply for two écoles d'application: the École nationale supérieure des sciences de l'information et des bibliothèques (Enssib, reserved competitive examination[37]) and the Institut national du patrimoine (INP). Following their studies in these schools, they may join the professions of either curators of libraries or curators of heritage. Each year, a number of students sit the INP's examination in the visual branches (Museums, Historic Monuments and Inventories) or the agrégation examination (History, Classic or Modern Letters and Grammar), thus following either a research-oriented or a teaching-oriented career path.

Training and teaching edit

The course takes place over eight semesters, of which six are dedicated to teaching. As well as a common core of subjects, students choose options according to their scientific and professional objectives. These options can be taken externally through a university. Internships play an important role, with a five-month compulsory internship in an institution in the field of conservation (e.g. archives, libraries, museums, or heritage or archeological services) in France, and three months in a similar institution abroad. The principal subjects studied are:[38]

  • Latin and French paleography (plus other languages in seminars)
  • archiving, diplomacy and history of the institutions that have produced these archives (medieval, modern and contemporary)
  • history of civil and canon law
  • history of contemporary law
  • Roman philology
  • medieval Latin
  • history of art (medieval, modern and contemporary)
  • archeology
  • editing of texts
  • bibliography
  • history of books
  • manuscripts and medieval literary texts
  • statistics and cartography for the study of history
  • modern languages and IT

ECTS credits are allocated to the subjects, making it possible for students from universities or other grandes écoles to follow some of them and for the subjects to be included in the external students' Master's qualifications. This is made possible by the new LMD reform, which harmonizes French academic qualifications with other European ones. Classes are also open to independent auditors.

Master's edit

 
The "Great Room" (a classroom) with a mural depicting the abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés

In 2006 the École des Chartes introduced a Master's program in Digital Technologies Applied to History and has since then trained approximately 20 students per year.[39] In the first year, all students take the same basic modules plus three options (archiving, history of books and media, and history of art). The first year of the Master's is a continuance of the École des Chartes undergraduate training. In the second year, students follow more specialized training in the field of IT applied to webcasting. There are two possible paths, one more research-oriented and the other, which is more vocational, oriented towards the dissemination of knowledge in a heritage service.

In 2011, the École des Chartes introduced a further two Master's courses. The first, in Medieval Studies, is offered in partnership with the École normale supérieure, the University of Paris III and the University of Paris IV. Its aim is to "provide training in literary research for medieval texts, with an interdisciplinary approach in the context of specialization in the Middle Ages". The second, run in partnership with the École normale supérieure Paris-Saclay and the Institut national de l'audiovisuel, is in Audiovisual Design: Plurimedial Representations of History, Society and Science. It aims to "train designers and makers of audiovisual documentaries (for cinema, television, radio and internet) as well as creators and heads of multimedia sites operating in the written press and publishing".

Doctorate edit

The École nationale des Chartes awards doctorates in the subjects that it teaches. Any student holding a master's degree, whether or not it was awarded by the École des Chartes, can apply to enroll in a doctoral program at the school. The doctorate is prepared through two collaborating doctoral schools: the École pratique des hautes études (for doctorates in medieval history, history of art, archeology, Roman philology and Latin) and the Paris Sorbonne University (for doctorates in modern and contemporary history).

The Institut national du patrimoine's classe préparatoire intégrée edit

Detailed article: Institut national du patrimoine (France).

The École des Chartes provides part of the preparation for the competitive examination for heritage curators (archive specialization) for students of the INP's classe préparatoire intégrée. These students are selected on the basis of social and academic criteria.

Research edit

 
Bust of Jules Quicherat by Jean Petit

Most of the professors at the École nationale des Chartes are affiliated to the Centre Jean-Mabillon, the École's research unit, whose director is currently Olivier Poncet. The aim of the centre's research program is to cover all the processes that explain and publicize the written production from the Middle Ages to the present, through various stages:

  • the conditions of production (axis 1: the cultures of writing from the Middle Ages to the 21st century)
  • the mechanisms of heritage transmission (axis 2: genesis and tradition of written heritage: author, institutions, laws, study, etc.)
  • the conditions of returning this historic documentation to the scientific community (axis 3: epistemology and the norms of editing texts and images in the digital age)

A significant part of the school's research activity is the theses of the students, whose fields of studies have diversified over the years and now relate to all periods of history, notably contemporary.[40]

Partnerships edit

 
A scanner in the library, available for students' use

Partnerships with other institutions form one of the central policies of the current administration, which collaborates closely with the École pratique des hautes études, the Institut de recherche et d'histoire des textes and the Centre d'études superieures de civilisation médiévale of the University of Poitiers to create the École d'Érudition en réseau. The École des Chartes is also part of the Institut d'histoire du livre together with the City of Lyon (its municipal library and Museum of printing works), the École normale supérieure of Lyon and the Enssib.

The École des Chartes also collaborates with other higher education establishments in Paris to form the ComUE heSam University, the ComUE Sorbonne Universities and the Campus Condorcet Paris-Aubervilliers.

The school also has partnerships with institutions outside France, such as the Russian State Archives, a number of Moscow libraries, the University of Alicante, and some Italian research centers. The school takes in a number of foreign students, who are often Swiss, Belgian or from francophone African countries, and is currently seeking to attract new students for shorter stays, through partnerships with universities. The school's students are also regularly invited to do internships in archives or libraries in other countries.

The library edit

The library was created by the order of 31 December 1846. At the time it occupied one of the two rooms reserved for the school in the hôtel de Soubise. The library moved with the school in 1897, and since then has occupied the second floor (reading room and history room), third floor (Horseshoe Room) and fourth floor (offices and store rooms in the attic).

In 1920, the management of the library was taken over by the secretary of the school, who at the time was René Poupardin. Today it is managed by a library curator.

It was designed as a research library. Its collections are particularly well supplied in the subjects taught at the school: medieval history, philology, history of books, bibliography, etc. The collections (around 150,000 volumes) are all available for immediate access. The catalogue is available online.[41] Many electronic resources are also available.

Due to lack of space at the Sorbonne, the library will move in 2016 to 12 rue des Petits-Champs, into much larger premises.

Dissemination of knowledge edit

The École nationale des Chartes disseminates scientific works in its fields of specialization, in printed and electronic format. It has published four collections of works in the printed format :

  • Mémoires et Documents, a collection dating from 1896, consisting of monographs, most notably the theses of École des Chartes alumni
  • Études et Rencontres, a collection begun in 1998, principally consisting of the minutes of scientific meetings
  • Matériaux pour l'Histoire, a collection inaugurated in 1996, consisting of richly illustrated quarto volumes
  • Études et documents for a Gallia Pontificia, a collection jointly edited by the École nationale des Chartes and the German Historical Institute of Paris since 2009 with the aim of presenting the work carried out as part of the Gallia Pontificia, a scientific enterprise that aims to identify, publish and study the papal acts concerning France dating from before 1198

The École des Chartes also publishes two periodic publications relating to the training it offers :

  • Abstracts of theses submitted by students to obtain their qualification of archivist-paleographer, published annually by the École des Chartes since 1849. Since 2000, they have also been available online
  • Hypotheses. Works of the University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne doctoral school of history and the École nationale des Chartes, co-edited by the École nationale des Chartes and Sorbonne publications since 2010

These works are disseminated by CID-FMSH, through the Comptoir des presses de l'université. Since 2002, the École des Chartes has also published scientific works in electronic format in its online collection of publications, the Éditions en ligne de l'École des Chartes (ELEC). This gives scientific works digital functions and brings together repertoires and databases as well as texts, in a format that is more suited than printed versions to detailed examination. This collection is completed by :

  • corpora of text made available online for research purposes, unedited by the École des charts
  • teaching materials, available on the THELEME website
  • a space for the presentation of the IT tools and methods developed by the École des Chartes

These materials are under an open license.

The school develops its scientific and teaching work through several initiatives, including the Thélème website 48, which offers materials supporting the subjects taught at the school, such as educational packs, advice, lessons, and interactive facsimiles.

École des Chartes publications edit

The École des Chartes also publishes numerous works, in both paper and electronic format. The Mémoires et documents de l'École des Chartes are monographs, many of them drawn from École des Chartes theses or doctoral research. The first of these was published in 1896 and they are distributed by Honoré Champion and Droz. Two more collections, the Études et rencontres (minutes of conventions and brief monographs) and Matériaux pour l'histoire (illustrated large-format albums), have been created more recently. ELEC is also responsible for the school's online publications, which include databases, editions of texts, minutes of symposia, bibliographies, and studies.

The Société de l'École des Chartes edit

The Société de l'École des Chartes is registered as a public-interest association, which students and alumni can join. Its current president is Marie-Françoise Limon-Bonnet, who was elected in 2018. Twice a year, the Société publishes the Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes with the support of the École. This scientific review, founded in 1839, is one of the oldest in France.

Some famous École des Chartes alumni edit

Archives, libraries, research edit

Clergy edit

Politics edit

Literature edit

Some biographers, perhaps overgeneralizing, also use the term chartiste to refer to certain French historians, such as La Villemarqué, Achille Jubinal, Pierre Lalo and Louis Madelin, or foreign historians, such as Alfred Métraux, K. J. Conant or Aleksander Gieysztor, who audited some of the lessons at the École des Chartes, or to Auguste Poulet-Malassis, José-Maria de Heredia and François Mauriac, who were registered as students but who never completed their studies.

List of directors of the École des Chartes edit

Beginning End Name Function
1847 1848 Jean-Antoine Letronne member of the Institut (Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres)
1848 1854 Benjamin Guérard professor at the École des Chartes, member of the Institut
1854 1857 Natalis de Wailly member of the Institut
1857 1871 Léon Lacabane professor at the École des Chartes
1871 1882 Jules Quicherat professor at the École des Chartes
1882 1916 Paul Meyer professor at the École des Chartes, member of the Institut
1916 1930 Maurice Prou professor at the École des Chartes, member of the Institut
1930 1954 Clovis Brunel professor at the École des Chartes, director of studies at the École pratique des hautes études, member of the Institut
1954 1970 Pierre Marot professor at the École des Chartes, member of the Institut
1970 1976 Michel François professor at the École des Chartes, member of the Institut
1976 1987 Jacques Monfrin professor at the École des Chartes, director of studies at the École pratique des hautes études, member of the Institut
1987 1993 Emmanuel Poulle professor at the École des Chartes, member of the Institut
1993 2002 Yves-Marie Bercé professor at the Paris-Sorbonne University, member of the Institut
2002 2006 Anita Guerreau-Jalabert director of research at the French National Center for Scientific Research
2006 2011 Jacques Berlioz director of research at the French National Center for Scientific Research
2011 2016 Jean-Michel Leniaud[42] director of studies at the École pratique des hautes études, professor at the École des Chartes
2016 current Michelle Bubenicek professor at the University of Franche-Comté

See also edit

Sources edit

  • The theses submitted at the École des Chartes since 1849 are kept at the National Archives on shelf no. ABXXVIII.[43]
  • The papers of the Société de l'École des Chartes are also kept at the National Archives on shelf no. 11AS.[44]

References edit

  1. ^ International Handbook of Universities, 1993, p. 1279.
  2. ^ Royal Decree of 22 February 1821 establishing a School of Charters, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, pp. 26–27
  3. ^ Project revived in 1891 by Gustave Servois, general guard of the National Archives: "Projet d'un enseignement historique et diplomatique à la Bibliothèque nationale sous la Convention", Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1891, vol. 52, pp. 353–55.
  4. ^ Letter from the Baron of Gérando to Mr. Marial Delpit, 6 April 1839, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839-1840, vol. 1, pp. 24–25.
  5. ^ Auguste Vallet de Viriville, "Notes et documents pouvant servir à l'histoire de l'école royale des Chartes. Recherches sur le projet présenté à l'Empereur en 1807, par le baron de Gérando", in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1848, vol. 9, pp. 153–76.
  6. ^ "Rapport adressé au roi Louis XVIII le 22 February 1821 par M. le comte Siméon, ministre de l'Intérieur", in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, p. 25.
  7. ^ Moore, Lara Jennifer (2008). Restoring order: the École des Chartes and the organization of archives and libraries in France, 1820–1870. Duluth (Minn.): Litwin Books. ISBN 9780977861798.
  8. ^ Royal decree of 22 February 1821, article 2, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, op. cit.
  9. ^ Royal decree of 22 February 1821, article 1, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, op. cit
  10. ^ Royal decree of 22 February 1821, article 3, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, op. cit.
  11. ^ Royal decree of 22 February 1821, article 5, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, op. cit.
  12. ^ L'École, son histoire, son œuvre. Livre du centenaire, Paris, Auguste Picard, 1921, p. 10.
  13. ^ Royal decree of 16 July 1823, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, pp. 27–28.
  14. ^ Martial Delpit, Notice historique sur l'École royale des Chartes, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes. 1839–1840, vol. 1, p. 6.
  15. ^ Royal decree of 11 November 1829 containing the reorganization of the École des Chartes, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, pp. 32–33.
  16. ^ "Chronique et Mélanges", in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes. 1889, vol. 50, pp. 278–89.
  17. ^ Royal decree of 31 December 1846, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1847, vol. 8, pp. 170–73.
  18. ^ Paul Frédéricq, L'enseignement supérieur de l'histoire à Paris, notes et impressions de voyage in Revue internationale de l'enseignement, 2e semestre 1883, pp. 746–52 [archive]: "The École des Chartes to me appeared to be an institution without equal. Together with the École pratique des hautes Études, it offers the most solid, complete, truly scientific historical education in Paris. Other countries envy France it's already venerable École des Chartes. Germany, so well equipped with history and auxiliary science universities, as yet has no counterpart to my knowledge.
  19. ^ See Vincent Mollet, "La conquête des archives départementales", in École nationale des Chartes. Histoire de l'École depuis 1821, Yves-Marie Bercé, Olivier Guyotjeannin, Marc Smith (eds), Thionville, Gérard Klopp, 1997, pp. 253–62.
  20. ^ Order of 29 February 1939, articles 15 et 26 relating to the École des Chartes, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1839–1840, vol. 1, p. 42.
  21. ^ Henri-Jean Martin, "Les chartistes et les bibliothèques", Bulletin des bibliothèques de France, 1972, no 12, pp. 529–37 [archive]: In 1867, of 222 alumni of the École des Chartes, only 15 found employment as librarians, 13 of them in Paris and two elsewhere in France.
  22. ^ See Louis Desgraves, "Quelques éminents bibliothécaires: galerie", in École nationale des Chartes. Histoire de l'École depuis 1821, op. cit., pp. 263–67.
  23. ^ Christian Hottin, "Le 19, rue de la Sorbonne, l'École ses bâtiments, sa décoration", in L'École nationale des Chartes. Histoire de l'École depuis 1821, op. cit., pp. 142–48. Text available on HAL-SHS (notice halshs-00087473 [archive])
  24. ^ Christian Hottin, L'École des Chartes: institutionnalité et architecture. Text available on HAL-SHS (notice halshs-00089095 [archive])
  25. ^ Decree no. 2012-286 of 28 February 2012 establishing Campus Condorcet, a public institution of scientific cooperation [archive].
  26. ^ Olivier Dumoulin, "Histoire et historiens de droite", in Jean-François Sirinelli (ed.), Histoire des droites en France, vol. 2, Cultures, Éditions Gallimard, 2006, pp. 361–62
  27. ^ Bertrand Joly, "Les chartistes et la politique", in L'École nationale des Chartes. Histoire de l'École depuis 1821, op. cit., p. 169–78
  28. ^ Bertrand Joly, 'L'École des Chartes et l'Affaire Dreyfus', in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes. 1989, vol. 147, pp. 611–71 [archive].
  29. ^ Madeleine Rebérioux, "Histoire, historiens et dreyfusisme", in Revue historique, vol. 255, 1976, pp. 407–32, at p. 425. Cited by Bertrand Joly, "L'École des Chartes et l'Affaire Dreyfus", op. cit.
  30. ^ See Laurent Ferri, "Émile Zola et 'ces messieurs de l'École des Chartes'" in the Dreyfus Affair: unpublished, in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes. 2006, vol. 164, pt 2. pp. 595–603 [archive].
  31. ^ Decrees of 19 June 1931, 16 March 1931 and 5 October 1932
  32. ^ Decree of 22 February 1932; decrees of 29 April 1933 and 29 November 1933
  33. ^ "Chroniques", in Bibliothèque de l'École des Chartes, 1959, vol. 117, p. 386 [archive].
  34. ^ Daniel Renoult, 'Les formations à la recherche de leurs réformes', in Histoire des bibliothèques françaises, 2nd ed., vol. 4, pp. 847–58, esp. p. 848.
  35. ^ The councils of the École des Chartes [archive]
  36. ^ The Master's course on the website of the École [archive]
  37. ^ A number of positions as State Curators are reserved for Chartists, but no positions as territorial curators are reserved.
  38. ^ Complete list of modules by semester on the website of the École [archive]
  39. ^ The Master's course on the website of the École [archive]
  40. ^ See the thesis abstracts [archive] of recent years, demonstrating the diversity of the research carried out
  41. ^ Catalog of the library of the school
  42. ^
  43. ^ "Online catalogue".
  44. ^ nationales

External links edit

  • (in French) Site of the École des Chartes

48°50′56″N 2°20′34″E / 48.84889°N 2.34278°E / 48.84889; 2.34278

École, nationale, chartes, this, article, about, school, academic, journal, bibliothèque, École, chartes, french, École, nationale, chartes, literally, national, school, charters, french, grande, école, constituent, college, université, specialising, historica. This article is about the school For the academic journal see Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes The Ecole Nationale des Chartes French Ecole nationale des chartes literally National School of Charters is a French grande ecole and a constituent college of Universite PSL specialising in the historical sciences It was founded in 1821 and was located initially at the National Archives and later at the Palais de la Sorbonne 5th arrondissement In October 2014 it moved to 65 rue de Richelieu opposite the Richelieu Louvois site of the National Library of France The school is administered by the Ministry of National Education Higher Education and Research It holds the status of a grand etablissement Its students who are recruited by competitive examination and hold the status of trainee civil servant receive the qualification of archivist paleographer after completing a thesis They generally go on to pursue careers as heritage curators in the archive and visual fields as library curators or as lecturers and researchers in the human and social sciences In 2005 the school also introduced master s degrees for which students were recruited based on an application file and in 2011 doctorates Ecole Nationale des Chartes PSLOther nameNational School of Charters 1 TypeGrandes EcolesEstablished1821 203 years ago 1821 DirectorMichelle Bubenicek since 2016 LocationParis FranceCampus2nd arrondissement of ParisAffiliationsCampus Condorcet Universite PSLWebsitewww Chartes psl eu Contents 1 History 2 Missions 3 Organization 4 Training 4 1 Archivist paleographers 4 1 1 Entrance examinations 4 1 2 Status of the students 4 1 3 Training and teaching 4 2 Master s 4 3 Doctorate 4 4 The Institut national du patrimoine s classe preparatoire integree 5 Research 6 Partnerships 7 The library 8 Dissemination of knowledge 9 Ecole des Chartes publications 10 The Societe de l Ecole des Chartes 11 Some famous Ecole des Chartes alumni 11 1 Archives libraries research 11 2 Clergy 11 3 Politics 11 4 Literature 11 5 List of directors of the Ecole des Chartes 12 See also 12 1 Sources 13 References 14 External linksHistory editThe Ecole des Chartes was created by order of Louis XVIII on 22 February 1821 2 although its roots are in the Revolution and the Napoleonic period The Revolution during which property was confiscated congregations were suppressed and competencies were transferred from the Church to the State produced radical cultural changes In 1793 the feudist Antoine Maugard approached the public instruction committee of the Convention with a proposal for a project of historical and diplomatic education The project was never carried out and Maugard was largely forgotten 3 The institution was eventually created by the philologist and anthropologist Joseph Marie de Gerando baron of the Empire and general secretary to Champagny the Minister of the Interior In 1807 he submitted a proposal to Napoleon for the creation of a school to train young scholars of history 4 Napoleon examined the proposal and declared that he wished to develop a much larger specialist history school 5 However Gerando was posted to Italy on an administrative mission and the project was interrupted At the end of 1820 Gerando convinced Count Simeon a philosopher and professor of law who had been state councilor under the Empire and who was at that time Minister of the Interior of the usefulness of an institution modeled on the grandes ecoles dedicated to the study of a branch of French literature 6 the charters The 1820s were a favorable period for the creation of the Ecole des Chartes Firstly this was because the atmosphere of nostalgia for the Middle Ages created a desire to train specialists who would by carrying out a direct study of archives and manuscripts confiscated during the Revolution be able to renew French historiography Secondly the need was also felt to maintain this branch of study which stemmed from Maurist tradition since the field was endangered by a lack of knowledgeable collaborators in the science of charters and manuscripts And thirdly during the reign of Louis XVIII a period which saw the return of the Ultras and during which the constitutional monarchy was called into question the political context influenced the creation of an institution whose name inevitably made explicit reference to the defense of the Charter 7 Under the order of 1821 twelve students were nominated by the Minister of the Interior based on propositions by the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 8 and they were paid 9 during the two years of their studies They principally studied paleography and philology with a purely practical aim to be able to read and understand the documents that they would be responsible for curating 10 The professors and students of the school were placed under the authority of the curator of medieval manuscripts of the Royal Library rue de Richelieu and of the general guard of the Archives of the Kingdom 11 This first experience was not very successful mainly because no job openings were reserved for the students The first course was implemented in two stages by the ministerial decree of 11 May for the Royal Library course and by the decree of 21 December 1821 for the Archives of the Kingdom course and was the only one run The Academie did put forward a new list of candidates 12 and the course length was set at two years 13 by the Order of 16 July 1823 but lessons had to be suspended on 19 December 1823 due to a lack of students However following a long period of inactivity the Ministry of the Interior decided to re open the school Rives the director of staff of the ministry together with Dacier drew up a report on the reorganization of the School and a draft order 14 proposed to Charles X by La Bourdonnaye which resulted in the order of 11 November 1829 15 The school was now open to anyone who had acquired the Baccalaureate but six to eight students were selected by competitive examination at the end of the first year They received a salary and followed two further years of training On completion of their studies they received the qualification of archivist paleographer and were reserved half of the available jobs in libraries and archives The first valedictorian was Alexandre Teulet nbsp The Hotel de Clisson and entrance to the Ecole des Chartes from 1846 to 1866 nbsp The new building of the Ecole located 65 rue de RichelieuThe Guizot period benefited the Ecole des Chartes which soon became an important institution in the field of historical particularly medieval studies On 24 March 1839 the Societe de l Ecole des Chartes 16 was founded by Louis Douet d Arcq among others and it published the Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes one of the oldest French scientific reviews to disseminate the work carried out in the school The Order of 31 December 1846 17 implemented a fundamental reorganization of the school and its study program which then remained unchanged for more than a century The students who were holders of the Baccalaureate were recruited by examination which shortly afterwards became a competitive examination and followed a three year course of studies Interdisciplinarity an essential characteristic of the school was then written into the reform which required students to study six subjects some of which were not taught anywhere else The second innovation a thesis was introduced with the first public defense being held in 1849 A surveillance council was set up consisting of the guard of the Archives the director of the Royal Library the director of the School and five members of the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres The school was finally provided with a new statute It moved to the Kingdom Archives in the hotel de Soubise in the oval hall and adjacent rooms of the hotel de Clisson nbsp The students of 1857By now the Ecole des Chartes had become a point of reference in Europe 18 Its historical research methodology had been greatly modernized as had its teaching methods thanks to the copies of ancient documents to which it had access The students were taught paleography sigillography numismatics philology filing for archives and libraries historical geography currencies systems of weights and measures the history of political institutions in France archeology civil law canonic law and feudal law The teaching had both a scientific and a professional aim Thus by gradually being integrated into the network of royal then national and departmental archive services the graduates of the school contributed to the strengthening of the network and to the improvement of archival principles A career path for the graduates was thus established in the archives first implemented by the Order of 31 December 1846 then reinforced by a legislative framework providing them with a means to enforce this law The decree of 4 February 1850 reserved the posts of departmental archivist to those holding the qualification of archivist paleographer 19 while all the positions at the National Archives except that of senior civil servant were reserved for them by the decree of 14 May 1887 The same could not be said of libraries The order of 1839 20 was never applied and although the order of 1839 reserved places at the Royal Library for Ecole des Chartes graduates fewer than 7 of them worked in a library in 1867 21 It was not until the end of the Second Empire partly thanks to the work of Leopold Delisle the general administrator of the national library that the qualifications of the school s graduates were recognized by libraries 22 Little by little decrees and orders facilitated their access to jobs in libraries The school moved in 1866 into more suitable premises in the hotel de Breteuil rue des Francs Bourgeois without this move having much effect on the teaching Seven professorships were instituted by the decree of 30 January 1869 paleography Latin languages bibliography filing for libraries and archives diplomacy political administrative and judiciary institutions in France civil and canonic law of the Middle Ages and archeology of the Middle Ages Apart from minor modifications these remained unchanged until 1955 The school moved once again in 1897 to 19 rue de la Sorbonne into the premises originally intended for the Paris Faculte de theologie catholique This move brought the school geographically closer to the other research and teaching institutions based at the Sorbonne such as the Faculte de lettres and the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes The school had a classroom with windows along both sides and special deep desks for paleography practice as well as a library in which books were available for immediate access 23 Although the premises have been refurbished the school is still located here today During the 1920s a number of moves to other premises were proposed 24 with suggestions including the hotel de Rohan in 1924 the garden of the Institution for Deaf Mutes suggested by Michel Roux Spitz a plot on rue Notre Dame des Champs a house on rue de Vaugirard the former Polytechnic School and the refectory of the Bernardins The school will move in 2015 to the Richelieu area into new premises at 65 rue de Richelieu and 12 rue des Petits Champs The school was also a founding member of the Campus Condorcet 25 and for this reason some of its research activities were conducted at the Aubervilliers campus The image of the Ecole des Chartes in political and social terms was firmly anchored even though it has sometimes been classified as a right wing institution 26 The image of the right wing chartiste originated in the figure of the amateur the son of a well off family passing through the school to kill time elegantly or to wait in the words of Robert Martin du Gard 27 who graduated from the school in 1905 In fact throughout the 19th century there was a discontinuity between the high prestige training offered by the Ecole des Chartes and the lower prestige modestly remunerated jobs open to graduates However this reputation was at least partly unfounded as demonstrated by several cases At the time of the Dreyfus Affair 28 for example the milieu of the Ecole des Chartes mirrored the divisions in French society Nowhere were civic quarrels more completely invested in the job of historian 29 The few chartistes who were called upon as experts during the Zola trial Arthur Giry Auguste Molinier Paul Meyer Paul Viollet and Gaston Paris and those who were involved in the founding of the League of Human Rights were attacked by other archivist paleographers including Robert de Lasteyrie Gabriel Hanotaux and Emile Couard as well as by their students at the Ecole des Chartes The variety of engagements at the time of the Dreyfus Affair did not necessarily reflect the political sensitivities of those involved and their motives were political as well as professional jeopardizing the very training and methods of the school 30 Although it was conservative to some extent the school admitted a female student Genevieve Acloque in 1906 long before the other grandes ecoles had started admitting women The Ecole des Chartes may have been perceived as a bastion of the French Action during the interwar period although several relatively prominent alumni such as Georges Bataille or Roger Martin du Gard seem to have been more left leaning During the Second World War there were therefore more Ecole des Chartes students and teachers on the side of the Resistance than on the side of Vichy Bertrand Joly concludes that the school was largely neutral in that each wing seems to have been equally represented a neutrality that was also justified by the fact that the school was not big enough for its members to have a significant effect on national politics The entrance examination and internal examinations of the Ecole des Chartes were reformed at the beginning of the 1930s 31 At this time 32 the school began offering the qualification of diplome technique de bibliothecaire DTB 34 which was required to obtain a job as a librarian in first category municipal libraries or university libraries The school opened its classes on the history of books and bibliography to external students preparing for the qualification This practice continued until 1950 when the diplome superieur de bibliothecaire DSB replaced the DTB as the qualification for librarians The mid 20th century was a difficult period for the school as it struggled to modernize Its student numbers dropped sharply there were only 11 archivist paleographers in the class of 1959 33 Its training was considered to be outdated and lacking in the latest approaches to history notably the historiographic revival of the Annales School 34 It was not until the 1990s when the entrance examination and teaching were reformed and a new policy was introduced that the school really saw a revival It entered a period of development under the direction of Yves Marie Berce 1992 2001 and Anita Guerreau Jalabert 2001 2006 The current development of the school is based on solid training in new technologies and their application to the conservation of cultural heritage and closer more structured links with French universities and similar institutions in other European countries The teaching has also been restructured to be better suited to the current demands of scientific research and evolution in conservation jobs This approach will be introduced gradually as of the academic year 2014 15 Since the current director Jean Michel Leniaud took up his post in 2011 the school has once more reformed its entrance examination to focus student recruitment on the specifics of the training while also expanding the training to a broader field of human and social sciences adapting it to the European context and recruitment conditions within conservation organizations The range of subjects taught which was expanded in the 1990s to include the history of art now also includes archeology the history of contemporary law and history of property law The course has been extended from three years to three years and nine months aligning training in fundamental scientific techniques with empowerment in conservation jobs In no other social and human sciences institution is the study of history philology and law integrated to this extent into the conservation of archives books monuments and works of art be they inventories historic monuments or museums As well as improving the recruitment process and upgrading the training of future archivist paleographers the school has introduced specialized Master s programs focusing on digital technologies adapted to the humanities It has recently introduced a continuing training service that takes into account the validation des acquis de l experience VAE a certification accrediting work experience The school s collaboration with the Etablissement Public de Cooperation Scientific Campus Condorcet Paris Aubervilliers the ComUE heSam University and the Sorbonne Universities demonstrates the new directions that it has taken in recent years To this end it has modernized its administration implemented ambitious communications programs and established a new campus opposite the National Library on rue de Richelieu It is thus preparing to fulfill as effectively as possible the public service role assigned to it by the government nbsp Students of the Ecole des Chartes on a study trip to Saint Leu d Esserent 1903 Missions editThe Ecole nationale des Chartes is regulated by the statute of 27 January 1984 modified by statute no 2013 660 of 22 July 2013 which relates to higher education and research Article 3 of decree no 87 832 of 8 October 1897 modified by decree no 2005 1751 of 30 December 2005 defines the missions of the school as follows The mission of the Ecole nationale des Chartes is to provide training for the scientific staff of archives and libraries It trains those who contribute to scientific knowledge and the protection of national heritage It engages in the training and research of students in the human and social sciences particularly in disciplines relating to critical study exploitation conservation and communication of historic sources Organization editThe governing bodies are composed of the director of the School the administrative council and the scientific council The director is selected from among the directors of studies of the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes the Ecole nationale des Chartes and the Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient or from among professors of the universities and members of affiliated institutions The director is appointed by decree of the President of the Republic for a term of five years renewable once under the conditions of the article The director is assisted by a director of studies and a general director of services The administrative council 35 consists of 21 members including four unelected members ten members appointed by the minister responsible for higher education two of whom are members of the Institute and seven elected members three of whom are teachers two of whom are IATOS non teaching staff and two of whom are students The scientific council37 headed by the director of the School includes all the teachers who are directors of studies as well as other unelected members It also includes fifteen appointed members five of whom are members of the Institute as well as an elected teacher and a student representative The Paris URFIST an inter academic research and training body and the Committee of Historical and Scientific Work are affiliated with the l Ecole des Chartes Training edit nbsp The director s officeArchivist paleographers edit Entrance examinations edit French students are recruited by competitive examination prepared in literary oriented classes preparatoires in and outside Paris Since 1991 it has been divided into two sections Section A Classics This includes among other subjects medieval history modern history and Latin Studies at the School require fluency in Latin Section B Modern This is part of the Ecole normale superieure s banque d epreuves litteraires BEL a set of entrance examinations valid for several schools and includes modern history contemporary history and modern languages among its subjects Students prepare for the entrance examination in dedicated classes preparatoires the first year of which is known as hypoChartes and the second year Chartes Depending on the school students preparing for examination A and those preparing for examination B may be grouped into a single cohort with different options or they may be divided into two different cohorts Those preparing for Section B can be grouped into khagnes with additional options Candidates who can provide proof of at least a bachelor s degree in theory may take an examination to be allowed to proceed directly into the second year This examination is aimed at candidates who are already conducting research at an advanced level There is now a limit on the number of candidates taking the entrance examination It was reduced from 30 to 20 in three years which was lower than the number of jobs available to graduates of the school in archives libraries museums etc Status of the students edit nbsp The Horseshoe Room on the first floor of the libraryStudents recruited by competitive examination can assume the status of trainee civil servants being paid currently approximately 1250 month net in exchange for committing to a ten year engagement Those who pass the examination may choose whether or not to accept this status Foreign students who are recruited by examination or on the basis of qualifications according to the international selection procedure are not remunerated while they follow the course although they can apply for a scholarship The course duration is three years and nine months 36 At the end of their studies the students submit a thesis which qualifies them as archivist paleographers Those who have fulfilled their third year obligations can apply for two ecoles d application the Ecole nationale superieure des sciences de l information et des bibliotheques Enssib reserved competitive examination 37 and the Institut national du patrimoine INP Following their studies in these schools they may join the professions of either curators of libraries or curators of heritage Each year a number of students sit the INP s examination in the visual branches Museums Historic Monuments and Inventories or the agregation examination History Classic or Modern Letters and Grammar thus following either a research oriented or a teaching oriented career path Training and teaching edit The course takes place over eight semesters of which six are dedicated to teaching As well as a common core of subjects students choose options according to their scientific and professional objectives These options can be taken externally through a university Internships play an important role with a five month compulsory internship in an institution in the field of conservation e g archives libraries museums or heritage or archeological services in France and three months in a similar institution abroad The principal subjects studied are 38 Latin and French paleography plus other languages in seminars archiving diplomacy and history of the institutions that have produced these archives medieval modern and contemporary history of civil and canon law history of contemporary law Roman philology medieval Latin history of art medieval modern and contemporary archeology editing of texts bibliography history of books manuscripts and medieval literary texts statistics and cartography for the study of history modern languages and ITECTS credits are allocated to the subjects making it possible for students from universities or other grandes ecoles to follow some of them and for the subjects to be included in the external students Master s qualifications This is made possible by the new LMD reform which harmonizes French academic qualifications with other European ones Classes are also open to independent auditors Master s edit nbsp The Great Room a classroom with a mural depicting the abbey of Saint Germain des PresIn 2006 the Ecole des Chartes introduced a Master s program in Digital Technologies Applied to History and has since then trained approximately 20 students per year 39 In the first year all students take the same basic modules plus three options archiving history of books and media and history of art The first year of the Master s is a continuance of the Ecole des Chartes undergraduate training In the second year students follow more specialized training in the field of IT applied to webcasting There are two possible paths one more research oriented and the other which is more vocational oriented towards the dissemination of knowledge in a heritage service In 2011 the Ecole des Chartes introduced a further two Master s courses The first in Medieval Studies is offered in partnership with the Ecole normale superieure the University of Paris III and the University of Paris IV Its aim is to provide training in literary research for medieval texts with an interdisciplinary approach in the context of specialization in the Middle Ages The second run in partnership with the Ecole normale superieure Paris Saclay and the Institut national de l audiovisuel is in Audiovisual Design Plurimedial Representations of History Society and Science It aims to train designers and makers of audiovisual documentaries for cinema television radio and internet as well as creators and heads of multimedia sites operating in the written press and publishing Doctorate edit The Ecole nationale des Chartes awards doctorates in the subjects that it teaches Any student holding a master s degree whether or not it was awarded by the Ecole des Chartes can apply to enroll in a doctoral program at the school The doctorate is prepared through two collaborating doctoral schools the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes for doctorates in medieval history history of art archeology Roman philology and Latin and the Paris Sorbonne University for doctorates in modern and contemporary history The Institut national du patrimoine s classe preparatoire integree edit Detailed article Institut national du patrimoine France The Ecole des Chartes provides part of the preparation for the competitive examination for heritage curators archive specialization for students of the INP s classe preparatoire integree These students are selected on the basis of social and academic criteria Research edit nbsp Bust of Jules Quicherat by Jean PetitMost of the professors at the Ecole nationale des Chartes are affiliated to the Centre Jean Mabillon the Ecole s research unit whose director is currently Olivier Poncet The aim of the centre s research program is to cover all the processes that explain and publicize the written production from the Middle Ages to the present through various stages the conditions of production axis 1 the cultures of writing from the Middle Ages to the 21st century the mechanisms of heritage transmission axis 2 genesis and tradition of written heritage author institutions laws study etc the conditions of returning this historic documentation to the scientific community axis 3 epistemology and the norms of editing texts and images in the digital age A significant part of the school s research activity is the theses of the students whose fields of studies have diversified over the years and now relate to all periods of history notably contemporary 40 Partnerships edit nbsp A scanner in the library available for students usePartnerships with other institutions form one of the central policies of the current administration which collaborates closely with the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes the Institut de recherche et d histoire des textes and the Centre d etudes superieures de civilisation medievale of the University of Poitiers to create the Ecole d Erudition en reseau The Ecole des Chartes is also part of the Institut d histoire du livre together with the City of Lyon its municipal library and Museum of printing works the Ecole normale superieure of Lyon and the Enssib The Ecole des Chartes also collaborates with other higher education establishments in Paris to form the ComUE heSam University the ComUE Sorbonne Universities and the Campus Condorcet Paris Aubervilliers The school also has partnerships with institutions outside France such as the Russian State Archives a number of Moscow libraries the University of Alicante and some Italian research centers The school takes in a number of foreign students who are often Swiss Belgian or from francophone African countries and is currently seeking to attract new students for shorter stays through partnerships with universities The school s students are also regularly invited to do internships in archives or libraries in other countries The library editThe library was created by the order of 31 December 1846 At the time it occupied one of the two rooms reserved for the school in the hotel de Soubise The library moved with the school in 1897 and since then has occupied the second floor reading room and history room third floor Horseshoe Room and fourth floor offices and store rooms in the attic In 1920 the management of the library was taken over by the secretary of the school who at the time was Rene Poupardin Today it is managed by a library curator It was designed as a research library Its collections are particularly well supplied in the subjects taught at the school medieval history philology history of books bibliography etc The collections around 150 000 volumes are all available for immediate access The catalogue is available online 41 Many electronic resources are also available Due to lack of space at the Sorbonne the library will move in 2016 to 12 rue des Petits Champs into much larger premises Dissemination of knowledge editThe Ecole nationale des Chartes disseminates scientific works in its fields of specialization in printed and electronic format It has published four collections of works in the printed format Memoires et Documents a collection dating from 1896 consisting of monographs most notably the theses of Ecole des Chartes alumni Etudes et Rencontres a collection begun in 1998 principally consisting of the minutes of scientific meetings Materiaux pour l Histoire a collection inaugurated in 1996 consisting of richly illustrated quarto volumes Etudes et documents for a Gallia Pontificia a collection jointly edited by the Ecole nationale des Chartes and the German Historical Institute of Paris since 2009 with the aim of presenting the work carried out as part of the Gallia Pontificia a scientific enterprise that aims to identify publish and study the papal acts concerning France dating from before 1198The Ecole des Chartes also publishes two periodic publications relating to the training it offers Abstracts of theses submitted by students to obtain their qualification of archivist paleographer published annually by the Ecole des Chartes since 1849 Since 2000 they have also been available online Hypotheses Works of the University of Paris I Pantheon Sorbonne doctoral school of history and the Ecole nationale des Chartes co edited by the Ecole nationale des Chartes and Sorbonne publications since 2010These works are disseminated by CID FMSH through the Comptoir des presses de l universite Since 2002 the Ecole des Chartes has also published scientific works in electronic format in its online collection of publications the Editions en ligne de l Ecole des Chartes ELEC This gives scientific works digital functions and brings together repertoires and databases as well as texts in a format that is more suited than printed versions to detailed examination This collection is completed by corpora of text made available online for research purposes unedited by the Ecole des charts teaching materials available on the THELEME website a space for the presentation of the IT tools and methods developed by the Ecole des ChartesThese materials are under an open license The school develops its scientific and teaching work through several initiatives including the Theleme website 48 which offers materials supporting the subjects taught at the school such as educational packs advice lessons and interactive facsimiles Ecole des Chartes publications editThe Ecole des Chartes also publishes numerous works in both paper and electronic format The Memoires et documents de l Ecole des Chartes are monographs many of them drawn from Ecole des Chartes theses or doctoral research The first of these was published in 1896 and they are distributed by Honore Champion and Droz Two more collections the Etudes et rencontres minutes of conventions and brief monographs and Materiaux pour l histoire illustrated large format albums have been created more recently ELEC is also responsible for the school s online publications which include databases editions of texts minutes of symposia bibliographies and studies The Societe de l Ecole des Chartes editThe Societe de l Ecole des Chartes is registered as a public interest association which students and alumni can join Its current president is Marie Francoise Limon Bonnet who was elected in 2018 Twice a year the Societe publishes the Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes with the support of the Ecole This scientific review founded in 1839 is one of the oldest in France Some famous Ecole des Chartes alumni editSee also Category Ecole Nationale des Chartes alumni and fr Liste d eleves de l Ecole des chartes Archives libraries research edit Pierre Aubry 1874 1910 musicologist Jean Francois Bergier 1931 2009 modernist Leopold Victor Delisle 1826 1910 librarian Jean Favier 1932 2014 medievalist and archivist Arthur Giry 1848 99 professor at the Ecole des Chartes Louis Halphen 1880 1950 medievalist Suzanne Honore 1909 2000 archivist librarian historian Antoine Le Roux de Lincy 1806 1869 medievalist Charles Victor Langlois 1863 1929 medievalist and archivist Henri Jean Martin 1924 2007 historian of books Emile Maupas 1842 1916 librarian and zoologist Auguste Molinier 1851 1904 professor at the Ecole des Chartes Michel Pastoureau born 1947 medievalist Ngo Đinh Nhu 1910 1963 archivist librarian later politician Regine Pernoud 1909 98 medievalist Marcel Poete 1866 1950 librarian historian and urban planner Jean Richard 1921 2021 medievalist Paul Viollet 1840 1914 professor at the Ecole des Chartes Dominique de Courcelles 1953 historian of ideas Suzanne Dobelmann 1905 1993 librarian and curatorClergy edit Jules Doinel George Bernard Flahiff Joan Tarre i Sans ca Maurice de Germiny Henri BrincardPolitics edit Charles Beauquier Camille Pelletan Gabriel Hanotaux Louis Germain Martin Francois de Clermont Tonnerre Felix Grat Lucien Romier Ngo Đinh NhuLiterature edit Roger Martin du Gard Valerie Mangin Andre Chamson Georges Bataille Rene Girard Edith ThomasSome biographers perhaps overgeneralizing also use the term chartiste to refer to certain French historians such as La Villemarque Achille Jubinal Pierre Lalo and Louis Madelin or foreign historians such as Alfred Metraux K J Conant or Aleksander Gieysztor who audited some of the lessons at the Ecole des Chartes or to Auguste Poulet Malassis Jose Maria de Heredia and Francois Mauriac who were registered as students but who never completed their studies List of directors of the Ecole des Chartes edit Beginning End Name Function1847 1848 Jean Antoine Letronne member of the Institut Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 1848 1854 Benjamin Guerard professor at the Ecole des Chartes member of the Institut1854 1857 Natalis de Wailly member of the Institut1857 1871 Leon Lacabane professor at the Ecole des Chartes1871 1882 Jules Quicherat professor at the Ecole des Chartes1882 1916 Paul Meyer professor at the Ecole des Chartes member of the Institut1916 1930 Maurice Prou professor at the Ecole des Chartes member of the Institut1930 1954 Clovis Brunel professor at the Ecole des Chartes director of studies at the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes member of the Institut1954 1970 Pierre Marot professor at the Ecole des Chartes member of the Institut1970 1976 Michel Francois professor at the Ecole des Chartes member of the Institut1976 1987 Jacques Monfrin professor at the Ecole des Chartes director of studies at the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes member of the Institut1987 1993 Emmanuel Poulle professor at the Ecole des Chartes member of the Institut1993 2002 Yves Marie Berce professor at the Paris Sorbonne University member of the Institut2002 2006 Anita Guerreau Jalabert director of research at the French National Center for Scientific Research2006 2011 Jacques Berlioz director of research at the French National Center for Scientific Research2011 2016 Jean Michel Leniaud 42 director of studies at the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes professor at the Ecole des Chartes2016 current Michelle Bubenicek professor at the University of Franche ComteSee also editComite des travaux historiques et scientifiques CTHS Committee for Historic and Scientific Works Sources edit The theses submitted at the Ecole des Chartes since 1849 are kept at the National Archives on shelf no ABXXVIII 43 The papers of the Societe de l Ecole des Chartes are also kept at the National Archives on shelf no 11AS 44 References edit International Handbook of Universities 1993 p 1279 Royal Decree of 22 February 1821 establishing a School of Charters in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 pp 26 27 Project revived in 1891 by Gustave Servois general guard of the National Archives Projet d un enseignement historique et diplomatique a la Bibliotheque nationale sous la Convention Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1891 vol 52 pp 353 55 Letter from the Baron of Gerando to Mr Marial Delpit 6 April 1839 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 pp 24 25 Auguste Vallet de Viriville Notes et documents pouvant servir a l histoire de l ecole royale des Chartes Recherches sur le projet presente a l Empereur en 1807 par le baron de Gerando in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1848 vol 9 pp 153 76 Rapport adresse au roi Louis XVIII le 22 February 1821 par M le comte Simeon ministre de l Interieur in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 p 25 Moore Lara Jennifer 2008 Restoring order the Ecole des Chartes and the organization of archives and libraries in France 1820 1870 Duluth Minn Litwin Books ISBN 9780977861798 Royal decree of 22 February 1821 article 2 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 op cit Royal decree of 22 February 1821 article 1 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 op cit Royal decree of 22 February 1821 article 3 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 op cit Royal decree of 22 February 1821 article 5 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 op cit L Ecole son histoire son œuvre Livre du centenaire Paris Auguste Picard 1921 p 10 Royal decree of 16 July 1823 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 pp 27 28 Martial Delpit Notice historique sur l Ecole royale des Chartes in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 p 6 Royal decree of 11 November 1829 containing the reorganization of the Ecole des Chartes in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 pp 32 33 Chronique et Melanges in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1889 vol 50 pp 278 89 Royal decree of 31 December 1846 in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1847 vol 8 pp 170 73 Paul Fredericq L enseignement superieur de l histoire a Paris notes et impressions de voyage in Revue internationale de l enseignement 2e semestre 1883 pp 746 52 archive The Ecole des Chartes to me appeared to be an institution without equal Together with the Ecole pratique des hautes Etudes it offers the most solid complete truly scientific historical education in Paris Other countries envy France it s already venerable Ecole des Chartes Germany so well equipped with history and auxiliary science universities as yet has no counterpart to my knowledge See Vincent Mollet La conquete des archives departementales in Ecole nationale des Chartes Histoire de l Ecole depuis 1821 Yves Marie Berce Olivier Guyotjeannin Marc Smith eds Thionville Gerard Klopp 1997 pp 253 62 Order of 29 February 1939 articles 15 et 26 relating to the Ecole des Chartes in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1839 1840 vol 1 p 42 Henri Jean Martin Les chartistes et les bibliotheques Bulletin des bibliotheques de France 1972 no 12 pp 529 37 archive In 1867 of 222 alumni of the Ecole des Chartes only 15 found employment as librarians 13 of them in Paris and two elsewhere in France See Louis Desgraves Quelques eminents bibliothecaires galerie in Ecole nationale des Chartes Histoire de l Ecole depuis 1821 op cit pp 263 67 Christian Hottin Le 19 rue de la Sorbonne l Ecole ses batiments sa decoration in L Ecole nationale des Chartes Histoire de l Ecole depuis 1821 op cit pp 142 48 Text available on HAL SHS notice halshs 00087473 archive Christian Hottin L Ecole des Chartes institutionnalite et architecture Text available on HAL SHS notice halshs 00089095 archive Decree no 2012 286 of 28 February 2012 establishing Campus Condorcet a public institution of scientific cooperation archive Olivier Dumoulin Histoire et historiens de droite in Jean Francois Sirinelli ed Histoire des droites en France vol 2 Cultures Editions Gallimard 2006 pp 361 62 Bertrand Joly Les chartistes et la politique in L Ecole nationale des Chartes Histoire de l Ecole depuis 1821 op cit p 169 78 Bertrand Joly L Ecole des Chartes et l Affaire Dreyfus in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1989 vol 147 pp 611 71 archive Madeleine Reberioux Histoire historiens et dreyfusisme in Revue historique vol 255 1976 pp 407 32 at p 425 Cited by Bertrand Joly L Ecole des Chartes et l Affaire Dreyfus op cit See Laurent Ferri Emile Zola et ces messieurs de l Ecole des Chartes in the Dreyfus Affair unpublished in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 2006 vol 164 pt 2 pp 595 603 archive Decrees of 19 June 1931 16 March 1931 and 5 October 1932 Decree of 22 February 1932 decrees of 29 April 1933 and 29 November 1933 Chroniques in Bibliotheque de l Ecole des Chartes 1959 vol 117 p 386 archive Daniel Renoult Les formations a la recherche de leurs reformes in Histoire des bibliotheques francaises 2nd ed vol 4 pp 847 58 esp p 848 The councils of the Ecole des Chartes archive The Master s course on the website of the Ecole archive A number of positions as State Curators are reserved for Chartists but no positions as territorial curators are reserved Complete list of modules by semester on the website of the Ecole archive The Master s course on the website of the Ecole archive See the thesis abstracts archive of recent years demonstrating the diversity of the research carried out Catalog of the library of the school Decree of 10 August 2011 Online catalogue nationalesExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ecole nationale des chartes in French Site of the Ecole des Chartes 48 50 56 N 2 20 34 E 48 84889 N 2 34278 E 48 84889 2 34278 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ecole Nationale des Chartes amp oldid 1212958939, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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