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photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
The Lycée Georges Clemenceau, French pronunciation: [lise ʒɔʁʒ klemɑ̃so], usually called Lycée Clemenceau is a public secondary school located in Nantes, France, formerly known as the Lycée of Nantes. Inaugurated in 1808, it is the oldest secondary school of the town of Nantes and in the department of Loire-Atlantique. It offers both a sixth-form college curriculum (as a lycée), and a post-secondary-level curriculum (classes préparatoires). It is located next to a botanic garden (Jardin des plantes). Train and tram stations offer an easy access to the school for students. Furthermore there is a lovely chapel inside. The Emperor Napoleon visited the Lycée on 9 August 1808. The school was rebuilt from 1886 to 1892 to a design by the architects Antoine Demoget and Léon Lenoir. Many famous people studied in Clemenceau, like the writer Jules Verne and the politician Georges Clemenceau who give his name to the school. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Authors educated at lycée Georges-Clemenceau 244
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Julien Gracq
Georges Ernest Boulanger
Tristan Corbière
Georges Painvin
Alphonse de Châteaubriant
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Thierry Fortineau
Alfred Eluère
Stephen Spender
Marcel Schwob
Pierre Richard-Willm
Alfred Heurtaux
Hervé Le Boterf
Jules Vallès
Jacques Vaché
Édouard Bureau
Paul Nizan
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Maurice Schwob
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Morvan Lebesque
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Jean Bernard
Édouard Pierre Marie Chassaignac
Charles Le Roux
Paul Ladmirault
Gaston Serpette
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Roger Lalouette
Léon Durocher
Maxime Maufra
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Louis Brisset
Emmanuel Le Maout
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Jean Sarment
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Maurice Chabas
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Julien Lanoë
François Autain
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