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Katedralskolan, Uppsala

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Type
  
Public

Principal
  
Heléne Lagerquist

Nickname
  
Katte

School district
  
Uppsala

Founded
  
1246

Established
  
1246

Grades
  
10-12

Phone
  
+46 18 56 81 00

Number of students
  
1,200

Katedralskolan, Uppsala

Language
  
Main: Swedish, English (IB Diploma Programme) Other: Spanish, French, German

Address
  
Skolgatan 2, 753 12 Uppsala, Sweden

Alumnis
  
Gustav I of Sweden, Erik Gustaf Boström, Dag Hammarskjöld

Similar
  
Rosendal, Lundellska skolan, Celsiussk, Fyrisskolan, Bolandgy

Profiles

Katedralskolan (Swedish; "the Cathedral School"; colloquially Katte; formerly Högre Allmänna Läroverket, "Higher-level Public Education") is a school in Uppsala, Sweden. The school was established in 1246. It is the oldest educational institution in Uppsala, and one of the oldest in Sweden.

Contents

History

A school administered by the Cathedral existed before the year 1300; originally, this school was a seminary for clergy and other church functionaries. In 1509, Gustaf Eriksson, who would later become King Gustaf I (Gustavus Vasa), became a student at the school, according to Peder Svart's chronicle. Allegedly, Eriksson tired of his studies and left the school, having driven his dagger through a book and cursed his teacher.

From the late Middle Ages and up until the mid-19th century, the education was focused on the three "trivial" subjects: grammar, dialectics and rhetoric. In 1865, the first student degrees were conferred on students at the school. By this time, the school was called Högre allmänna läroverket, a name it kept until 1972. In 1930, the first female students were accepted.

Until 1869, the school was located in various buildings next to the cathedral, but in that year it moved to its current location. Several new buildings have been added to the original school building.

Today

Today, Katedralskolan is a gymnasium school with around 1200 students. Traditionally, Katedralskolan has focused on theoretical education within the humanities and natural sciences, but it also offers programmes within subjects such as child care.

The school offers the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme, as well as advanced programmes within German, French or Spanish.

There is a number of student societies; the oldest still existing one being the young scientists' society, Matematisk-naturvetenskapliga föreningen (MNF), founded in 1899.

Notable alumni

  • Gustav I (Gustav Vasa), King of Sweden 1523 - 1560
  • Erik Gustaf Boström (1842-1907), Prime Minister of Sweden 1891–1900 and 1902–1905
  • Svante Arrhenius, Nobel laureate (chemistry) in 1903
  • Dag Hammarskjöld, Secretary-General of the United Nations 1953 - 1961
  • Kai Siegbahn, Nobel laureate (physics) in 1981
  • Niklas Zennström, co-founder of the KaZaA, Skype and Joost.
  • Hans Blix, former head of IAEA,
  • References

    Katedralskolan, Uppsala Wikipedia