| Edward Walford - 1857 - 76 pages
...after its foundation the Polytechnic grew and nourished in the general dearth of public teaching, being indeed not merely the only great school, but, until...its sixteen earliest professors, ten still retain a European name. Lagrange, Monge, Fourcroy, La Place, Guyton de Morveau were connected with it. Malus,... | |
| Henry Barnard - Military education - 1862 - 410 pages
...in conformity with its recommendation, the law of the 3rd of October 1802, (12th Vendemiaire, XI.) dissolved the separate artillery school at Chalons,...name. Lagrange, Monge, Fourcroy, La Place, Guyton de Morvcau were connected with it. Malus, Hauy, Biot, Poisson, and De Barante, were among its earliest... | |
| Education - 1862 - 752 pages
...its foundation the Polytechnic grew and flourished in the general dearth of public teaching, being indeed not merely the only great .school, but, until...applied and explained by repetiteurs, its success iu its own purely scientific line was, and has continued to be, astonishing. Out of its sixteen earliest... | |
| Henry Barnard - Education - 1870 - 826 pages
...its foundation the Polytechnic grew and flourished in the general dearth of public teaching, being indeed not merely the only great school, but, until...professorial lectures, practically applied and explained by rcpeliteurs, its success in its own purely scientific line was, and has continued to be, astonishing.... | |
| Education - 1871 - 964 pages
...of 1816, was attended with its temporary dissolution. indeed not merely the only great school, bnt, until the Institute was founded, the only scientific...professorial lectures, practically applied and explained by répétiteurs, its success in its own purely scientific line was, and has continued to be, astonishing.... | |
| Ellwood Patterson Cubberley - Education - 1920 - 720 pages
...its foundation the Polytechnic grew and flourished in the general dearth of public teaching, being indeed not merely the only great school, but, until...applied and explained by repetiteurs, its success on its own purely scientific line was, and has continued to be, astonishing. . . . All the great engineers... | |
| Ellwood Patterson Cubberley - Education - 1920 - 718 pages
...its foundation the Polytechnic grew and flourished in the general dearth of public teaching, being indeed not merely the only great school, but, until...professorial lectures, practically applied and explained by rZpttiteurs, its success on its own purely scientific line was, and has continued to be, astonishing.... | |
| |