Jesuit college
The first school in Poznań was established already 50 years after the founding of the city. It was affiliated with St Mary Magdalene collegiate church. After graduating from it, many members of the local gentry and bourgeoisie (including later mayors Kasper Goski and Józef Struś) attended the Lubrański Academy on Cathedral Island. However, at the end of the 16th century, the level of teaching at both schools was rather low. Thus, many Poznań students would travel to Germany to study.
At that time one Poznań bishop invited the Jesuit order to the city. Its role was to stop the Protestant movement in Poznań but the process of achieving this goal left mark not only on religious life.
In 1575 Jesuits opened a school in Poznań. Their college turned out to be a breakthrough in the municipal education system. Education at this school was free. At first, some 300 students attended it but soon this number reached 800. The high level of teaching and the lack of competition contributed to the fact that not only Catholics but also Protestants sent their sons to study at the Jesuit school. Sometimes, this resulted in Protestant students converting to Catholicism.
The Jesuit college in Poznań provided the highest level of education in the Wielkopolska Region. Several attempts were made to turn the institution into a university, photo by Piotr Skórnicki
