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Entries / Vladimirskie Courses

Vladimirskie Courses


Categories / Science. Education/Educational Institutions

VLADIMIRSKIE COURSES (St. Petersburg University public courses), an educational institution, founded in 1870 by a group of female education activists, who later established Bestuzhev Courses. Until 1874, they were co-educational courses with over 900 students, then only female courses. Professors of St. Petersburg University lectured there on Russian literature, Russian and world history, botany, anatomy, human physiology, physics, chemistry, public law and criminal law, statistics and political economy. Vladimirskie Courses moved several times, working in the premises of Vladimirsky district school [21 Vladimirsky Avenue; not preserved (hence the name)]. Courses were closed down in 1875 because of financial difficulties. Alarchinskie courses functioned concurrently with Vladimirskie Courses.

Reference: Лихачева Е. О. Материалы для истории женского образования в России, 1856-1880. СПб., 1901. С. 520-529, 593-595.

O. N. Ansberg.

Addresses
Vladimirsky Ave/Saint Petersburg, city, house 21

Bibliographies
Лихачева Е. О. Материалы для истории женского образования в России, 1856-1880. СПб., 1901

The subject Index
Bestuzhev's Courses
Alarchin Courses



Alarchin Courses

ALARCHIN COURSES, a women's educational institution opened by teacher I. I. Paulson in 1869 to provide training for women to study at higher educational institutions

Filosofova A.P. (1837-1912), public figure

FILOSOFOVA (nee Dyagileva) Anna Pavlovna (1837, St. Petersburg - 1912, St. Petersburg), a public figure. The wife of member of State Council V.D. Filosofov (1820-94) and the mother of critic and publicist D.V. Filosofov (1872-1940)