Provincial male gymnasium in Tomsk is a secondary educational institution. It existed from 1838 to 1920.
| Provincial gymnasium of the city of Tomsk | |
|---|---|
| Founded by | December 10, 1838 |
| Closed | January 1, 1920 |
| Type of | gymnasium |
| Address | 9 Frunze Avenue |
| Object of cultural heritage of Russia of regional significance reg. No. 701410164530005 ( EGROKN ) (Wikigid database) |
Content
History
By the highest decree on December 8, 1828, Emperor Nicholas I ordered the opening of a gymnasium in every provincial city.
The opening of the gymnasium in Tomsk took place on December 10, 1838. The goal of the gymnasium was to train public servants and school teachers.
The first director was Ivan G. Novotroitsky.
According to the first enrollment, 25 students were accepted to the gymnasium, after 6 years (1844) the first graduation took place - 6 people. The course of the gymnasium was 7 (from 1871 - 8) years. Admission was based on the results of entrance exams. Transfer to the next class was also carried out on the basis of translation exams. Training was paid. At the gymnasium there were scholarships - named after Emperor Nicholas I , named after B. I. Sciborsky .
The first building for the gymnasium was the former house of the merchant, E. Khlebnikova (modern address is Lenin Avenue , 129 / Sovpartshkolny Lane , 11 - object of cultural heritage No. 7000165000 ). Since 1885, part of the classes took place in the building of Tomsk University . In 1897, according to the project of the Tomsk architect Pavel Naranovich , a building was built specifically for the gymnasium.
Only boys were admitted to the provincial gymnasium. When the girls' (Mariinsky) gymnasium appeared in the city (1863), the provincial became known as the Tomsk men's gymnasium.
The training program included the Law of God, Russian, ancient languages (Latin and, until 1901, Greek), history, mathematics, physics, geography, cosmography , logic, French and German, law (which was taught by a member of the Tomsk District Court) and such the subject that is not quite clear to us now is philosophical propaedeutics. Its own gymnasium library totaled up to 15,000 volumes and was one of the best in the city. The gymnasium had its own church.
The teaching staff was changing rapidly, teachers often asked for their dismissal due to weakening their health due to the severity of the local climate.
One of the directors of the gymnasium was Ivan Kuzmich Smirnov (? —1912) - the father of the archaeologist Y. I. Smirnov .
The trustees of the gymnasium were I. D. Astashev and E. I. Korolyov .
In 1917, 560 students studied at the gymnasium.
January 1, 1920 was disbanded.
Famous Pupils
Anatoly Alexandrov (1906, with a gold medal)
Sergey Alexandrovsky (1907, did not finish the course) [1]
Nikolai Baransky (1899, with a gold medal)
Valentin Bulgakov (1906, with a gold medal)
Alexander Voznesensky
Peter Vologda (1884)
Boris Gan (1903, with a silver medal)
Innocent Gebler (1905)
Peter Golovachev
Sergey Golubin (1889)
Dmitry Zverev
Porfiry of Kazan (1903)
Vasily Karutsky (1918)
Alexander Kvyatkovsky (1870)
Nikolay Kotov
Alexander Koshurnikov
Ivan Kushchevsky
Nikolai Luzin (1901)
Alexander Mako (1869)
Yaroslav Nikolaev (?)
Victor Pepelyaev
Konstantin Rashevsky (1892, with a silver medal)
Philologist Rudakov (1844, first issue)
Alexander Timofeevsky (1905, with a gold medal)
Nikolay Naumov (did not finish the course)
Vasily Osipanov (1880, transferred to the Krasnoyarsk gymnasium)
Venedict Khakhlov (1912)
Mikhail Cheremnykh
Vasily Shtilke (1870)
Nikolay Yadrintsev (did not finish the course)
Famous educators
- Bakai, Nikolai Nikitovich (director, 1908-1918)
- Bobov V.K. (mathematics)
- Bildinsky, Peter Vasilievich (Director) [2]
- Vyatkin P.M. (literature)
- Kosharov, Pavel Mikhailovich (drawing and calligraphy, 1854-1877)
- Kuznetsov, Dmitry Lvovich (literature, 1858-1865)
- Kurochkin, Ivan Mikhailovich (since 1884 ancient languages; director 1.6.1886–13.7.1902) [3]
- Laletin K.A. (Greek)
- Misyurev, Antonin Alexandrovich
- Muretov, Ivan Dmitrievich (Director)
- Rudakov, Philologist Vasilievich (jurisprudence, 1849-1862, director 1862)
- Siren R.K.
- Sciborsky, Boris Ivanovich (director, 1880-1884)
- Fadeev, Vladislav Konstantinovich (construction business, 1859-1860) [4]
Notes
- ↑ Sheinis Z.S. Comrade Sergey . - Owls. Russia, 1990. - S. 24. - 256 p. - ISBN 5-268-00914-1 .
- ↑ Initially, after graduating from the Main Pedagogical Institute in 1858, he was sent as a teacher of the Russian language to the 4th Moscow Gymnasium .
- ↑ Graduated from St. Petersburg Institute of History and Philology ; in 1902 he filed a petition for transfer to the Omsk gymnasium .
- ↑ Zalesov V.G. Architects of Tomsk (XIX - beginning of XX century). Khabarov Victor Vasilievich.
Literature
- Misyurev A.A. Tomsk Provincial Gymnasium in the first fiftieth anniversary of its existence (1838-1888). Tomsk, 1894.
- Kurochkin I. M. Statistical information about the Tomsk male gymnasium over the decade from 1889-1899. Tomsk, 1899.
- Yurtsovsky N. S. Essays on the history of the enlightenment of Siberia. Vol. 1. The general course of development of school business in Siberia. 1703-1917. Novosibirsk, 1923
- Shamakhov F.F. Schools of Western Siberia at the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th centuries Tomsk, 1957.
- Provincial male gymnasium // Tomsk from A to Z: A brief encyclopedia of the city. / Ed. Dr. East. Sciences N. M. Dmitrienko . - 1st ed. - Tomsk: NTL Publishing House, 2004 .-- S. 93. - 440 p. - 3,000 copies. - ISBN 5-89503-211-7 .