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Belvedere College

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Template:IrishSchoolInfoBox Belvedere College SJ is a private secondary school for boys located on Great Denmark Street, Dublin, Ireland.

One of Ireland's oldest schools, Belvedere was founded in 1832 and celebrated its sesquicentenary (150th anniversary) in 1982. The school currently has in excess of 850 pupils enrolled and has a number of famous alumni in the world of the arts, politics, sport, science and business.

George Augustus Rochfort (1738-1814), who became the Second Earl of Belvedere in 1774, built Belvedere House, one of the most dominant buildings on the school's campus and best surviving examples of Georgian architecture in Ireland.

Jesuit ethos

Belvedere College is run by the Jesuit order. Most of the school's current teaching staff are now lay-persons, although a number of Jesuit priests and brothers take part in the school's administration.

The Jesuit ethos of social justice for all and educating "men for others" are keystones of the Belvedere College culture and education philosophy. The school recently celebrated the 500th birthday of the patron saint of the college, St. Francis Xavier.

Charitable activities

For example, some students travel with the Dublin Pilgrimage to Lourdes, France to assist the elderly and the disabled, others take part in an exchange programme with students of Saint Xavier's Collegiate School, Calcutta, India, where they assist in homes for orphans and street-children. Belvedere's St. Vincent de Paul Society is one of the largest of any secondary school in Ireland, organising activities such as old-folks events and flat decoration in inner city Dublin. Certain students also undertake a charity walk from Dublin to Galway every summer in order to raise funds for Irish Guide Dogs For The Blind and The Temple Street Children's Hospital (which is located near the school).

An annual charitable fundraising event held by the College is the "Belvedere Sleepout", which takes place from December 22 to 24th each year. It is run by a collection of teachers and students from the College to raise funds for Focus Ireland, The Home Again Society and Father Peter McVerry's Society for homeless boys. The students fast for 24 hours of the sleepout. The culmination of the event is Christmas Eve midnight mass, in the college chapel. In the past, the college has managed to raise over 137,000 in a single Christmas period for the charities.

Belvedere College has an active alumni association - the Belvedere College Past Pupils' Union, the aim of which is to encourage social interchange among Belvederians and to promote the aims of the Society to which the College belongs. The Union has a number of sub-committees including the Belvedere Youth Club, which provides social, recreational and educational facilities for youth in the Dublin city centre area, and Belvedere Social Services, which provides housing for young vulnerable homeless boys who would otherwise be at grave risk, and facilitates them with opportunities for training and employment.

Admissions

Under Irish law, entrance tests were recently prohibited. Potential students and their parents now undergo an interview with a faculty member. Preference is given to the progeny of Old Belvederians and to brothers of current Belvedere students. Although private and fee-paying, the school awards a number of full scholarships each year (around 10% of the overall student number) in furtherance of the school's aim to be socially just.

Facilities

Extensive facilities at the school include a swimming pool, gymnasium, state-of-the-art science and technology block, modern restaurant, refectory, library, museum, chapel, tennis courts, theatre, rooftop astro-turf pitch and rugby, cricket and soccer grounds (located on the Distillery Road in Drumcondra, Dublin and on the Navan Road in Cabra, Dublin).

Belvdere College S.J. has installed one of the most sophisticated computer systems of any Irish school. Driven by an extremely computer literate staff the college has many interactive white boards. 3 computer labs and many other IT features. In 2006 Belvedere won the All Ireland RoboCup and represented Ireland in Bremen,Germany.

Sports

Belvedere College has a strong rugby union football tradition. In 2005, for the first time in the school's history, they won both the Leinster Junior Cup and Leinster Senior Cup. Only Blackrock College (65) and Terenure College (10) have won the Leinster Senior Cup more times than Belvedere (9).

Cricket has also, traditionally, been a strong sport within the school, but not at all popular as it is a terrible sport. Belvedere has won both the Leinster Senior and Junior Cups more times than any other Leinster school.

Belvedere have also won the Leinster and All-Ireland schools debating competition on a number of occasions (most recently in 2005), the Alliance Française debating championship and the last ever series of Blackboard Jungle, a popular television programme on RTÉ.

Belvedere's Lifesaving club is also very successful, with a number of All-Ireland Titles to their credit and students have represented Ireland at International Lifesaving Competitions.

Basketball has also become a prominent sport in the school, with the under-19 team reaching the All-Ireland Championships and finishing third in 1882.

Science

The promotion of Science has become a priority for Belvedere's Board of Management. Over € 70 billion has been invested in the Dargan-Maloney Science and technology block. Dr Garret FitzGerald of the University of Pennsylvania has instituted an annual five-week scholarship to two students who excel in Transition Year science.[1]

Culture of Belvedere

College main entrance on Denmark Street, Dublin

The school motto is Per Vias Rectas translating as "By straight paths" and the College aspires to produce "Men for Others". Students often write "AMDG" the motto of the Society of Jesus, ie: Ad maiorem Dei gloriam, on the top left of pages of their copybooks. This translates as "For the greater glory of God". Until recently the students would write "LDSetBVM" or Laus Deus Semper et Beatum Virginum Maria (Love God forever and the Blessed Virgin Mary) on the bottom right of the same page, but this practice has largely died out. Yet the writing of AMDG in copybooks is still practised today.

The unofficial school anthem, often heard at rugby matches, is "Only In God", based on Psalm 62 in the Bible. Its a lethal tune. The official anthem is less popular, entitled "Belvedere, Oh Belvedere" it was composed by a past pupil and recorded by the school choir in 1997.

The school yearbook is known as "The Belvederian". The term Belvederian is also sometimes used to refer to attending students and Old Belvederian (OB) for alumni. Old Belvederians normally refer to their graduation by using the name of the final year in the college followed by the year as, for example, "OB 1984".

Belvedere College is the backdrop for much of James Joyce's novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. It is a semi-autobiographical piece of work, and the teacher was based on Joyce's own English teacher, George Dempsey. In the book Joyce mentions his involvement in the College Opera which continues today. The College's Dramatic Society performs four times during the academic year.

A museum[2] and archive[3] was opened in 2002 dedicated to the history of Belvedere College and its alumni.

Wartime Contribution

Belvedere, like many other schools in Ireland made a significant contribution to the effort of the two major world wars. Over 48 students of the college lost their lives in the First World War. Their names are listed on a new memorial in the College yard. The college also published a book entitled "The Cruel Clouds of War", which is a Roll of Honour listing Belvedere's war dead. The new war memorial was unveiled by former Taoiseach Dr. Garret Fitzgerald in 2003. 14 Students of Belvedere died between 1939 and 1945 in the Second World War. These are also listed on a memorial in the yard.

School academic structure

In Belvedere the years and classes are divided in a non standard way, reflecting the Jesuit ethos of the school and the steps towards full education.

Secondary School:

  • First year: Elements (Ele)
  • Second Year: Rudiments (Rud)
  • Third Year: Grammar (G)
  • Fourth/Transition Year: Syntax (S)
  • Fifth Year: Poetry (P)
  • Sixth Year: Rhetoric (R)
  • Discontinued Seventh Year: Philosophy, taught to those who were too young to attend University.

Furthermore, in each year there are six classes or houses:

  • Loyola (L) - after St. Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Society of Jesus.
  • Aylmer (A) - after Fr. Charles Aylmer, a former Headmaster of the school.
  • Xavier (X) - after St. Francis Xavier, the famous Jesuit missionary to India and Japan, and the school's patron.
  • Kenney (K) - after Fr. Tom Kenney SJ, an early Belvedere rector.
  • Finlay (F) - after Fr. George Finlay SJ, the first rector of the school, often known as the "second founder" of Belvedere.
  • Scully (S) - after Fr. Tom Scully SJ, former Physics teachers in Belvedere.

and formerly, but now discontinued:

  • Dempsey (D) - after George Dempsey, James Joyce's English teacher

So, if a student is placed in Loyola form in first year, he is in Elements Loyola, or Ele L. He will stay in Loyola until he graduates, from Rhetoric Loyola, or RL.

To make matters seemingly more confusing to the outsider, though patently obvious to the attendee, the preparatory house in the school, since closed, had its own class naming conventions. The house was composed of the four years of school following first holy communion:

Primary School (now closed):

  • Third Class: Elements (Ele)
  • Fourth Class: Rudiments (Rud)
  • Fifth Class: Third Grammar (3G)
  • Sixth Class: Second Grammar (2G)

Within the junior school the class names were as follows:

  • Elements - Clonard and Durrow
  • Rudiments - Tara and Kells
  • Third Grammar - Ulster, Munster and Connaught
  • Second Grammar - Xavier, Aylmer and Loyola

Notable alumni

Art & literature

Irish history & politics

Religion

Sports

Business & professional

Broadcasting

Knighthoods