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Carol I National College

Coordinates: 44°19′09″N 23°47′31″E / 44.31917°N 23.79194°E / 44.31917; 23.79194
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Carol I National College
File:POZA CNC.jpg
Location
Map
Information
Typepublic
Established1826
HeadmasterMic Danut
Enrollment1800
CampusUrban
Websitehttp://www.cnc.ro/

The Carol I National College (Template:Lang-ro) is a high school located in central Craiova, Romania, on Titu Maiorescu street. It is one of the most prestigious secondary education institutions in Romania. Between 1947 and 1969 it operated under a different name[1][2].

History

The Central High School was officially established on 20 May 1826, although it was actually built 7 years later in 1833. . After suffering heavy damage from the earthquake of 11 January 1838, the school was rebuilt in November 1842 and it had some 400 students.

Craiova's Central High School was renamed "Carol I Liceum" on November 11th, 1885 by a Royal decree of King Carol I[3].

It was re-built a second time after the 1976 earthquake that demolished a major part of its buildings.

Alumni

The following is a short list of the most notable alumni of the Carol I National College[4][5][6].



References

  1. ^ Prof. Nicolae Andrei, Contribuții la studiul istoriei liceului "Nicolae Bălcescu" din Craiova, Editura Didactică și Pedagogică, București, 1969
  2. ^ Colecția revistei "Tradiții", buletin al Fundației "Nicolae Bălcescu " din Craiova, 1993-1999
  3. ^ Nicolae Andrei, Ani de lumină 1826-1876, Scrisul Românesc Craiova, 1976
  4. ^ Nicolae Andrei, Ani de lumină 1826-1876, Scrisul Românesc Craiova, 1976
  5. ^ Nicolae Andrei, Biografii triste, Editura Alma Craiova, 1999
  6. ^ Nicolae Andrei, Voievozi ai spiritului, Editura Alma, Craiova 2000
  7. ^ http://planetphysics.org/?op=getobj&from=books&id=253 Algebraic Mathematics and Logics. 2009., 400 pp, GNUL contributed book of 500+ contributing authors.
  8. ^ http://planetphysics.org/encyclopedia/AlgebraicCategoryOfLMnLogicAlgebras.html Algebraic category of LMn-logic algebras
  9. ^ Georgescu, G. and C. Vraciu. 1970, On the characterization of centered Łukasiewicz algebras., J. Algebra, 16: 486-495.
  10. ^ 2 Georgescu, G. 2006, N-valued Logics and Łukasiewicz-Moisil Algebras, Axiomathes, 16 (1-2): 123-136.
  11. ^ http://planetmath.org/?op=getobj&from=lec&id=105 Order convergence and distance on Lukasiewicz-Moisil algebras
  12. ^ http://planetmath.org/?op=getobj&from=objects&id=10756 Quantum ŁM-algebraic Logic
  13. ^ http://philpapers.org/autosense.pl?searchStr=George%20Georgescu Web-generated list of Publications
  14. ^ http://genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=127579 Maths genealogy project
  15. ^ http://www.imar.ro/~nipopesc/ Curriculum Vitae of Acad. Dr. doc. Nicolae Popescu at The Institute of Mathematics of the Romanian Academy
  16. ^ Interviu reprodus verbatim and in toto, în paginile 28-33 din cartea „In memoriam Nicolae Popescu- Omul, Matematicianul și Mentorul”. Editura Universității din București. 2011.
  17. ^ http://planetmath.org/encyclopedia/NicolaePopescuMathematician.html
  18. ^ http://planetphysics.us/encyclopedia/NicolaePopescuMathematician.html
  19. ^ Brewer, Sam Pope (22 October 1945). "Romanian Defends Pre-Armistice Acts. Vice Premier Tatarescu [sic] Says He Backed Carol's Policies but Did Not Aid Nazis". The New York Times. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  20. ^ Ţurlea, Petre (2001). "Dinu Brătianu înfrânt de Gheorghe Tătărescu ("Dinu Brătianu Defeated by Gheorghe Tătărescu")". Dosarele Istoriei (in Romanian). 1 (VI).
  21. ^ Tătărescu, Gheorghe (1926). "Speech related to the events in Tatarbunary (held by Tătărescu as under-secretary for Internal Affairs)". Memoria.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved 21 February 2010.

44°19′09″N 23°47′31″E / 44.31917°N 23.79194°E / 44.31917; 23.79194