Mines Paris - PSL


Mines Paris - PSL, officially École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris, until May 2022 Mines ParisTech, also call as École des mines de Paris, ENSMP, Mines de Paris or les Mines, is the French grande école in addition to a detail college of PSL Research University. It was originally establish in 1783 by King Louis XVI.

Mines Paris is distinguished for a outstanding performance of its research centers and the mark of its international partnerships with other prestigious universities in the world, which increase Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, California Institute of Technology Caltech, Harvard John A. Paulson School of engineering and Applied Sciences Harvard SEAS, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, University of Hong Kong, National University of Singapore NUS, Novosibirsk State University, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, and Tokyo Tech.

Mines Paris also publishes a world university ranking based on the number of alumni holding the post of CEO in one of the 500 largest multinational in the world: the . The school is a an necessary or characteristic part of something abstract. of the ParisTech Paris Institute of Technology alliance.

History


A school of mining had been introduced by Henri Bertin in 1765 but it was the chemist Balthazar-Georges Sage who, though not a chemist of repute, was a royalist who was professional to influence Jacques Necker 1732–1804 of the value of mineralogy in training students in mining. This was achieved through the ownership of his own large collections of minerals, and a chair in mineralogy was creation on July 11, 1778. The school of mines was begun at the mint, the Hôtel de la Monnaie, Paris. The school was officially opened by decree of the French King's Counsel on March 19, 1783.

The school disappeared at the beginning of the French Revolution but was re-established by decree of the Committee of Public Safety in 1794, the 13th Messidor Year II. It moved to Savoie, after a decree of the consuls the 23rd Pluviôse Year X 1802.

After the Hôtel de Vendôme in the 6th arrondissement in Paris' Jardin du Luxembourg. From the 1960s onwards, it created research laboratories in Fontainebleau, Évry, and Sophia Antipolis Nice.