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About the Cnam

A brief history of the Cnam

The ChapelThe cornerstone of our chapel was laid in 1060 by King Henry 1. Foucault's pendulum swings quietly in our museum. Machines that launched the Industrial Revolution were invented in our halls (and those from other lands, reverse-engineered)
The Cnam was created at the beginning of the Industrial Age and in the throes of the French revolution. As the National Convention replaced the monarchy with a social democracy of common workers, machines were changing the socioeconomic and geopolitic of Europe.
Au centre pendant le serment du jeu de PaumeOn 10 October 1794, the Convention enacted a law to educate workers in these emerging technologies and founded the Cnam in order to "improve the nation's industry, cultivate engineering methods, teach widely and illuminate ignorance" (Henri Grégoire).
Les collections durant la première moitié du XIX ePublics finances delayed the realization of the ideal until 10 June 1798 when the Cnam was physically installed in the ancient chapel of Saint-Martin-des-Champs. Machines were installed in these premises... for exposition, for learning, for reverse engineering, and for innovation. The Cnam experienced immediate success: artists, artisans, technicians, businessmen and future inventors sat side by side to learn about new developments in textiles, ceramics, mechanics, construction, applied chemistry, physics and more. Theoretically-oriented subjects were added in the 1820s: France's first Chair in Economics, for example, was created at the Cnam and occupied by Jean Baptiste Say.

  Amphi de l'école Centrale 1910L'école HEC jeunes filles en 1917

 

 
image a kind of faithfulness to the universal ambitious objectives of our pionners
image a contribution to the growth in the economic, natural, human and social «capital» of our (and other) country
Portrait de l'abbé Grégoire
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