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Liceu de Macau

Coordinates: 22°11′37″N 113°33′07″E / 22.193534°N 113.551838°E / 22.193534; 113.551838
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Liceu de Macau
澳門利宵中學
The building which housed the former Liceu de Macau now houses part of the Macao Polytechnic University (formerly Macau Polytechnic Institute)
Location
Map
Coordinates22°11′37″N 113°33′07″E / 22.193534°N 113.551838°E / 22.193534; 113.551838
Information
TypePublic
Closed1998
Liceu de Macau
Historical picture (after 1937).
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese澳門利宵中學
Simplified Chinese澳门利宵中学
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinÀomén Lìxiāo Zhōngxué
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingou3 mun4*2 lei6 siu1 zung1 hok6
Portuguese name
PortugueseLiceu de Macau

Liceu de Macau (Chinese: 澳門利宵中學) was a Portuguese-curriculum public secondary school in , Macau. It was the territory's only public Lusophone secondary school.[1]

Its students included local Han Chinese and Macanese as well as children of Portuguese government officials. Students who chose this school would have been prepared for education in universities in Portugal.[1]

History

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Circa 1998 the school occupied a campus in central Macau that had been designed by a well-known Portuguese architect. Cathryn H. Clayton, the author of Sovereignty at the Edge: Macau & the Question of Chineseness, wrote that compared to most schools in Macau, the Liceu's class sizes were small. She added that the faculty received good salaries and benefits and that the campus was among the most lavish and expensive to maintain. A large percentage of the students matriculated to universities with the majority moving on to European institutions, including those in Portugal itself. Clayton concluded that the school "reflected the conditions of advantage enjoyed by the Portuguese in Macau".[1]

The school's administration chose not to directly teach the history of Macau, although some teachers chose to incorporate that history within their history lessons.[2] Clayton stated that, of all of the school's in Macau, Liceu de Macau was the only one she was aware of which had its own swimming pool.[1]

In 1998 students were transferred to the Macau Portuguese School,[3] a private school which receives funding from the Portuguese government.[1] The former Liceu de Macau campus became the Macao Polytechnic University (formerly Macao Polytechnic Institute) main building.[4]

Monument for Liceu de Macau

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Clayton, Cathryn H. Sovereignty at the Edge: Macau & the Question of Chineseness (Volume 324 of Harvard East Asian monographs, ISSN 0073-0483). Harvard University Press, 2009. p. 168. ISBN 0674035453, 9780674035454.
  2. ^ Clayton, Cathryn H. Sovereignty at the Edge: Macau & the Question of Chineseness (Volume 324 of Harvard East Asian monographs, ISSN 0073-0483). Harvard University Press, 2009. p. 169. ISBN 0674035453, 9780674035454.
  3. ^ "brochura_epm_EN.pdf" (Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine). Portuguese School of Macau. Retrieved on October 10, 2015. - Portuguese HTML, Portuguese PDF (Archive), Traditional Chinese PDF (Archive)
  4. ^ Clayton, Cathryn H. Sovereignty at the Edge: Macau & the Question of Chineseness (Volume 324 of Harvard East Asian monographs, ISSN 0073-0483). Harvard University Press, 2009. p. 168-169. ISBN 0674035453, 9780674035454.

Further reading

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  • Botas, João F. O. (2007). Liceu de Macau, 1893-1999: contributo para uma história de 106 anos (in Portuguese).
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