Académie Française
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The Académie française (English: The French Academy) is France's main authority on the French language. It was created in Paris on 22 February 1635. Like the French Academy of Sciences, it is one of five academies in the Institut de France.
| Académie française | |
|---|---|
| File:Institut de France - Académie française et pont des Arts.jpg the Académie française in Paris | |
| Formation | 1635 |
| Headquarters | Paris |
| Website | www.académie-française.fr |
Académie Française Media
- Cardinal de Richelieu.jpg
Cardinal Richelieu, responsible for the establishment of the Académie
- Poincare larger.jpg
Raymond Poincaré was one of the five French heads of state who became members of the Académie Française. He is depicted wearing the habit vert, or green habit, of the Académie.
Bernard Dujon and his colleague Eric Westhof, wearing the "Habit vert" of the Institut de France.
Title page of the 6th edition of the Académie's dictionary (1835)
Other websites
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Académie française. |
- L'Académie française (in French)
- L'Académie française Archived 2001-04-19 at the Wayback Machine from the Scholarly Societies project