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  1. Jeanne d'Arc School (Persian: مدرسه ژان دارک, romanized: Madrese-ye Žāndārk) was a prestigious French school for girls founded in 1900 in Tehran, Iran. It operated until the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

  2. The first school was the St. Vincent de Paul school for orphaned girls founded in 1865 by the Daughters of Charity and later renamed Jeanne d'Arc. In the 1920s, the school offered both primary and secondary education at separate classes for Muslim and Armenian students.

  3. Jeanne d'Arc School ( persa: مدرسه ژان دارک, romanizado: Madreseh-ye Žāndārk) fue una prestigiosa escuela francesa para niñas fundada en 1900 en Teherán, Irán. [1] [2] Operó hasta la Revolución Islámica de 1979 .

  4. École Jeanne d’Arc, Tehran - Facebook

  5. 31 de ene. de 2012 · A considerable number of Persian political and cultural elite of the 20th century studied at French schools in Tehran, including St. Louis, Alliance Française, Jeanne d’Arc, Franco-Persane and Razi (usually referred to as Lycée Razi), and Alliance Israélite schools.

  6. Sevruguin, Antoin, 1851-1933, Islamic Archives, Smith, Myron Bement, 1897-1970, Tehran (Iran): Jeanne d'Arc School: Group Portrait of Students (probably early Pahlavi era). Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America, http://collections.si.edu/search/results.htm?q=record_ID=FSA.A.04_ref10371&repo=DPLAMLA citation style

  7. The Tehran Jeanne d’Arc School The origins of the Tehran Jeanne d'Arc school can be traced to two different St. Vincent de Paul schools. The first one was a school for orphaned girls founded on Manûchehrî street, in the vicinity of the Lazarist church, by the Daughters of Charity in 1865.