Ignatius Loyola, founder and director general of…
January 1556 CE
Ignatius Loyola, founder and director general of the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits, had established a "School of Grammar, Humanity, and Christian Doctrine" on February 18, 1551 in a house at the base of the Capitoline Hill.
Francis Borgia, the vice-king of Catalonia who became a Jesuit himself, had provided financial patronage.
With a small library connected to it, this school was called the Collegio Romano (Roman College).
Within the first year, the site was transferred to a larger facility behind the church of San Stefano del Cacco due to the large number of students seeking enrollment.
After only two years of existence, the Roman College already counted two hundred and fifty alumni.
Pope Paul IV authorizes the College in January 1556 to confer academic degrees in theology and philosophy, hereby raising the school to the rank of university.