Erenköy Girls High School Erenköy Kız Anadolu Lisesi |
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Entrance to the main building of Erenköy Girls High School
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Address | |
Ömerpaşa Sok. 82 Erenköy, Kadıköy Istanbul, 34738 Turkey |
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Coordinates | 40°58′38″N 29°04′24″E / 40.97722°N 29.07333°ECoordinates: 40°58′38″N 29°04′24″E / 40.97722°N 29.07333°E |
Information | |
School type | Public Anadolu |
Established | 1911 |
Principal | Yavuz Ş. Erturan |
Staff | 5 |
Teaching staff | 65 |
Gender | Girls |
Alumni | Türkan Akyol |
Website | www |
Erenköy Girls High School (Turkish: Erenköy Kız Anadolu Lisesi) is a public girls high school at Erenköy neighborhood of Kadıköy district in Istanbul, Turkey. Founded in 1911, during the Ottoman Empire, it is the oldest surviving girls high school in the country and the only girls high school in Istanbul.
Erenköy Girls High School was established 1911 in the Mansion of Nemizade Zihni Bey at Kabasakal neighborhood of Istanbul. It was later renamed Model School for Girls (Ottoman Turkish: Kız Numune Mektebi) and moved to the Mansion of Rıdvan Pasha. In 1916, the school was finally named Erenköy Girls High School (Ottoman Turkish: Erenköy İnas Sultanisi). The school moved then to a mansion purchased for 7,500 gold coins by the Ministry of Education from Mabeyinci Faik Bey. The school dormitory was extended by purchasing the mansion of Hajji Hüseyin Pasha from its last owner Hatice Sultan, one of the daughters of Sultan Murad V (reigned 1876).
Education continued at scattered sites after the school building burnt down on February 22, 1945. The school moved into the current building in the academic year 1954-55. From 1990 on, no more boarding students were accepted. Erenköy Girls High School is today an Anadolu-type high school called "Super High School", at which education is in a foreign language, the courses are computer-aided and the classroom size is limited.
This school has educated generations of Turkish women who have achieved important social standing in the Turkish society. Until 1979, it was a girls-only school, when boy students were also accepted to the school. This practice lasted for only one and a half academic years and the school never again accepted boys.