The Racovian Academy (Latin: Gymnasium Bonarum Artium) was a Socinian school operated, 1602–1638, by the Polish Brethren in Raków, Sandomierz Voivodeship of Lesser Poland, and publisher of the Racovian Catechism in 1605.
The communitarian Arian settlement of Raków was founded in 1569 by Jan Sienieński . The academy was founded in 1602 by his son, Jakub Sienieński. The zenith of the academy was 1616–1630. It was contemporaneous with the Calvinist Pińczów Academy, which was known "as the Sarmatian Athens". It numbered more than 1,000 students, including many foreigners. At this point it is estimated that ten to twenty percent of Polish intellectuals were Arians.
The end of the Academy in 1638 was occasioned by the pretext of the alleged destruction of a roadside cross, by several students of the Academy, while on tour accompanied by a teacher Paludiusa Solomon. Jakub Zadzik, bishop of Kraków, Jerzy Ossoliński, voivode of Sandomierz, and Honorato Visconti, papal nuncio, forced the closure of the Academy and the destruction of all buildings by sentence of the Sejm in April 1638. Most of the teaching staff and students went into exile in Transylvania or the Netherlands.
Rectors:
Teaching staff, in alphabetical order:
Notable students at the academy, who became writers in the exile: