Lyceum
Lyceum is a term used for several educational and cultural institutions, with origins in ancient Greece and a broad modern usage in education and public culture. In Athens, the Lyceum was a school associated with Aristotle, founded around 334 BCE on a public precinct near the city center. It became the center of the Peripatetic school, named for Aristotle’s habit of teaching while walking. The Lyceum contributed to the development of philosophy, science, and civic education, and its legacy influenced later intellectual centers.
In contemporary contexts, the meaning of lyceum varies by country. In many European and former Soviet states,
The term also extends to cultural and public-education venues. In the 19th-century United States, the Lyceum