The Ateneo de Montevideo was founded as a cultural and educational club on July 3, 1886, with the merger of the
Sociedad Universitaria and the
Ateneo del Uruguay associations. It began as a
free university that sought to break out of the state system dominated by the political changes and religious dogmatism prevailing in Uruguayan society at the time. After its founding, it promoted the
educational reform designed in the second half of the 19th century by
José Pedro Varela ―one of the founders of the Ateneo―, together with the Society of Friends of Popular Education. In 1900, a building was inaugurated to house the institution. Located at the intersection of the
Plaza de Cagancha ring road and Rondeau Street, the two-story building in an eclectic style had been started in 1897 by the architects José María Claret, Julián Masquelez and Emilio Boix. In 1915, the team made up of the architects Horacio Azzarini, Julio Vilamajó and the sculptor
José Luis Zorrilla de San Martín was in charge of decorating the large assembly hall on the upper floor. In March 1939, it hosted the International Congress of American Democracies within the framework of the rise of totalitarian regimes in Europe. In 1940, the Ateneo, evoking its "democratic tradition and the imperative of its moral conscience," issued a statement repudiating fascism and communism, as well as
world war that began the previous year. In 1975, within the framework of the "Year of
Orientality", the building was designated as a National Historic Monument. == Activities ==