Foundation: An intergovernmental enterprise Following the establishment of the institutions of the
European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC) in
Luxembourg, in 1952, it became apparent that it was necessary to provide an education to the children of the officials of those institutions in their
mother tongues. The lack of such provisions posed challenges in building an administration that reflected the diverse makeup of the ECSC's
six founding member states, discouraging potential employees who heralded from outside the jurisdiction in which the institutions were based from relocating with their families. In 1953, employees of the ECSC established an association, financed by the
High Authority of the ECSC, for the purpose of founding a school in Luxembourg providing nursery and primary education to the children of the institutions' officials. The school begun to operate on 4 October 1953, with teachers recruited and paid by the association. However, by the spring of 1954, it was apparent that the solution was inadequate, with the school unable to provide a secondary education to its enrolees. The President of the High Authority of the ECSC,
Jean Monnet, invited representatives of the
education ministers of the
six founding member states of the ECSC to Luxembourg for discussions on a school with
intergovernmental status. The member state representatives transformed themselves into a
Board of Governors, who would oversee the establishment of such a school. It was agreed that teaching staff would be seconded from the member states, who would continue to pay their salary, and that salaries would be harmonised by means of an additional supplement. On 12 October 1954, the first two years of the secondary school began to operate. On 12 April 1957, the governments of the six ECSC member states signed the Statute of the European School, which took the form of an
international treaty. Following ratification, the agreement entered into force on 22 February 1960. Under Article 6 of the Statute, the European School was to have the status of a public institution in the law of each of the contracting parties and was to have
legal personality to the extent requisite for the attainment of its objectives. The organs of the school were to be a Board of Governors, which would have executive authority over the School, a Boards of Inspectors, an Administrative Board and a
Head teacher. Article 8 provided that the Board of Governors of the European School was to consist of the "
Minister or Ministers of each contracting party whose responsibilities include national education and/or external cultural relations", with the Board able to confer a position to a representative of the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community, as per Article 27.
The spread of the European Schools Following the foundation of the
European Economic Community (EEC) and the
European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) in 1957 and the establishment of the school in Luxembourg, other European Schools were set up in
Brussels and then in
Mol,
Belgium in 1958, in
Varese,
Italy in 1960,
Karlsruhe,
Germany in 1962, in
Bergen,
the Netherlands in 1963, and a second school in Brussels in 1974. In order to facilitate the setting-up of those new schools and to provide them with a legal basis, the governments of the member states signed on 13 April 1962 in Luxembourg a Protocol on the setting-up of European Schools with reference to the 1957 Statute of the European School. In 1967, the institutions of the EEC, ECSC and Euratom were merged to form the
European Communities. Consequently, the three organisations were represented on the Board of Governors by the
European Commission of the European Communities, the successor institution to the High Authority of the ECSC. Taking advantage of the powers conferred to it by the 1957 Statute, the Board of Governors signed an agreement with the
European Patent Organisation - a separate intergovernmental organisation - in December 1975 allowing for the creation, in 1977, of a European School in
Munich, Germany for the education and instruction together of children of its staff. In 1973, the first
enlargement of the European Communities saw the United Kingdom, Denmark and Ireland join, who all likewise acceded to the 1957 Statute. On 1 October 2002 it came into effect, following ratification by all signatories. Following the subsequent enlargements of the EU, the acceding states have also acceded to the 1994 Convention, which, as of September 2021, includes amongst its contracting parties all 27 EU member states, as well as the EU itself, and Euratom.
Brexit As part of the UK's withdrawal from the EU, better known as
Brexit, the UK government notified its intention to withdraw from the Convention Defining the Statute of the European Schools. The UK's formal exit from the European Schools occurred at 00:00
CET on 31 August 2021, which represented, as per the terms established within the
Withdrawal Agreement, the end of the school year that was ongoing at the end of the transition period. As a result, the Europa School's accredited status expired on 31 August 2021, with the school no longer able to offer the European Baccalaureate. == Principles and objectives ==