Public monuments Public memorials to Monnet include: • bronze busts in front of his birthplace in
Cognac; at the entrance of the
square Jean-Monnet in
Montpellier; in
Angers; inside the
Peace Palace in
The Hague; and as part of the Monument to the Founding Fathers of the European Union in
King Michael I Park,
Bucharest. • a sculpted memorial in a garden named after Monnet in
Vanves near Paris; • a life-size statue by
Zurab Tsereteli, part of a group offered by
Russia in 2012 and erected in front of the in
Scy-Chazelles near
Metz; •
commemorative plaques on the
Willard Hotel in
Washington DC, where he worked during World War II; the building at 18, rue de Martignac, where he created France's
General Planning Commission; the
Hotel Grand Chef at
Mondorf-les-Bains in Luxembourg, where he lived in 1952-1953; the house at 138, rue des Muguets in Luxembourg, where he lived in 1953-1955; the building on 83, avenue Foch in Paris, where his
Action Committee for the United States of Europe had its office from 1955 to 1975; and the
house at Houjarray where he lived after 1945 and died in 1979. In the United States, a bill was introduced in 2022 to erect a bench in memory of Monnet in
Rock Creek Park, with support from the
National Capital Memorial Advisory Commission and
National Park Service.
Places Jean Monnet House at Houjarray The
Jean Monnet House is located in Houjarray, a hamlet of
Bazoches-sur-Guyonne,
Yvelines, 80 kilometres (50 miles) outside Paris. This old farm became Jean Monnet's property in 1945, upon his return to France. It was there that Jean Monnet and his advisors, in the last days of April 1950, drew up the historic declaration that
Robert Schuman used to address Europe on 9 May 1950, proposing the creation of the European Coal and Steel Community. In the house, Robert Schuman,
Walter Hallstein,
Paul-Henri Spaak,
Konrad Adenauer,
René Pleven,
Helmut Schmidt, and many others exchanged their views with Jean Monnet on Europe's common future. On Sundays, he had friends passing by come to his house; among them were
Dwight Eisenhower,
George Ball, and
Edward Heath. Monnet liked fireside conversations with journalists such as
Walter Lippmann,
Hubert Beuve-Méry, or his neighbour
Pierre Viansson-Ponté. This house was also where Jean Monnet died on 16 March 1979. The
European Parliament acquired the house in 1982 and erected a multimedia conference room in 2000.
Public spaces in
Metz Numerous streets, squares, and avenues have been named after Jean Monnet in France and elsewhere in Europe. They include the Place Jean-Monnet in the
16th arrondissement of Paris, and the Jean-Monnet-Strasse in the
Moabit neighbourhood of
Berlin.
Educational institutions Many educational institutions are named after Monnet, including numerous
French Lycées and
Jean Monnet University (
Université Jean Monnet de Saint-Étienne), situated on two campuses in
Saint-Étienne. Outside France, educational institutions named after Monnet include a high school in
Taiwan, dedicated in 1985 to honour Monnet's contribution to the Republic of China and especially to the creation of the
China Development Finance Corporation; and the Jean Monnet High School in
Bucharest,
Romania. The
University of Limerick, Ireland, has a lecture theatre named after Monnet.
Other buildings The Jean Monnet Building was the principal location of the
European Commission's activities in
Luxembourg between 1975 and 2016. Its replacement, the
Jean Monnet 2 building, will become operational from February 2023. is a French non-profit that organizes about 250 conferences on European history and current events each year.
Jean Monnet Council The Jean Monnet Council was formed in the United States in 1988, on the centenary of Monnet's birth. It has published several volumes on Monnet, including
Jean Monnet: The Path to European Unity in 1991,
Monnet and the Americans: The Father of a United Europe and His U.S. Supporters in 1995, and
The Father of Europe: The Life and Times of Jean Monnet in 2018. In 1997, it erected a plaque on the
Willard Hotel in memory of the office Monnet kept there during
World War II.
Jean Monnet Institute The Jean Monnet Institute is a French nonprofit, established in 2021 to leverage Monnet's legacy to foster European integration and chaired by Monnet's grandson Jean-Marc Lieberherr. One of its early initiatives was a new edition of Monnet's Memoirs, with a preface authored by French president
Emmanuel Macron.
Prizes and scholarships Jean Monnet prizes The , set up in 1995 by the
department of
Charente, rewards European authors for books written in, or translated to, French. The Jean Monnet Prize for European Integration, given by EuropeanConstitution.eu, a French association, rewards projects contributing to the promotion of European integration. Several universities and research centres award prizes named after Jean Monnet.
Jean Monnet Programme and Chairs The European Union maintains Monnet's memory with the
Jean Monnet Activities, under the
Erasmus+ programme of the
Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). These activities promote knowledge on
European integration and
European studies on a worldwide scale, especially at the university level, through the Jean Monnet Centres of Excellence, as well as chairs, policy debates, and support to associations. Jean Monnet Actions aim to build bridges between academics, researchers and EU policymakers. There is an emphasis on the study of and research on EU integration and in understanding Europe's place in a globalised world. Jean Monnet Actions are organised and applied for via higher education institutions. Jean Monnet Chairs are teaching posts with a specialisation in European Union studies for university professors or senior lecturers. Jean Monnet Chairs can: • enhance the teaching of EU studies at your institution through the curriculum • conduct, monitor and supervise research on EU matters at all education levels • be a mentor and advisor to the next generation of teachers and researchers • provide expert guidance to future professionals about European matters Jean Monnet Chairs are encouraged to: • publish books within their university press during the grant period. The grant will cover part of the publication and, if need be, part of the translation costs • participate in dissemination and information events in your country and around Europe • organise events (lectures, seminars, workshops, etc.) with policymakers, civil society and schools • network with other academics and institutions supported by Jean Monnet • apply open educational resources, and publish the summaries, content, schedule and expected outcomes of your activities Jean Monnet chairs have been established, for example, at the following universities (alphabetically): British educational institutions which honour Monnet include the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence at
King's College London, the East Midlands Euro-Centre at
Loughborough University, the European Research Institute at the
University of Bath, the Jean Monnet Centre at the University of Birmingham, the Jean Monnet European Centre of Excellence at Cambridge, the Jean Monnet European Centre of Excellence at the
University of Essex, the Centre for European Union Studies at the
University of Hull, the Kent Centre for Europe at the
University of Kent, the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence, a partnership between the
University of Manchester,
Manchester Metropolitan University and the
University of Salford, the Jean Monnet Centre at
Newcastle University, the Jean Monnet Centre for European Studies at the
University of Wales Other dedications Shortly after his death, Monnet was chosen as patron of the 1980–1981 academic year at the
College of Europe. On the centenary of his birth in 1988, he was similarly chosen as class patron by the students who entered
École nationale d'administration that year and graduated in 1990.
Cinema In April 2011, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of Paris, a new documentary,
"Jean Monnet: Father of Europe" was produced. The documentary includes interviews with colleagues of Monnet such as
Georges Berthoin,
Max Kohnstamm and
Jacques-René Rabier, as well as former member of the European Court of Justice
David A.O. Edward of the United Kingdom. ==See also==