The school was originally called the "Volhynian Gymnasium"; in 1819 the name was changed to "Krzemieniec Lyceum". The faculty included such notable figures as
Joachim Lelewel, Józef Korzeniowski and
Euzebiusz Słowacki (father of the famous poet
Juliusz Słowacki). There was only one foreign teacher, the
Lemberg-educated Austrian,
Willibald Besser, who taught botany and zoology. Czacki required him to perfect his Polish, as all teaching was in the Polish language. Not all students were Poles, however; the student body included many Jews and Ukrainians. The school was proud of its library, which was based on the library of Poland's last
king,
Stanisław August Poniatowski, and held 34,388 books, maps and manuscripts, some very rare. The school offered a broad educational program, aimed not only at formal instruction but also at students' general intellectual development. Many students learned English, a language favored by
Adam Czartoryski. The best students were given opportunities to continue their education in
Edinburgh and at English universities. One of those who received a scholarship to study in Edinburgh was
Michal Wiszniewski, who later became a professor of logic. Tadeusz Czacki dreamed of the school eventually developing into a university. It grew quickly, establishing its position. Numerous donors helped with money, and the school had a modern astronomical observatory and excellent laboratories. The campus stood within a well-kept botanical garden with 8,350 kinds of plants. Seeds were given for free to landowners across
Volhynia. After its 1820s heyday, the school went into decline. In the wake of the
November 1830 Uprising, as a reprisal, it was closed by the Russian authorities. Several professors and the library were transferred to the newly created
Kiev University. The Russians even moved the renowned botanical gardens to Kiev by horse-cart. == 1922-39 ==