The Minerva Society, a student fraternity for graduates of the
University of Leiden, was founded in 1814 as the first student fraternity in the Netherlands and was named after the Roman goddess
Minerva. In 1846, the society moved into its current headquarters at
Breestraat 50 in Leiden. Following a speech by university lecturer
Rudolph Cleveringa against the exclusion of Jewish professors and a student strike, the Minerva Society was banned by the
National Socialist occupiers in 1940 and its property was confiscated by the Germans. It was not until the end of the war in 1945 that it was revived, and the following year
Winston Churchill visited the society and said “I see tremendous forces in this room.” After a major fire on the night of December 2-3, 1959, the society's new clubhouse, built in a
brutalist architectural style, was opened in 1965. The LSV Minerva in its current form was founded on January 1, 1974, and marked the merger of the Leiden Student Corps (which was male-only) with the VVSL (Female Union for Students in Leiden, founded in 1900). In 2014, the association celebrated its 200th anniversary. == Structure ==