Louis Sellier, a layman who later became a Jesuit, founded a
pensionnat at Amiens in 1797, which he gave to the Fathers of the Faith including
Jean Nicolas Loriquet in 1803. The
pensionnat was suppressed in 1812, but was succeeded in 1816 after the fall of the Empire by the minor seminary of Saint-Acheul, staffed by the former teachers of the
pensionnat who had become Jesuits after the restoration of that order. The seminary was crowded into the old abbey and an old auxiliary building, with a 3-story building thrown up in 1818 to hold a study hall and dormitory, and two nearby houses. An ancient stable on the farm beside the abbey was also used as a study hall. The seminary was home to almost 900 resident students. There were almost 60 Jesuits and perhaps as many lay workers. Despite the austere conditions, the college was well off compared to most such establishments. In 14 years the seminary educated 70 Jesuits, 550 priests and 8 bishops. Alumni of the Jesuit college include: •
Augustin de Backer (1809–73), Belgian Jesuit and bibliographer •
Charles Cahier (1807–82), French antiquarian •
Célestin Joseph Félix (1810–91), French Jesuit and preacher •
Ivan Gagarin (1814–82), Russian Jesuit, founding editor of Études •
Peter Hasslacher (1810–76), German Jesuit missionary •
Louis Lambillotte (1796–1855), Belgian Jesuit, composer and palaeographer of Church music •
Francis Sylvester Mahony (1804–66), an Irish humorist and journalist •
Félix Martin (1804–86), antiquary, historiographer, architect, and educationist •
Carlos Sommervogel (1834–1902), French Jesuit scholar, author of the Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus •
Charles Vilain XIIII (1803–78), Belgian politician The Jesuit college was closed in 1830. Later the building was used as a hospital. As of 2017 the abbey was occupied by a private lycée. ==See also==