The current St. Michael's College is chronologically the third college to be built:
The first college The Jesuits have been in
Brussels since 1586. By the request of the Archdukes
Albert VII and
Isabella, the Jesuits agreed to open a college. Inaugurated on 14 July 1604, the college is composed of a large rectangle formed by the Rue de la Paille/Strostraat, the Rue de Ruysbroeck/Ruisbroekstraat and the Rue d'Or/Goudenstraat.
The Jesuits were ejected from the school in 1773 and it was demolished in 1891.
The second college In 1814, the Jesuits returned to Belgium and opened the French-speaking St. Michael's College 19 years later in the
Chapel Church area of the city. In 1905, the expanding population forced the Jesuits to not only expand the college but to also look for a location for a new college. In 1905, the college on the Rue des Ursulines/Ursulinenstraat was renamed as
St John Berchmans College and the new college in the Etterbeek part of the city became St. Michael's College.
The third college In 1905, building on the new St. Michael's College was complete and work on the nearby church started. It was built in the same neo-traditional architectural style as the rest of the school buildings. The college welcomed 400 students, of which 100 were boarders, on 3 October of that same year. On 20 July 1908, the foundation stone of the church was laid by Msg.
Giovanni Tacci Porcelli, the
Papal nuncio to Belgium. The architect Joseph Prémont was inspired by the Rhenan
Romanesque tradition of the
Middle Ages, especially the
Basilica of Saint Servatius in
Maastricht. The church was consecrated on 9 July 1912 by the
Bishop of Galle, Joseph van Reeth
SJ. Starting in the late 1930s, a shift in language was made which would result in St John Berchmans College speaking Dutch and English and the French-speaking section of the college being transferred to St. Michael's College. The two separate colleges still exist today, each teaching in their respective language. ==Notable students==