Producer history
In 1841, the Diputació de Girona, created in 1822, founded the College of Humanities of Girona, the predecessor of the Girona Provincial Institute of Secondary Education, established on September 17, 1845. At the time, it was associated with the Ministry of Development and Governance and was under the supervision of the dean of the University of Barcelona. Its original headquarters was Casa Cartellà (Placeta de l¿Institut Vell, 1), a former monastery of the mendicant Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, which currently serves as the offices of he Municipal Archives of Girona and the Girona Museum of History.
The school was maintained thanks to provincial budgets, tuition fees and its own income. Through the law on public education or the Moyano Law (1857), it later came under the auspices of the Provincial Board of Public Education. At the time, the model centre was a model in terms of equipment and infrastructure.
Starting in academic year 1887-1888, it fell under the auspices of the State, and in1903, it was named the Institut General i Tècnic de Girona. General baccalaureate studies, elementary and higher level teaching studies, and technical trade studies were taught there. During the Second Republic, the baccalaureate studies were reformed and the centre¿s name was changed to Institut Nacional de Segon Ensenyament de Girona.
Under the Franco regime, the Ministry of National Education took charge of it. There were basic secondary education and a final exam, higher post-secondary education and a final exam, and a pre-university course. In 1967, its headquarters was moved to new premises on Carrer d¿Isabel La Catòlica, number 17, in the upper part of Girona. The 1970-1971 academic class adopted the name Institut de Segon Ensenyament Jaume Vicens Vives.
Popularly known as the Girona Institute, its antiquity and history have made it the most emblematic of its kind in the Girona region. Currently, it has around 900 students and a faculty consisting of 87 teachers, who teach ESO (compulsory secondary education), and both LOE (Organic Law of Education) and International Baccalaureates.
Archive history
The collection of lantern plates was compiled in the early 20th century by some geography and history teachers at Institut Jaume Vicens Vives. They bought them from establishments that specialized in teaching materials, with the aim of illustrating different subjects through their projection.
In 2017, the secondary school transferred the collection on loan and usage rights to the Diputació de Girona and to INSPAI, Image Centre. Between February and November of the following year, a restorer reviewed the state of conservation and restored the plates.
From October to December 2018, a digital imaging specialist photographed the images in RAW format ¿ with a CaptureOne camera ¿ and converted them into TIFF format, that is, conservation master files.
In January 2021, an expert report was made on the economic assessment of the collection. In 2021 an art historian documented and cataloged the collection and placed the plates definitively in INSPAI¿s repositories.
Details of entry
On September 26, 2017, the Diputació de Girona and the Institute signed a easement and usage rights agreement regarding the collection.