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Collège d'Alzon is a Belgian French-speaking secondary school. It was founded on 16 October 1900 in Bure (municipality of Tellin, Luxembourg Province, Wallonia) by the Augustinians of the Assumption - better known as Assumptionists.

Alumnate Notre-Dame de l'Assomption
At the turn of the 20th century, when the 1905 French law on the Separation of the Churches and the State drove the religious congregations out of France, some Assumptionists found shelter in Belgium. On 16 October 1900, Fr. Pierre Descamps and 15 boys of modest backgrounds settled in the castle of Bure. The castle was the former summer residence of the Benedictine Abbots of Saint-Hubert, Belgium, and it had been confiscated and sold as nationalised property by the French Revolutionaries in 1794. The Alumnate Notre-Dame de l'Assomption was born. In a letter dated 1 July 1900 addressed to Fr. François Picard, Fr. Emmanuel Bailly described the building as the first students and their teachers discovered it.

"To me it is a beautiful and sturdy house with magnificent bedrooms. It is clean, well built, well preserved and surrounded by a nice and quite large enclosure. It is located near a lovely village, very good and very Catholic. It is adjacent to a large farm, well run by very honest people and decent servants. It has a very high, very open and very large attic; rooms, cells, etc. could be established there. The walls under the roof are still almost a metre thick. The enclosure has trees, with enough walkways bordered by pine trees, with a large orchard and a vast vegetable garden, very easy to cultivate. We will need one or two lay brothers capable of doing a bit of gardening as soon as possible. There are 15 or 16 beautiful rooms which are quite high, most of them are 30 to 36 square metres. Not to mention 3 small dormitories, one chapel, one inner parlour, one refectory, a kitchen, a superb staircase and vestibule, and a corridor almost two metres wide running between the rooms from one end to the other. The house was built with hardy and visible stones (sturdier and more serious than the rubble and plaster of Livry’s old buildings). Its twin period-stone windows are very pretty. The doors are very large and made of oak, as is the parquet. The roof frames are very fine and in perfect shape. The building is 14 metres deep and has a façade of 56 metres. Four towers are located at each corner of the house and the farm."

On 29 January 1918, a fire destroyed the major part of the farm. Only the farmers' dwelling and the entrance porch were spared. Two of the four towers mentioned by Fr. Bailly were in ruins. The part of the building which the Assumptionists occupied was the only one that was saved from the fire.

While the school was able to remain open during the First World War, the fire of 1918, the damage left by the German troops in September of the same year, and the constant financial difficulties led to the school's closure in 1920.