For the past 10 years, the Jardin des Plantes has been organizing summer tours to help the general public learn more about our botanical garden. Check out the summer 2021 program.

 

Tours for all ages

 

Open to everyone, the Jardin des Plantes’ summer tours cover a variety of themes:
  • The medicinal plant collections at the Jardin des Plantes
  • Richer Mountain: Where History and Ecology Meet
  • Martins Greenhouse and its collection of succulents
  • Tours of the Permaculture Edible Garden
  • Herbs and the Senses Garden

Practical Information

ADDRESS

Henri IV Boulevard,

34000 Montpellier

  • Free admission

  • No registration required

  • Please arrive 10 minutes before the tour begins

One hundred years ago, students from the Montpellier Faculty of Medicine unveiled works of art in the Jardin des Plantes and its historic building to celebrate the faculty’s 700th anniversary. To recreate this symbolic gesture for the 800th anniversary, a student association was founded by current students in 2019.

The founding of an association

To carry out this project,the Association Carabine Montpelliéraine (ACM) and the Syndicat des Internes du Languedoc-Roussillon (SIRL) have joined forces to createthe Association for a Historic Ceremony of Montpellier Medical Students (ACHEMM). The association consists of 19 members and is chaired by Allan Guilliey, a fourth-year medical student. The association’s goal is to implement the project from concept to completion, including the search for artists who will exhibit their works at the new Arnaud de Villeneuve Campus.

An event redesigned in response to the COVID-19 pandemic

Originally, this exhibition was to be launched with a gala organized by ACHEMM students. Numerous European institutions were to be invited to attend in late 2020, and the association had the opportunity to speak at the COIMBRA Group conference, initially scheduled for June 2020. Founded in 1985, this group aims to bring together and promote excellence among European universities, with a view to sustaining high standards of teaching, research, and academic mobility on an international level, while fostering unique cultural ties.
Unfortunately, due to health restrictions requiring a rethinking of the event, an exhibition opening will take place in July 2021 to showcase the students’ work.

A monumental task

To bring this project to fruition, the students in the association had to invest a great deal of their time and energy. To showcase meaningful works, the students issued a call for submissions to local artists. About twenty artists submitted their work; the students then selected thirteen of them based on which pieces seemed most artistically suited to the project.

Next, the association’s members had to approach local governments to secure funding to pay the artists. These institutions were invaluable in helping to bring this project to fruition.

Finally, a tremendous amount of organizational work has been done over the past two years to bring this exhibition to life and, through it, to highlight the history of the Faculty.

Transmission as a common thread

The theme of this exhibition is transmission. Indeed, in 2017, the 800-year-old Faculty expanded with a new, state-of-the-art campus: the Arnaud de Villeneuve Campus. The works in this exhibition bridge the gap between these two sites, combining the classical and the modern, realism and abstraction, to represent both places and, through them, both eras.

The centerpiece of this exhibition, created by Nicolas Daubanes, is a DNA molecule—a reminder that even though the Faculty is spread across different locations, all these campuses share the same DNA and are part of its history.

Artists and Their Works

Visit the exhibition

Guided tours will be offered on Saturday, July 10, and Sunday, July 11, starting at 2:00 p.m. They will be conducted in accordance with safety guidelines. Registration is required:

 

The association would like to thank all of its partners (the DRAC, the FRAC, the Hérault Department, the Occitanie Region, Pumkin, the CROUS, the University of Montpellier, the Montpellier Metropolitan Area, and the City of Montpellier) for their support, as well as Professor Gérald CHANQUES and the Faculty’s staff, who worked to ensure the smooth running of this project. 

In 2016 and 2018, Ms. Barjon and Ms. Blanc, daughters of former Dean Gaston Giraud, bequeathed their father’s archives to the University of Montpellier. Thanks to these archives, we are now able to present an exhibition on the evolution of the Faculty’s various buildings and sites since its 700th anniversary, commemorated in 1921.

 

An exhibition divided into several sections

This exhibition, organized by the University of Montpellier Archives Department (Sophie Dikoff, Antoine Redouly, and Gwendoline Perrault) in collaboration with Ms. Barjon and Professor Dedet, and with the special participation of Dean Jacques Bringer, Professor Daniel Jarry, and Mr. Serge Caminade, will focus on the evolution of the various buildings and sites that make up the Faculty: the Historic Building, the Institute of Biology, the extensions in Nîmes and on the northern site of Montpellier (the UPM and the Arnaud de Villeneuve campus building), and finally the Botanical Garden.

Dive into the archives

Thanks to donations from the family of former Dean Giraud, this exhibition features a wealth of photographs. You can view photos of the old buildings and see how their architecture has evolved over time. The exhibition also showcases other documents that shed light on the buildings’ development, such as architectural plans, handwritten letters, and postcards…

A large-scale project

To mark the occasion, we spoke with Sophie Dikoff, the archivist in charge of this exhibition, to learn how it was put together.

Could you tell us about your job?

My role as an archivist at the University of Montpellier is to assist all departments in managing their archives in accordance with current legislation governing public archives. This work is carried out in collaboration with the Hérault Departmental Archives, which provides scientific and technical oversight. Archives serve to document changes—whether architectural, societal, or otherwise…

 

Where do the archival materials in this exhibition come from?

Most of these items come from donations made by Dean Giraud’s family. Indeed, the dean kept many documents related to his various projects, both in his capacity as dean of the Montpellier Faculty of Medicine and in his personal capacity, as someone with a passion for the history of medicine and the Montpellier Faculty. The remaining archives come from the University’s iconographic collection, the University’s photo library, and that of the Conference of University Presidents, which have been supplemented by photographs taken for the exhibition.

 

How long did it take you to prepare this exhibition?

The exhibition was originally scheduled to take place in October 2020, but due to health restrictions, we had to postpone it. So I’ve been working on this project since around the beginning of 2020. The process is very long, as it first requires conducting research to understand the various aspects of the subject (searching archives, reading, meeting with subject matter experts), selecting the most interesting documents, obtaining permissions to use photos in accordance with copyright laws, writing texts, and determining a visitor route. For the exhibition design, we hired a professional scenographer, André Dumonnet. For this exhibition, the approach was to organize the presentation by building and then in chronological order. A panel displays a timeline covering all buildings and sites.

 

An exhibition open to everyone

The exhibition, which will run from June 18, 2021, at 1:30 p.m. to July 21, 2021, at 6:00 p.m., is free of charge. Self-guided tours will be available Wednesday through Friday from 1:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. and Saturdays from 10:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., with guided tours available Saturdays from 1:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

 

Dear students, every year, health sciences students admitted to the medical program are assigned to either the Montpellier or Nîmes teaching sites. This year, the assignment will take place on July 16 at 9:00 a.m.

 

Due to recent developments, the terms of this allocation have changed. Please refer to the article below, updated on July 15, 2021, at 8:00 a.m.

 

For students who have chosen to study medicine

You are currently enrolled in the PASS or LAS program and have expressed an interest in continuing your studies in the medical track in DFGSM 2 for the 2021–2022 academic year, provided you pass the MMOP selection committee.

Under this program, admitted students are assigned to either the Montpellier or Nîmes campuses of the Montpellier-Nîmes Faculty of Medicine.

The following are hereby summoned:

  • THOSE ADMITTED DIRECTLY AFTER THE FIRST ROUND OF EXAMS

    You are scheduled to meet on July 16 at 9:00 a.m. in theRabelais Amphitheater.

 

PLEASE NOTE: Candidates admitted to the second round of exams WILL NOT be notified.

 

Practical Information

  • Absence with a proxy

    In the eventof a justified absence, you may have someone else represent you by providing apower of attorneyalong with allsupporting documents.

    We appreciate your efforts to attend or to have someone represent you.

  • Absence without authorization

    If you are not present in the lecture hall when your name is called, and if no one holding a power of attorney accompanied by all required supporting documents appears on your behalf, you will be automatically assigned to any unfilled seats based on your ranking after the roll call procedure described above. 

  • Address

    641 Doyen Gaston Giraud Avenue,

    34090 Montpellier

 

Dear students, please find below the admission results for the MMOPKE program from the first round of exams for PASS and LAS students enrolled for the 2020–21 academic year.

 

PASS Results

Click the button below to download the PASS results.

 

LAS Results

Click the buttons below to download the LAS results.

 

Understanding the Results

To fully understand the acronyms and analyze your results, see the help section below:

 

Spotlight on: ADAC "Admitted Before Selection" Results

Candidates who are directly admitted following the first set of exams must:

>> confirm their acceptance of admission, specifying—if their name appears on multiple admission lists—the program in medicine, pharmacy, dentistry, or midwifery they have definitively chosen ; failure to do so will result in the loss of their admission and disqualification from taking the second set of exams for the program to which they were directly admitted. This agreement constitutes a waiver of the right to take the second set of exams.

Section III of Article 11 of the Order of November 11, 2019

The student must clearly state their decision:
>> either they explicitly accept the program to which they were admitted following the first round of exams, in which case they waive their right to participate in the second round of exams and the possibility of being admitted to another program;

>> or they may forfeit the results of the first set of exams and take the second set of exams to try again for admission to another program. They may also try again to gain admission to the program they previously passed up through direct admission. However, there is no guarantee that they will be admitted to that program.

Guide to the Reform Resulting from Law No. 2019-774 of July 24, 2019, on the Organization and Transformation of the Healthcare System, March 2021, p. 8.

Determination of Minimum Grades in Accordance with Article 7 of the MMOP 2020–2021 Admission Guidelines