Not really, but the day I saw a stack of my books in a window of the Sorbonne comes close.
William H. Gass: How I Write|Noah Charney|March 13, 2013|DAILY BEAST
But Hala Shoukair, 53, had no hangups sketching from models at the Sorbonne in Paris, during the 1970s.
The Rise of Islamo-Erotica|Betwa Sharma|March 25, 2010|DAILY BEAST
While Roosevelt praised action and risk-taking in his Sorbonne speech, he also counseled elevating politics itself.
Is Obama Too Thoughtful?|Michael Signer|February 13, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Next day I had nearly as good an audience, although it was the day for the disputation at the Sorbonne.
The Age of Erasmus|P. S. Allen
They were publicly sold at Paris, and, as far as appears, the doctors of Sorbonne then read them with approbation.
History of the Reformation in the Sixteenth Century, Vol 2|J. H. Merle D'Aubign
The reference to the Sorbonne, which was founded in 1252, is of course an anachronism.
La Lgende des Sicles|Victor Hugo
It was to the Sorbonne that the Guises addressed themselves in order to obtain theological support for their projected usurpation.
Old and New Paris, v. 2|Henry Sutherland Edwards
Parker died, and Gifford, a Papist of the Sorbonne, was appointed.
Oxford and its Story|Cecil Headlam
British Dictionary definitions for Sorbonne
Sorbonne
/ (Frenchsɔrbɔn) /
noun
the Sorbonnea part of the University of Paris containing the faculties of science and literature: founded in 1253 by Robert de Sorbon as a theological college; given to the university in 1808