The Collège de Montréal (French pronunciation: [kɔlɛʒ də mɔ̃ʁeal]) is a subsidized private high school for students attending grades 7–11 located in downtown Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
A former Roman Catholic minor seminary, it was founded on June 1, 1767 as the Petit Séminaire of Montreal by the Sulpician Fathers.
The school's performance hall, the Ermitage, was an important venue for public concerts in Montreal from its establishment in 1914 up into the 1960s.
In a widely reported article in 2008, Le Journal de Montréal found that school administrators and in particular its director-general, Jacques Giguère, had expensed many non-school related items, including high-priced furniture, a luxury hotel suite for a Christmas party, and the services of a personal trainer.
Many of the Black students at the school expressed anger towards the director even though he claimed he was simply paying tribute to the singer.