Lycée Franco-Hellénique Eugène Delacroix

Lycée Franco-Hellénique Eugène Delacroix (LFH/LFHED Greek: Ελληνογαλλική Σχολή Ευγένιος Ντελακρουά) is a private French international school in Agia Paraskevi, Athens, Greece.

Lycée Franco-Hellenique was created in 1974, on the site of the small school "Collaros" that operated without statues, on the premises of the French Institute of Greece on Sina Street, thanks to the political will of Konstantinos Karamanlis and Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, respectively Greek and French presidents.

Their vision for convergence not only of the educational systems of the two countries but also of the respective cultures, was realized in 1975, after an exchange of letters between the two governments and the concession by the Greek state of a space to build the Greek-French school.

For this purpose and given that a foreign state is not entitled to enter into a long-term lease (99 years), a French-Hellenic association was created, the Panhellenic Association for Education (AFHE), which brought together personalities related to the development of cultural ties between of the two countries and the strengthening of the use of French in Greece.

This charter was accompanied by an agreement, according to which AFHE, Union of Greek Law, grants the management of the French-Greek School (LFH) to the Union for French Language Teaching in Greece (AEFG), a French Law Association based in Paris.