THE ORIGINS OF UNIVERSITIES The first European uni-
versity was founded in Bologna, Italy, and coincided
with the revival of interest in Roman law, especially
the rediscovery of Justinian’sBody of Civil Law.Inthe
twelfth century, Irnerius (1088–1125), a great teacher
of Roman law in Bologna (buh-LOHN-yuh), attracted
students from all over Europe. Most of them were lay-
men, usually older individuals who served as adminis-
trators to kings and princes and were eager to learn
more about law so they could apply it in their jobs. To
protect themselves, students at Bologna formed a guild
or universitas, which was recognized by Emperor Fred-
erick Barbarossa and given a charter in 1158. Although
the faculty members also organized themselves as a
group, the universitas of students at Bologna was far
more influential. It obtained a promise of freedom for
students from local authorities, regulated the prices of
books and lodging, and determined the curriculum,
fees, and standards for their masters. Teachers were
fined if they missed a class or began their lectures late.
In northern Europe, the University of Paris became
the first recognized university. A number of teachers ormasters who had received licenses to teach from the ca-
thedral school of Notre-Dame in Paris began to take on
extra students for a fee. By the end of the twelfth cen-
tury, these masters teaching at Paris had formed a uni-
versitas or guild of masters. By 1200, the king of
France, Philip Augustus, officially acknowledged the ex-
istence of the University of Paris. The University of
Oxford in England, organized on the Paris model,
appeared in 1208. A migration of scholars from Oxford
led to the establishment of Cambridge University the
following year. In the late Middle Ages, kings, popes,
and princes vied to found new universities. By the end
of the Middle Ages, there were eighty universities in
Europe, most of them located in England, France, Italy,
and Germany (see Map 9.2).TEACHERS AND STUDENTS IN THE MEDIEVAL UNIVERSITY
A student’s initial studies at a medieval university cen-
tered around the traditional liberal arts curriculum,
which consisted of grammar, rhetoric, logic, arithmetic,
geometry, astronomy, and music. All classes were con-
ducted in Latin, which provided a common means ofAtlantic
OceanNorth
Sea
Baltic
SeaMediterranean
SeaIRELANDSCOTLANDENGLANDFRANCESPAINDENMARKHOLY ROMAN EMPIREValladolid
Salamanca
CoimbraSevilleToledoPalermoSalernoNaplesMonte
Rome CassinoPerugiaFlorence VallombrosaBolognaFerraraPiacenza PaduaJarrow
DurhamCambridge
Oxford
Salisbury
WinchesterCanterburyYorkMont-
Saint-
MichelPoitiersToulouseMontpellierCahors
AvignonGrenobleBordeauxLaonSaint-
Denis
Notre-
Dame
Chartres Paris
ToursOrléans Fleury
BourgesReimsBasel
ClunyCiteauxClairvauxHirsauKrakowPragueCologne
Mainz
HeidelbergFulda
BambergMagdeburg LeipzigSaint-GallViennaLorchRegensburgCorsicaSardiniaBalearic IslandsSicily0 200 400 Miles0 200 400 600 KilometersUniversity
Important monastic school
Important cathedral schoolMAP 9.2Main Intellectual
Centers of Medieval Europe.
Education in the early Middle Ages
was provided primarily by the
clergy, especially the monks.
Although monastic schools were
the centers of learning from the
ninth century to the early eleventh,
they were surpassed in the course
of the eleventh century by the
cathedral schools organized by the
secular (nonmonastic) clergy. In the
twelfth and thirteenth centuries,
the universities surpassed both
monastic and cathedral schools as
intellectual centers.Q In what ways did France
qualify as the intellectual
capital of Europe?212 Chapter 9The Recovery and Growth of European Society in the High Middle AgesCopyright 2017 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. Due to electronic rights, some third party content may be suppressed from the eBook and/or eChapter(s).
Editorial review has deemed that any suppressed content does not materially affect the overall learning experience. Cengage Learning reserves the right to remove additional content at any time if subsequent rights restrictions require it.
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