The Sociology of Philosophies

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TABLE 9.1.UNIVERSITY FOUNDATIONS AND FAILURES, 1000–1600


Total Italy France Britain


German Empire,
Scandinavia,
Low Countries Iberia

1000s
F  1
f  0
T  1M


F  1

1100s
F  6
f  17%
T  5M
1m


F  3
f  1
T  2M
1m

F  2

T  2M

F  1

T  1M

1200s
F  19
f  37%
T  12M
6m


F  8
f  3
T  4M
4m

F  5
f  2
T  4M
1m

F  1

T  2M

F  5
f  2
T  2M
1m

1300s
F  34
f  47%
T  18M
14m


F  15
f  12
T  4M
7m

F  5
f  1
T  5M
4m

F  1
f  1
T  2M

F  10
f  2
T  6M
2m

F  3

T  2M
3m

1400s
F  41
fa  48%
T  22M
34m


F  5
f  4
T  5M
7m

F  9
f  7
T  5M
6m

F  3

T  2M
3m

F  15
f  4
T  8M
11m

F  9
f  5
T  2M
7m

1500s
F  54
f  31%
T  23M
70m


F  5
f  2
T  4M
11m

F  4
f  1
T  4M
9m

F  2

T  3M
4m

F  18
f  2
T  9M
26m

F  25
f  12
T  3M
20m

Totals 1000–1600
F  155
f  39%


F  37
f  60%

F  25
f  44%

F  8
f  13%

F  43
f  19%

F  42
f  45%

Source: Collins, 1981, p. 517. From Rashdall, 1936; Shepherd, 1964: No. 100; The Cambridge Modern
History Atlas 1912, Map 9; Kagan (in Stone, 1974:355–405).
Notes: F  foundations; f  failures; T  total in existence at end of century; M  major universities;
m  minor universities.
a. Includes “paper universities” given legal charters, but which did not actually come into existence.
Rashdall (1936, Vol. II:325–331) lists 10 of these, mostly in the 1300s, and notes that his list is probably
very incomplete for the 1400s. Hence this failure rate is probably 10–15% too low.

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