Humboldt, one of Fichte’s audience in 1808, put into effect. The University of
Berlin was made a privileged corporation with self-government; professors
were given the right to choose their own subjects, without restrictions of a
standard syllabus. The philosophical faculty received full equality in status and
pay with the other faculties, and could now award advanced degrees. Fichte
was appointed first rector. After Fichte’s death, the leading Idealist theologian,
Schleiermacher, took over as rector, and Hegel was brought to Berlin as Fichte’s
successor in philosophy.
This is not to say that the University of Berlin bore the brunt of reform
alone. Göttingen, founded in 1737, had already pioneered in the reorientation
toward creative research. Both Wilhelm and Alexander von Humboldt were
German Universities, 1348–1900
(Boundaries are those of German Empire in 1872;
9.1 University Foundations and Failures, 1000–1600
648 •^ Intellectual Communities: Western Paths