|
most new universities were founded from pre-existing schools, usually when these schools were deemed to have become primarily sites of higher education. Many historians state that universities and cathedral schools were a
continuation of the interest in learning promoted by monasteries.
The University of Bologna began as a law school teaching the ius gentium or Roman law of peoples which was in demand across Europe for those defending the
right of incipient nations against empire and church. Bologna’s special claim to Alma Mater Studiorum is based on its autonomy, its awarding of degrees, and other structural arrangements, making it the oldest
continuously-operating institution independent of kings, emperors or any kind of direct religious authority.
The conventional date of 1088 ,or 1087 according to some, records when a certain Irnerius commences teaching
Emperor Justinian’s 6th century codification of Roman law, the Corpus Iuris Civilis, recently discovered at Pisa. Lay students arrive in the city from many lands contracting to gain this knowledge, organising themselves into
‘Learning Nations’ of Hungarians, Greeks, North Africans, Arabs, Franks, Germans, Iberians etc. The students “had all the power…and dominated the masters”.
In Europe, young men proceeded to university when they
had completed their study of the trivium–the preparatory arts of grammar, rhetoric and dialectic or logic–and the quadrivium: arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy. (See Degrees of the University of Oxford for the
history of how the trivium and quadrivium developed in relation to degrees, especially in anglophone universities).
Some scholars have argued that early medieval universities were influenced by the religious Madrasah
schools in Al-Andalus, the Emirate of Sicily, and the Middle East (during the Crusades), but this view has been flatly opposed and there is no actual evidence of the transmission of Arab scholarly methods discernible in
medieval universities.
Modern universities
|