This is a little bit of a history lesson but I figure if this is the stuff I'm learning in my Medieval history course, I might as well share it with you folks.
Universities, as we know it, are entirely a medieval creation, in that it never became an institution until the middle ages. During the revival of learning that took place in Medieval society, the universty as we know it formed. In the ancient world, they weren't really universities, but more along the lines of "centers for learning". The universities which we know of now are based on the medieval model entirely. "University" was a name given to a guild. There was a university in which the students were a guild, and a university in which the teachers were a guild of their own.
And more or less, these universities would organize themselves around some discipline. The first university was probably in Salerno, Italy, organizeding around medicine, as medical knowledge came from the Arab world during the crusades. And then you had others, such as in Paris, based on theology.
And as with everything a university degree ensured money to be made. Education was free because the Church deemed that knowledge comes from God alone and shouldn't be charged, contrary to nowadays. Women, however, were not allowed to study. But overall there were new opportunities for those learned certain things about beaurocracy. Morever, it was a training ground for new beaurocracies, involving formalized knowledge. It was to shape those that were to be later incorporated into the lay and eccelsiastical beaurocracies.
The question now is, how much do the universities of today, differ from the universities of that day. and how much are they the same?
Universities, as we know it, are entirely a medieval creation, in that it never became an institution until the middle ages. During the revival of learning that took place in Medieval society, the universty as we know it formed. In the ancient world, they weren't really universities, but more along the lines of "centers for learning". The universities which we know of now are based on the medieval model entirely. "University" was a name given to a guild. There was a university in which the students were a guild, and a university in which the teachers were a guild of their own.
And more or less, these universities would organize themselves around some discipline. The first university was probably in Salerno, Italy, organizeding around medicine, as medical knowledge came from the Arab world during the crusades. And then you had others, such as in Paris, based on theology.
And as with everything a university degree ensured money to be made. Education was free because the Church deemed that knowledge comes from God alone and shouldn't be charged, contrary to nowadays. Women, however, were not allowed to study. But overall there were new opportunities for those learned certain things about beaurocracy. Morever, it was a training ground for new beaurocracies, involving formalized knowledge. It was to shape those that were to be later incorporated into the lay and eccelsiastical beaurocracies.
The question now is, how much do the universities of today, differ from the universities of that day. and how much are they the same?
Comment