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To see, at once, how well the Thirteenth deserves the name of the
greatest of centuries, it is necessary, only, to open the book of her
deeds and read therein what was accomplished during this period for the
education of the men of the time. It is, after all, what a
generation accomplishes for intellectual development and social uplift
that must be counted as its greatest triumph. If life is larger in its
opportunities, if men appreciate its significance better, if the
development of the human mind has been rendered easier, if that
precious thing, whose name, education, has been so much abused, is
made readier of attainment, then the generation stamps itself as having
written down in its book of deeds, things worthy for all subsequent
generations to read. Though anything like proper appreciation of it
has come only in very recent times, there is absolutely no period of
equal length in the history of mankind in which so much was not only
attempted, but successfully accomplished for education, in every sense
of the word, as during the Thirteenth Century. This included, not
only the education of the classes but also the education of the masses.
For the moment, we shall concern ourselves only with the education
offered to, and taken advantage of by so many, in the universities of
the time. It was just at the beginning of the Thirteenth Century
that the great universities came into being as schools, in which all
the ordinary forms of learning were taught. During the Twelfth
Century, Bologna had had a famous school of law which attracted
students from all over Europe. Under Irnerius, canon and civil law
secured a popularity as subjects of study such as they never had
before. The study of the old Roman Law brought back with it an
interest in the Latin classics, and the beginning of the true new
birth -- the real renaissance -- of modern education must be traced
from here. At Paris there was a theological school attached to the
cathedral which gradually became noted for its devotion to philosophy as
the basis of theology, and, about the middle of the Twelfth
Century, attracted students from every part of the civilized world.
As was the case at Bologna, interest after a time was not limited to
philosophy and theology; other branches of study were admitted to the
curriculum and a university in the modern sense came into existence.
During the first quarter of the Thirteenth Century both of these
schools developed faculties for the teaching of all the known branches
of knowledge. At Bologna faculties of arts, of philosophy and
theology, and finally of medicine, were gradually added, and students
flocked in ever increasing numbers to take advantage of these additional
opportunities. At Paris, the school of medicine was established
early in the Thirteenth Century, and there were graduates in medicine
before the year 1220. Law came later, but was limited to Canon
law to a great extent, Orleans having a monopoly of civil law for more
than a century. These two universities, Bologna and Paris, were,
in every sense of the word, early in the century, real universities,
differing in no essential from our modern institutions that bear the
same name.
If the Thirteenth Century had done nothing else but put into shape
this great instrument for the training of the human mind, which has
maintained its effectiveness during seven centuries, it must be
accorded a place among the epoch-making periods of history. With all
our advances in modern education we have not found it necessary, or
even advisable, to change, in any essential way, this mold in which
the human intellect has been cast for all these years. If a man wants
knowledge for its own sake, or for some practical purpose in life,
then here are the faculties which will enable him to make a good
beginning on the road he wishes to travel. If he wants knowledge of
the liberal arts, or the consideration of man's duties to himself, to
his fellow-man and to his Creator, he will find in the faculties of
arts and philosophy and theology the great sources of knowledge in these
subjects. If, on the other hand, he wishes to apply his mind either
to the disputes of men about property, or to their injustices toward
one another and the correction of abuses, then the faculty of law will
supply his wants, and finally the medical school enables him, if he
wishes, to learn all that can be known at a given time with regard to
man's ills and their healing. We have admitted the practical-work
subjects into university life, though not without protest, but
architecture, engineering, bridge-building and the like, in which
the men of the Thirteenth Century accomplished such wonders, were
relegated to the guilds whose technical schools, though they did not
call them by that name, were quite as effective practical educators as
even the most vaunted of our modern university mechanical departments.
It is rather interesting to trace the course of the development of
schools in our modern sense of the term, because their evolution
recapitulates, to some degree at least, the history of the
individual's interest in life. The first school which acquired a
European reputation was that of Salernum, a little town not far from
Naples, which possessed a famous medical school as early as the ninth
century, perhaps earlier. This never became a university, though its
reputation as a great medical school was maintained for several
centuries. This first educational opportunity to attract a large body
of students from all over the world concerned mainly the needs of the
body. The next set of interests which man, in the course of evolution
develops, has to do with the acquisition and retention of property and
the maintenance of his rights as an individual. It is not surprising.
then, to find that the next school of world-wide reputation was that
of law at Bologna which became the nucleus of a great university. It
is only after man has looked out for his bodily needs and his property
rights, that he comes to think of his duties toward himself, his
fellow-men, and his Creator, and so the third of these great
medieval schools, in time, was that of philosophy and theology, at
Paris.
It is sometimes thought that the word university applied to these
institutions after the aggregation of other faculties, was due to the
fact that there was a universality of studies, that all branches of
knowledge might be followed in them. The word university, however,
was not originally applied to the school itself, which, if it had all
the faculties of the modern university, was, in the Thirteenth
Century, called a studium generale. The Latin word universitas had
quite a different usage at that time. Whenever letters were formally
addressed to the combined faculties of a studium generale by reigning
sovereigns, or by the Pope, or by other high ecclesiastical
authorities, they always began with the designation, Universitas
Vestra, implying that the greeting was to all of the faculty,
universally and without exception. Gradually, because of this word
constantly occurring at the beginning of letters to the faculty, the
term universitas came to be applied to the institution.
[Certain other terms that occur in these letters of greeting to
university officials have a more than passing interest. The rector of
the university, for instance, was always formally addressed as
Amplitudo Vestra, that is, Your Ampleness. Considering the fact
that not a few of the rectors of the old time universities all of whom
were necessarily ecclesiastics, must have had the ampleness of girth so
characteristic of their order under certain circumstances, there is an
appropriateness about this formal designation which perhaps appeals more
to the risibilities of the modern mind than to those of medieval
time.]
While the universities, as is typically exemplified by the histories
of Bologna and Paris, and even to a noteworthy degree of Oxford,
grew up around the cathedrals, they cannot be considered in any sense
the deliberate creation, much less the formal invention, of any
particular set of men. The idea of a university was not born into the
world in full panoply as Minerva from the brain of Jove. No one set
about consciously organizing for the establishment of complete
institutions of learning. Like everything destined to mean much in the
world the universities were a natural growth from the favoring soil in
which living seeds were planted. They sprang from the wonderful
inquiring spirit of the time and the marvelous desire for knowledge and
for the higher intellectual life that came over the people of Europe
during the Thirteenth Century. The school at Paris became famous,
and attracted pupils during the Twelfth Century, because of the
new-born interest in scholastic philosophy. After the pupils had
gathered in large numbers their enthusiasm led to the establishment of
further courses of study. The same thing was true at Bologna, where
the study of Law first attracted a crowd of earnest students, and then
the demand for broader education led to the establishment of other
faculties.
Above all, there was no conscious attempt on the part of any supposed
better class to stoop down and uplift those presumably below it. As we
shall see, the students of the university came mainly from the middle
class of the population. They became ardently devoted to their
teachers. As in all really educational work, it was the man and not
the institution that counted for much. In case of disagreement of one
of these with the university authorities, not infrequently there was a
sacrifice of personal advantage for the moment on the part of the
students in order to follow a favorite teacher. Paris had examples of
this several times before the Thirteenth Century, and notably in the
case of Abelard had seen thousands of students follow him into the
distant desert where he had retired.
Later on, when abuses on the part of the authorities of Paris limited
the University's privileges, led to the withdrawal of students and
the foundation of Oxford, there was a community of interest on the
part of certain members of the faculty and thousands of students. This
movement was, however, distinctly of a popular character, in the
sense that it was not guided by political or other leaders. Nearly all
of the features of university life during the Thirteenth Century,
emphasize the democracy of feeling of the students, and make it clear
that the blowing of the wind of the spirit of human liberty and
intellectual enthusiasm influencing the minds of the generation, rather
than any formal attempt on the part of any class of men deliberately to
provide educational opportunities, is the underlying feature of
university foundation and development.
While the great universities of Paris, Bologna, and Oxford were,
by far, the most important, they must not be considered as the only
educational institutions deserving the name of universities, even in
our modern sense, that took definite form during the Thirteenth
Century. In Italy, mainly under the fostering care of
ecclesiastics, encouraged by such Popes as Innocent III, Gregory
IX, and Honorius IV, nearly a dozen other towns and cities saw
the rise of Studia Generalia eventually destined, and that within a
few decades after their foundation, to have the complete set of
faculties, and such a number of teachers and of students as merited for
them the name of University. Very early in the century Vicenza,
Reggio, and Arezzo became university towns. Before the first
quarter of the century was finished there were universities at Padua,
at Naples, and at Vercelli. In spite of the troublous times and the
great reduction in the population of Rome there was a university
founded in connection with the Roman Curia, that is the Papal
Court, before the middle of the century, and Siena and Piacenza had
founded rival university institutions. Perugia had a famous school
which became a complete university early in the Fourteenth Century.
Nor were other countries much behind Italy in this enthusiastic
movement. Montpelier had, for over a century before the beginning of
the thirteenth, rejoiced in a medical school which was the most
important rival of that at Salernum. At the beginning this reflected
largely the Moorish element in educational affairs in Europe at this
time. During the course of the Thirteenth Century Montpelier
developed into a full-fledged university though the medical school
still continued to be the most important faculty. Medical students
from all over the world flocked to the salubrious town to which patients
from all over were attracted, and its teachers and writers of medicine
have been famous in medical history ever since. How thorough was the
organization of clinical medical work at Montpelier may perhaps best be
appreciated from the fact, noted in the chapter on City Hospitals
-- Organized Charity, that when Pope Innocent III. wished to
establish a model hospital at Rome with the idea that it would form an
exemplar for other European cities, he sent down to Montpelier and
summoned Guy, the head of the Hospital of the Holy Ghost in that
city, to the Papal Capital to establish the Roman Hospital of the
Holy Ghost and, in connection with it, a large number of hospitals
all over Europe.
A corresponding state of affairs to that of Montpelier is to be noted
at Orleans, Only here the central school, around which the
university gradually grouped itself, was the Faculty of Civil Law.
Canon law was taught at Paris in connection with the theological
course, but there had always been objection to the admission of civil
law as a faculty on a basis of equality with the other faculties.
There was indeed at this time some rivalry between the civil and the
canon law and so the study of civil law was relegated to other
universities. Even early in the Twelfth Century Orleans was famous
for its school of civil law in which the exposition of the principles of
the old Roman law constituted the basis of the university course.
During the Thirteenth Century the remaining departments of the
university gradually developed, so that by the close of the century,
there seem to be conservative claims for over one thousand students.
Besides these three, French universities were also established at
Angers, at Toulouse, and the beginnings of institutions to become
universities early in the next century are recorded at Avignon and
Cahors.
Spain felt the impetus of the university movement early in the
Thirteenth Century and a university was founded at Palencia about the
end of the first decade. This was founded by Alfonso XII. and was
greatly encouraged by him. It is sometimes said that this university
was transferred to Salamanca about 1230, but this is denied by
Denifle, whose authority in matters of university history is
unquestionable. It seems not unlikely that Salamanca drew a number of
students from Palencia but that the latter continued still to attract
many students. About the middle of the Thirteenth Century the
university of Valladolid was founded. Before the end of the century a
fourth university, that of Lerida, had been established in the
Spanish peninsula. Spain was to see the greatest development of
universities during the Fourteenth Century. It was not long after
the end of the Thirteenth Century before Coimbra, in Portugal,
began to assume importance as an educational institution, though it was
not to have sufficient faculty and students to deserve the more
ambitious title of university for half a century.
While most people who know anything about the history of education
realize the important position occupied by the universities during the
Thirteenth Century and appreciate the estimation in which they were
held and the numbers that attended them, very few seem to know anything
of the preparatory schools of the time, and are prone to think that all
the educational effort of these generations was exhausted in connection
with the university. It is often said, as we shall see, that one
reason for the large number of students reported as in attendance at the
universities during the Thirteenth Century is to be found in the fact
that these institutions practically combined the preparatory school and
the academy of our time with the university. The universities are
supposed to have been the only centers of education worthy of mention.
There is no doubt that a number of quite young students were in
attendance at the universities, that is, boys from 12 to 15 who
would in our time be only in the preparatory school. We shall
explain, however, in the chapter on the Numbers in Attendance at the
Universities that students went to college much younger in the past and
graduated much earlier than they do in our day, yet apparently,
without any injury to the efficacy of their educational training.
In the universities of Southern Europe it is still the custom for
boys to graduate with the degree of A. B. at the age of 15 to
16, which supposes attendance at the university, or its equivalent
in undergraduate courses, at the age of 12 or even less. There is
no need, however, to appeal to the precociousness of the southern
nations in explanation of this, since there are some good examples of
it in comparatively recent times here in America. Most of the
colleges in this country, in the early part of the nineteenth century
and the end of the eighteenth, graduated young men of 16 and 17 and
thought that they were accomplishing a good purpose, in allowing them
to get at their life work in early manhood. Many of the distinguished
divines who made names in educational work are famous for their early
graduations. Dr. Benjamin Rush, of Philacielphia whom the medical
profession of this country hails as the Father of American Medicine,
graduated at Princeton at 15. He must have begun his college
course, therefore, about the age of 12. This may be considered
inadvisable in our generation, but, it must be remembered that there
are many even in our day, who think that our college men are allowed to
get at their life-work somewhat too late for their own good.
It must be emphasized moreover, that in many of the university towns
there were also preparatory schools. Courses were not regularly
organized until well on in the Thirteenth Century, but younger
brothers and friends of students as well as of professors would not
infrequently be placed under their care and thus be enabled to receive
their preparation for university work. At Paris, Robert Sorbonne
founded a preparatory school for that institution under the name of the
College of Calvi. Other colleges of this kind also existed in
Paris. This custom of having a preparatory school in association with
the university has not been abandoned even in our own day, and it has
some decided advantages from an educational standpoint, though perhaps
these are not enough to balance certain ethical disadvantages almost
sure to attach to such a system, disadvantages which ultimately led in
the Middle Ages to the prohibition that young students should be taken
at the universities under any pretext.
The presence of these young students in university towns probably did
add considerably to the numbers reported as in attendance. It must not
be thought, however, that there were no formal preparatory schools
quite apart from university influence. This thought has been the root
of more misunderstanding of the medieval system of education than almost
any other. As a matter of fact there were preliminary and preparatory
schools, what we would now call academies and colleges, in connection
with all of the important monasteries and with every cathedral.
Schools of less importance were required by a decree of a council held
at the beginning of the Thirteenth Century to be maintained in
connection with every bishop's church. During the Thirteenth
Century there were some twenty cathedrals in various parts of
England; each one had its cathedral school. Besides these there were
at least as many important abbeys, nearly a dozen of them immense
institutions, in which there were fine libraries, large writing
rooms, in which copies of books were being constantly made, many of
the members of the communities of which were university men, and around
which, therefore, there clung an atmosphere of bookishness and
educational influence that made them preparatory schools of a high
type. The buildings themselves were of the highest type of
architecture; the community life was well calculated to bring out what
was best in the intellectuality of members of the community, and,
then, there was a rivalry between the various religious orders which
made them prepare their men well in order that they might do honor to
the order when they had the opportunity later, as most of those who had
the ability and the taste actually did have, to go to one or other of
the universities.
This system of preparatory schools need not be accepted on the mere
assumption that the monasteries and churches must surely have set about
soch work, because there is abundant evidence of the actual
establishment and maintenance of such schools. With regard to the
monasteries there can be no doubt, because it was the members of the
religious orders who particularly distinguished themselves at the
universities, and the histories of Oxford, Cambridge, and Paris
are full of their accomplishments. They succeeded in obtaining the
right to have their own houses at the universities and to have their own
examinations count in university work, in order that they might
maintain their influence over the members of the orders during the
precious formative period of their intellectual life. With regard to
the church schools there is convincing evidence of another kind.
In the chapter on the foundation of City Hospitals we have detailed
on the authority of Virchow all that Innocent III. accomplished
for the hospital system of Europe. This chapter was published
originally in the form of a lecture from the historical department of
the Medical School of Fordham University and a reprint of it was
sent to a distinguished American educator well known for his
condemnation of supposed church intolerance in the matter of education
and scientific development. He said that he was glad to have it
because it confirmed and even broadened the idea that he had long
cherished, that the Church had done more for Charity during the
despised Middle Ages than national governments had ever been able to
accomplish since, though it was all the more surprising to him that it
should not have under the circumstances, done more for education,
since this might have prevented some of the ills that charity had
afterward to relieve. This expression very probably represents the
state of mind of very many scholars with regard to this period The
Church is supposed to have interested herself in charity almost to the
exclusion of educational influence. Charity is of course admitted to
be her special work, yet these scholars cannot help but regret that
more was not done in social prophylaxis by the encouragement of
education. In the light of this almost universal expression it is all
the more interesting to find that such opinions are founded entirely on
a lack of knowledge of what was done in education, since the same
Pope, in practically the same way and by the exertion of the same
prestige and ecclesiastical authority, did for education just what he
did for charity in the matter of the hospitals and the ailing poor.
Virchow, as we shall see, declared that to Innocent III. is due
the foundation of practically all the city hospitals in Europe. If
the effect of certain of the decrees issued in his papacy be carefully
followed, it will be found that practically as many schools as
hospitals owe their origin to his beneficent wisdom and his paternal
desire to spread the advantages of Christianity all over the civilized
world. This policy with regard to the hospitals led to the foundation
before the end of the century of at least one hospital in every diocese
of all the countries which were more closely allied with the Holy
See. There is extant a decree issued by the famous council of
Lateran, in 1215, a council in which Innocent's authority was
dominant, requiring the establishment of a Chair of Grammar in
connection with every cathedral in the Christian world. This Chair
of Grammar included at least three of the so-called liberal arts and
provided for what would now be called the education of a school
preparatory to a university.
Before this, Innocent III, [1] who had himself received the
benefit of the best education of the time, having spent some years at
Rome and later at Paris and at Bologna, had encouraged the sending
of students to these universities in every way. Bishops who came to
Rome were sure to hear inculcated the advisability of a taste for
letters in clergymen, hear it said often enough that such a taste would
surely increase the usefulness of all churchmen. Schools had been
encouraged before the issuance of the decree. This only came as a
confirmatory document calculated to perpetuate the policy that had
already been so prominently in vogue in the church for over fifteen
years of the Pope's reign. It was meant, too, to make clear to
hesitant and tardy bishops, who might have thought that the papal
interest in education was merely personal, that the policy of the
church was concerned in it and recalled them to a sense of duty in the
matter, since the ordinary enthusiasm for letters, even with the added
encouragement of the Pope, did not suffice to make them realize the
necessity for educational establishments.
The institution of the schools of grammar in connection with cathedrals
was well adapted to bring about a definite increase in the opportunities
for book learning for those who desired it. In connection with the
cathedrals there was always a band of canons whose duty it was to take
part in the singing of the daily office. Their ceremonial and ritual
duties did not, however, occupy them more than a few hours each day.
During the rest of the time they were free to devote themselves to any
subject in which they might be interested and had ample time for
teaching. The requirement that there should be at least a school of
grammar in connection with every cathedral afforded definite opportunity
to such of these ecclesiastics as had intellectual tastes to devote
themselves to the spread of knowledge and of culture, and this
reacted, as can be readily understood, to make the whole band of
canons more interested in the things of the mind, and to make the
cathedral even more the intellectual center of the district than might
otherwise have been the case.
For the metropolitan churches a more far-reaching regulation was made
by this same council of Lateran under the inspiration of the Pope
himself. These important Archiepiscopal cathedrals were required to
maintain professors of three chairs. One of these was to teach
grammar, a second philosophy, and a third canon law. Under these
designations there was practically included much of what is now studied
not only in preparatory schools but also at the beginning of University
courses. The regulation was evidently intended to lead eventually to
the formation of many more universities than were then in existence,
because already it had become clear that the traveling of students to
long distances and their gathering in such large numbers in towns away
from home influences, led to many abuses that might be obviated if they
could stay in their native cities, or at least did not have to leave
their native provinces. This was a far-seeing regulation that, like
so many other decrees of the century, manifests the very practical
policy of the Pope in matters of education as well as charity. As a
matter of fact this decree did lead to the gradual development of about
twenty universities during the Thirteenth Century, and to the
establishment of a number of other schools so important in scope and
attendance that their evolution into universities during the Fourteenth
Century became comparatively easy. This formal church law,
moreover, imposed upon ecclesiastical authorities the necessity for
providing for even higher education in their dioceses and made them
realize that it was entirely in sympathy with the church's spirit and
in accord with the wish of the Father of Christendom, that they
should make as ample provision for education as they did for charity,
though this last was supposed to be their special task as pastors of the
Christian flock.
All this important work for the foundation of preparatory schools in
every diocese and of the preliminary organization of teaching
institutions that might easily develop into universities, as they
actually did in a score of cases in metropolitan cities, was
accomplished under the first Pope of the Thirteenth Century,
Innocent III. His successors kept up this good work. Pope
Honorious III., his immediate successor, went so far in this
matter as to depose a bishop who had not read Donatus, the popular
grammarian of the time. The bishop evidently was considered unfit, as
far as his mental training went, to occupy the important post of head
of a diocese. Pope Gregory IX., the nephew of Innocent
III., was one of the most important patrons of the study of law in
this period (see Legal Origins in Other Countries), and
encouraged the collection of the decrees of former Popes so as to make
them available for purposes of study as well as for court use. He is
famous for having protected the University of Paris during some of the
serious trouble with the municipal authorities, when the large increase
of the number of students in attendance at the University had
unfortunately brought about strained relations between town and gown.
Pope Innocent IV. by several decrees encouraged the development of
the University of Paris, increased its rights and conferred new
privileges. He also did much to develop the University of Toulouse,
and especially to raise its standard and make it equal to that of Paris
as far as possible. The patronage of Toulouse on the part of the
Pope is all the more striking because the study of civil law was here a
special feature and the ecclesiastical authorities were often said to
have looked askance at the rising prominence of civil law, since it
threatened to diminish the importance of canon law; and the cultivation
of it, only too frequently, seemed to give rise to friction between
civil and ecclesiastical authorities. While the pontifical court of
Innocent IV. was maintained at Lyons it seemed, according to the
Literary History of France, [2] more like an academy of
theology and of canon law than the court of a great monarch whose power
was acknowledged throughout the world, or a great ecclesiastic who
might be expected to be occupied with details of Church government.
Succeeding Popes of the century were not less prominent in their
Patronage of education. Pope Alexander IV. supported the cause of
the Mendicant Friars against the University of Paris, but this was
evidently with the best of intentions. The mendicants came to claim
the privilege of having houses in association with the university in
which they might have lectures for the members of their orders, and
asked for due allowance in the matter of degrees for courses thus
taken. The faculty of the University did not want to grant this
privilege. though it was acknowledged that some of the best professors
In the University were members of the Mendicant orders, and we need
only mention such names as Albertus Magnus and St. Thomas Aquinas
from the Dominicans, and St. Bonaventure, Roger Bacon and Duns
Scotus from the Franciscans, to show the truth of this assertion.
To give such a privilege seemed a derogation of the faculty rights and
the University refused. Then the Holy See interfered to insist that
the University must give degrees for work done, rather than merely for
regulation attendance. The best possible proof that Pope Alexander
cannot be considered as wishing to injure or even diminish the prestige
of the University in any way, is to be found in the fact that he
afterwards sent two of his nephews to Paris to attend at the
University.
All these Popes, so far mentioned, were not Frenchmen and therefore
could have no national feeling in the matter of the University of
Paris or of the French universities in general. It is not surprising
to find that Pope Urban IV., who was a Frenchman and an alumnus
of the University of Paris, elevated many French scholars, and
especially his fellow alumni of Paris, to Church dignitaries of
various kinds. After Urban IV., Nicholas IV. who succeeded
him, though once more an Italian, founded chairs in the University
of Montpelier, and also a professorship in a school that it was hoped
would develop into a university at Gray in Franche Comte. In a
word, looked at from every point of view, it must be admitted that the
Church and ecclesiastical authorities were quite as much interested in
education as in charity during this century, and it is to them that
must be traced the foundation of the preparatory schools, as well as
the universities, and the origin and development of the great
educational movement that stamps this century as the greatest in human
history.
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