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5 - From school to studium generale

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2009

Olaf Pedersen
Affiliation:
Aarhus Universitet, Denmark
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Summary

The strong economic and political changes in medieval society following the first millennium were accompanied by a rapid transformation within higher education. To a great extent this development can be attributed to the steadily increasing contact with ‘Arab’ culture, mediated by the hard industry of translators. Through these efforts Latin Europe came into possession of a scholarly literature of great extent for the first time since antiquity. Some of this literature was of high quality and comprised crucial parts of the best of the literary legacy of Greek scholarship, along with the works of many great thinkers and men of learning who had worked within Islam. In reality this was a true explosion of information that would clearly mean an enormous intellectual challenge for twelfth-century teaching and science. Later ages have often cherished an image of medieval polymaths, people capable of cultivating all subjects with equal competence. But this view is exaggerated. There is no doubt that after these translations appeared, the collected literature became too copious for any single teacher to cope with. An Alcuin or a Gerbert was no longer thinkable, and in no previous time had the situation seemed so hard to grasp for a teacher who wished to be universally oriented. In this context it can be understood that the schools of the twelfth century reacted to this challenge in the most logical way, namely by specialising. Everywhere we can spot a tendency to divide the work up by subject. This had the most farreaching consequences for the whole system of education.

Type
Chapter
Information
The First Universities
Studium Generale and the Origins of University Education in Europe
, pp. 122 - 154
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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