The University of cambridge from the earliest times to the royal injunctions

Front Cover
CUP Archive, 1873 - 686 pages
 

Contents

PAGE
xlviii
Believes posterity will do him more justice
1
Instance from Matthew Paris
3
Teaching of Gregory the Great
6
State of learning among the clergy
12
SCHOOL BOOKS OF THE DARK AGES
21
General conclusion with respect to the culture of the Dark
32
FOUNDATION OF PETERHOUSE A D 1284
36
Causes of this difference
421
The phenomena of the age not of an inspiriting character
428
A treatise by Petrarch at Michaelhouse
434
Foundation of GODS HOUSE A D 1439
445
Fisher elected president of Queens College
446
90
451
John Fawne Richard Whitford and Richard Sampson
472
The Greek fathers begin to be better known
483

Berengar
46
THE SENTENCES OF PETER LOMBARD
60
Events of the year 1516 558
71
THE UNIVERSITY OF BOLOGNA
72
Other universities founded in the thirteenth century
80
Testimony of Grosseteste to the good effects of their activity
85
Account of Giraldus Cambrensis
87
9
90
11
125
THE COLLEGES OF PARIS
126
RISE OF THE ENGLISH UNIVERSITIES
132
OUTLINE OF THE EARLY ORGANISATION OF THE ENGLISH UNI
135
Poggio Bracciolini and the Fratres Observantiæ
140
Authority of the chancellor
142
His translation of Aristotles Ethics
154
Foundation of Merton College A D 1264
160
DUNS SCOTUS
169
Schools founded by Charlemagne
187
THOMAS BRADWARDINE
198
Alcuins distrust of pagan learning
209
CAMBRIDGE PRIOR TO THE CLASSICAL
213
HUGH BALSHAM
224
51
225
FOUNDATION OF PEMBROKE COLLEGE A D 1347
236
FOUNDATION OF CLARE HALL by Elizabeth de Burgh A D 1359
250
CAMBRIDGE PRIOR TO THE CLASSICAL
258
The Great Councils
275
Course of study pursued by the student of grammar
280
REGINALD PECOCK
290
Torpor of the universities after Pecocks time
297
Goughs account of the alien priories
304
FOUNDATION OF QUEENS COLLEGE A D 1448
312
53
317
FOUNDATION OF ST CATHERINES HALL A D 1475
318
32
319
FOUNDATION OF THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
321
55
326
Instruction in grammar to some extent preliminary to
349
The father
356
Concession made in 1431
357
33
362
SPORTS AND PASTIMES
373
The question which the schoolmen were called to decide
379
Duke Humphreys bequests to Oxford
399
BESSARION
403
LEARNING IN GERMANY
409
The study of ancient literature forbidden under a
412
The Humanists and the religious orders
416
His estimate of different fathers
500
The last glimpse of Erasmus at Cambridge
506
Bryan lectures in the schools from the new versions of Aristotle
518
RICHARD CROKE
538
Oxford a Cambridge colony
539
Alcuins view becomes the traditional theory of the Church
542
Hopes of the Humanists
559
36
561
GEORGE STAFFORD
567
King Henry and Fisher write against Luther
572
His second examination which is similarly interrupted
578
Sir Thomas More elected high steward
585
Reason of the dislike with which it was now regarded
588
91
592
228
596
The aid thus rendered to Oxford not superfluous
602
Skeltons satire of the Cambridge Reformers
608
THE ROYAL DIVORCE
612
Position of Fisher
622
Fisher is committed to prison
628
Distinction instituted in the monastic schools between
649
433
650
Their rapid extension 90
653
Feeling of the university
654
The outcome of his work in England and of English patronage
655
These libraries compared with that of Christchurch Canter
656
38
657
Disturbed state of the empire after the death of Charle
658
Story from Eusebius
661
427
662
Interview between the Franciscan emissaries and Grosse
663
The Testaments of the Twelve Patriarchs
665
6252
666
THE BARNWELL PROCESS A D 1430
667
Testimony of Machiavelli and Savonarola to the depravity
668
47
669
Proclamation of Indulgences by Leo x
670
Bishop Lupus of Ferrières
671
Professor Brewers criticism
674
nastic schools
675
The Summula of Petrus Hispanus
676
50
677
FOUNDATION OF TRINITY HALL by bishop Bateman A D 1350
679
Robert Shorton first master
680
Signal gain of the university
681
house
685
9
686
Cromwell succeeds Fisher as chancellor 629

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