Life in the Medieval University
| Authors | Rait, Robert S. |
| Series | Project Gutenberg [20958.0] |
| Publisher | Project Gutenberg |
| Published | 02 apr 2007 |
| Date | 18 feb 2015 |
| Languages | eng |
| Identifiers | oclc: 746971536, uri: https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/20958 |
| Formats | EPUB |
Description
mentioned in this answer to "What kind of music was played at European, High Middle Age (c. 1100-1400 A.D.) universities' ceremonies?"
and in the question "How did medieval universities discipline?"; cf. chapters
"the insistence upon celibacy in the northern universities is one of the characteristic differences between them and the universities of Southern Europe." (ref:0.64).
mentioned 1× in Today's Medieval University
ref:1.26 on ordinary vs. cursory lectures: Engl. transl. of Tocco's St. Thomas Aquinas bio., p. 61n37: "The principal role of the Bachelor was to lecture ‘cursorily’ (cursorie) to less advanced Bible and Peter Lombard’s Sentences."