The University of Cambridge: From the earliest times to the royal injunctions of 1535University Press, 1873 |
From inside the book
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Page xvii
... philosophy The traditional hostility to pagan literature not aimed at the philosophers Hostility now excited at Rome The scientific treatises the first there condemned The emperor Frederic II • Anathemas pronounced by the Church The ...
... philosophy The traditional hostility to pagan literature not aimed at the philosophers Hostility now excited at Rome The scientific treatises the first there condemned The emperor Frederic II • Anathemas pronounced by the Church The ...
Page xxxiii
... philosopher . His other literary labours LEARNING IN GERMANY Reuchlin and Argyropulos Eneas Sylvius and Gregory Heimburg Hegius ... philosophy , Use of the native language in classical studies Acquired knowledge to be not only stored but ...
... philosopher . His other literary labours LEARNING IN GERMANY Reuchlin and Argyropulos Eneas Sylvius and Gregory Heimburg Hegius ... philosophy , Use of the native language in classical studies Acquired knowledge to be not only stored but ...
Page 4
... philosophy of history is set forth in a work of comparatively moderate compass , — His De Civi- the De Civitate Dei . From the earliest times , a very solemn belief had prevailed with more or less intensity in the different sections of ...
... philosophy of history is set forth in a work of comparatively moderate compass , — His De Civi- the De Civitate Dei . From the earliest times , a very solemn belief had prevailed with more or less intensity in the different sections of ...
Page 11
... Philosophy , p . 38 , incline to a far less favorable estimate of the ecclesiastic . Alcuin has been least favorably judged by his own countrymen , a fact which may be explained by his sympathies with monasticism in its more ascetic ...
... Philosophy , p . 38 , incline to a far less favorable estimate of the ecclesiastic . Alcuin has been least favorably judged by his own countrymen , a fact which may be explained by his sympathies with monasticism in its more ascetic ...
Page 23
... philosophy , his eloquence , and his fertility of exposition . Such was the origin of the volume which after- wards became the school history of the Middle Ages , and it must be owned that it is a decidedly sombre treatise . It was the ...
... philosophy , his eloquence , and his fertility of exposition . Such was the origin of the volume which after- wards became the school history of the Middle Ages , and it must be owned that it is a decidedly sombre treatise . It was the ...
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The University of Cambridge: From the Earliest Times, to the Royal ... James Bass Mullinger No preview available - 2015 |
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Albertus Alcuin already ancient Annals appears Aquinas archbishop Aristotle arts authority Averroes bishop Boethius Cambridge canon law chancellor CHAP character Church civil law clergy connexion divinity doctrines Dominicans DUCTION Duns Scotus ecclesiastical election England English Erasmus evidence favour Fisher foundation founder fourteenth century Franciscans friars grammar Greek Hall Hist hostel Ibid influence INTRO John King's labours Latin learning lectures letter literature logic Lollardism master Mendicants ment Merton Michaelhouse monastery monastic monks observes Occam original Oxford papal period Peter Lombard Peterhouse philosophy pope Prantl prior Priscian probably quæ quam quod recognised Reformation regarded regents religious respect Roger Bacon Rome Roscellinus says scholars scholasticism schoolmen schools secular sity spirit statutes super theology theory thirteenth thought tion translation treatise Trinity Trinity Hall trivium univer university of Paris versity Walter de Merton William Wolsey writings Wyclif
Popular passages
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