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 9
... seem effectually to isolate the earlier age . To trace the progress of European thought we shall consequently Charle- find it necessary to follow Alcuin across the English channel 742 to the court of Charlemagne . magne . d . 814 . the ...
... seem effectually to isolate the earlier age . To trace the progress of European thought we shall consequently Charle- find it necessary to follow Alcuin across the English channel 742 to the court of Charlemagne . magne . d . 814 . the ...
Page 12
... seems natural to infer that the emperor , the warrior , the conqueror , would be the first to set himself free , as he beheld athwart the wide territories of his extending empire the bow of hope rising again to view . The new element ...
... seems natural to infer that the emperor , the warrior , the conqueror , would be the first to set himself free , as he beheld athwart the wide territories of his extending empire the bow of hope rising again to view . The new element ...
Page 14
... seems certain that , for a time at least , the English ecclesiastic heartily seconded the plans of his royal ... seem doubtful whether Alcuin ever cordially sympathized with the extension of instruction which Charlemagne brought about ...
... seems certain that , for a time at least , the English ecclesiastic heartily seconded the plans of his royal ... seem doubtful whether Alcuin ever cordially sympathized with the extension of instruction which Charlemagne brought about ...
Page 20
... seem raised to unenviable eminence , only to be marked out for the dislike of the crowd , who impute all their failings ... seems hard to withhold the meed of praise from a poor French bishop of the ninth century ; unless indeed such ...
... seem raised to unenviable eminence , only to be marked out for the dislike of the crowd , who impute all their failings ... seems hard to withhold the meed of praise from a poor French bishop of the ninth century ; unless indeed such ...
Page 24
... seems out of all proportion to the end in view , the allegorical por- tion of the treatise occupying more than a ... seem to be in error when he attributes its first conception to Capella . See Dean Mansel's Introd . to Artis Logica Ru ...
... seems out of all proportion to the end in view , the allegorical por- tion of the treatise occupying more than a ... seem to be in error when he attributes its first conception to Capella . See Dean Mansel's Introd . to Artis Logica Ru ...
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The University of Cambridge: From the Earliest Times, to the Royal ... James Bass Mullinger No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
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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