A History of the University of Cambridge: Volume 2, 1546-1750

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Cambridge University Press, 1988 - 636 páginas
This is the first volume of a four-part History of the University of Cambridge, under the general editorship of Professor C.N.L. Brooke, and the first volume on the medieval university as a whole to be published in over a century. It provides a synthesis of the intellectual, social, political and religious life of the early university, and gives serious attention to the development of classroom studies and how they changed with the coming of the Renaissance and the Reformation. Following the first stirrings in the early thirteenth century, the evolution of the university is traced from the original corporation of masters and scholars through the early development of the colleges. The second half of the book focuses on the century from the 1440s to the 1540s, which saw the flowering of the university under Tudor patronage. In the decades preceding the Reformation many colleges were founded, the teaching structures reorganised and the curriculum made more humanistic. The place of Cambridge at the forefront of northern European universities was eventually assured when Henry VIII founded Trinity College in 1546, in the face of changes and difficulties experienced during the course of the Reformation.
 

Contenido

I
1
3
62
CAMBRIDGE AND PARLIAMENT BY V M
147
Corrupt elections
159
Lands and leases
173
CAMBRIDGE AND THE COUNTRY BY V M
181
Distribution by college and college status of a sample
202
University experience among a sample of about 470
231
HEADS LEASES AND MASTERS LODGES BY V M
256
IO THE CAMBRIDGE ELECTORAL SCENE IN
343
LEARNING AND DOCTRINE 15501660 BY C B
437
CAMBRIDGE IN THE AGE OF THE PURITAN
464
CAMBRIDGE AND THE SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION
483
IS THE SYLLABUS RELIGION AND POLITICS
511
EPILOGUE BY C B
542
Bibliographical references
550

GOWNSMEN
243
Cambridge population excluding colleges
247

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Acerca del autor (1988)

Christopher Brooke, the former Dixie Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Cambridge University and a life fellow of Conville and Caius College, Cambridge, is a leading scholar of medieval history. He is a fellow of the British Academy and corresponding fellow of the Medieval Academy of America. Dr Victor Morgan is Lecturer in History, University of East Anglia.

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