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Topic: University of Paris strike of 1229


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In the News (Fri 11 Dec 09)

  
  University of Paris - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The historic University of Paris (French: Université de Paris) first appeared in the second half of the 12th century, but was in 1970 reorganized as 13 autonomous universities (University of Paris I–XIII).
The university is often referred to as the Sorbonne or La Sorbonne after the collegiate institution (Collège de Sorbonne) founded about 1257 by Robert de Sorbon, but the university as such is older and was never completely centered on the Sorbonne.
Similarly to the other of the earliest medieval universities (University of Bologna, University of Oxford, University of Salamanca), but in opposition to later ones (such as the University of Prague or the University of Heidelberg), the University of Paris was never established through a specific foundation act, such as a royal charter or papal bull.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Sorbonne   (1130 words)

  
 Medieval university :: Web Articles ::
The first European medieval universities were established in Italy, France and England in the late 11th and the 12th Century for the study of arts, law, medicine, and theology.
The development of the medieval university coincided with the widespread reintroduction of Aristotle from Byzantine and Jewish scholars and the decline in popularity of Platonism and Neoplatonism in favor of Aristotelian thought.
This happened at the University of Paris strike of 1229 after a riot (started by the students) left a number of students dead; the University went on strike and did not return for 2 years.
www.webarticles.com /Education/Universities/Medieval-university   (1078 words)

  
 University of Paris strike of 1229   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
In 1229, a student riot at the University of Paris resulted in the deaths of a number of students, and the student strike in protest which followed lasted more than two years and led to a number of reforms of the medieval university.
The University of Paris was founded around 1150 and was one of the first universities in Europe and considered the most prestigious because of its focus on the "Queen" of science, theology.
After two years of negotiations, Pope Gregory IX, an alumnus of Paris himself, on April 13, 1231 decreed the Parens Scientarum ("The Mother of Sciences"), which has been called the Magna Carta of the University of Paris because it guaranteed the school a larger measure of independence from papal authority.
university-of-paris-strike-of-1229.iqnaut.net   (613 words)

  
 Town and gown - Gnorx.com, the free encyclopedia
During the Middle Ages, students admitted to the European universities often held minor clerical status, particularly on the continent, and donned garb similar to that worn by the clergy.
By the Papal bull "Parens scientiarum" (1231), the charter of the University of Paris, Pope Gregory IX authorized the masters in the event of an outrage committed by anyone upon a scholar and not redressed within fifteen days, to suspend their lectures.
The University of Cambridge was originally set-up after a fight between the townspeople of Oxford and scholars from Oxford University forced many scholars to flee to a new location.
www.gnorx.com /Town_and_gown   (3296 words)

  
 Restoring the Scholarly Balance
It can hardly be denied that universities were badly in need of reform as educational institutions when in 1988 the government in the form of federal education minister Dawkins stepped in to fill what had become a virtual vacuum.
Further, the University of Paris was an organisation squarely anchored in the 'real world', providing education and training for practitioners in all the major professions - medical, legal and clerical - as well as for government officials and advisors.
Academics and universities are once again in a position to resume their time honoured role and the medieval University of Paris need no longer represent some impossibly archaic piece of ancient history.
www.foucault.qut.edu.au /unis.html   (1636 words)

  
 University of Paris   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The Sorbonne, Paris, in a 17th century engraving The historic University of Paris (French: Université de Paris) first appeared in the second half of the 12th century, but was in 1970 reorganized as 13 autonomous universities (University of Paris I–XIII).
In 1968 it was the starting point of the cultural revolution commonly known as "the French May" (see also situationism), resulting in the closing of the University for the second time in history (the first having been the invasion by the German army of 1940).
Category:Paris Paris Category:University of Paris de:Sorbonne eo:La Sorbonne es:Universidad de París fr:Université de Paris ja:&12497;&12522;&22823;&23398; nl:Sorbonne pl:Sorbona ru:&1057;&1086;&1088;&1073;&1086;&1085;&1085;&1072; fi:Pariisin yliopisto sv:Sorbonne
university-of-paris.iqnaut.net   (1049 words)

  
 Gatorsports.com :: 100 years of Gator Football
The historic University of Paris () first appeared in the second half of the 12th century, but was in 1970 reorganized as 13 autonomous universities (University of Paris I–XIII).
The historical campus, located in the Quartier Latin, in the arrondissement">5th arrondissement of Paris, featuring mural paintings by Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, was split for use between several of the universities of Paris and the Rector's services.
André Tuiler: Histoire de l'Université de Paris et de la Sorbonne ("History of the University of Paris and of the Sorbonne"), in 2 volumes (From the Origins to Richelieu, From Louis XIV to the Crisis of 1968), Paris: Nouvelle Librairie de France, 1997 ;
www.gatorsports.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?template=wiki&text=University_of_Paris   (4634 words)

  
 Riot Encyclopedia Article @ Protested.org   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Paris -- France sent riot police reinforcements yesterday to the southern city of Marseilles where young vandals torched a bus during the night, leaving a...
Teamsters, armed with pipes, riot in a clash with riot police in the Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934.
Malay Muslims riot in the 1964 Race Riots near Kallang, Singapore, due to the racial and religious tensions at that time.
www.protested.org /encyclopedia/Riot   (943 words)

  
 Medieval university   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Map of Medieval Universities The predecessor of the modern university found its roots in Paris, especially under the guidance of Peter Abelard, who wrote Sic et Non (Latin "yes or no"), which collected texts for university study.
Women were not allowed in universities because of the clerical legal status of students, and Women by law could not be clerics.
A popular textbook for university study was called the Sentences (''Quattuor libri sententarium'') of Peter Lombard; theology students and masters were required to write extensive commentaries on this text as part of their curriculum.
medieval-university.iqnaut.net   (1163 words)

  
 1229 - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
1226 1227 1228 - 1229 - 1230 1231 1232
Foundation of the University of Toulouse in Toulouse, France.
1229, Events, Births, Deaths, Self-contradictory articles and 1229.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/1229   (162 words)

  
 Saint Bonaventure (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
In October 1256, Pope Alexander IV ordered the secular Masters at Paris to accept Bonaventure and the Dominican Thomas of Aquino in their rightful places as Masters of Theology, but it was not until 12 August 1257 that they did so.
Yet the most striking feature of Bonaventure's account of the philosophers is the manner in which he juxtaposes the doctrine of creation, as he understands it, with the philosophical theory of origins.
Third, seminal reasons are not, as we have just seen, universal in their application to the living things that occur within the order of natural history; human beings, at least in terms of their souls, fall outside the range of influence of seminal reasons.
plato.stanford.edu /entries/bonaventure   (11356 words)

  
 University of Paris strike of 1229 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It was the model for all others including Oxford University.
The Pope's courts knew that the University tended to be very protective of its students, and fearing causing a split like that of Cambridge University from Oxford, they were trying to approach the matter carefully.
But the secular ruler, Blanche of Castile, the ruler of France during the minority of Louis IX, stepped in and demanded retribution.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/University_of_Paris_strike_of_1229   (631 words)

  
 University of Paris   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The Sorbonne, Paris, in a 17th century engraving The Sorbonne today, from the same point of view The historic University of Paris (French: Université de Paris) first appeared in the second half of the 12th century, but was in 1970 reorganized as 13 autonomous universities (University of Paris I–XIII).
It is also the name of its main campus in the 5th arrondissement of Paris, which now houses several universities (heirs to the former University of Paris) as well as the Paris rectorate.
Category:Paris Paris Category:University of Paris de:Sorbonne eo:La Sorbonne es:Universidad de París fr:Université de Paris ja:パリ大学 nl:Sorbonne pl:Sorbona sv:Sorbonne
university-of-paris.kiwiki.homeip.net   (1017 words)

  
 Shepherds\' Crusade   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
They followed him to Paris in May, where the Master met with Blanche of Castile, Louis IX's mother who was acting as regent during His absence.
Their movement in the city was restricted; they were not allowed to cross to the Left Bank, where the University of Paris was located, as Blanche perhaps feared another disturbance related to the University of Paris strike of 1229.
They marched to Paris to ask Philip V to lead them, but he refused to meet with them at all.
shepherds-crusade.iqnaut.net   (929 words)

  
 University of Paris - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
4 Suppression of the colleges and establishment of the University of France
Four colleges appear in the twelfth century; they became more numerous in the thirteenth, and among them may be mentioned Collège d'Harcourt (1280) and the Collège de Sorbonne (1257).
[edit] Suppression of the colleges and establishment of the University of France
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/University_of_Paris   (4688 words)

  
 Everything about Albigensian Crusade   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The Inquisition was established in Toulouse in November 1229 and the process of ridding the area of heresy and investing the remaining Cathar strongholds began.
The war ended in the Treaty of Paris (1229), by which the king of France dispossessed the house of Toulouse of the greater part of its fiefs, and that of Béziers of the whole of its fiefs.
Amongst the most striking of festive events are the correfocs, in which "devils" play with fire and with the people.
wikimiki.org /en/Albigensian+Crusade   (12631 words)

  
 no.5159 - Hechmat Tabechian   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Located in Rochester, New York, USA and founded in 1850, the University of Rochester is a private, coeducational and nonsectarian research institution.
The University's current president is Joel Seligman, who replaced Thomas H. Jackson as the University's 10th president on July 1, 2005.
Association of American Universities (AAU) Rochester is one of 62 members of this organization of the leading public and private research and graduate institutions in the United States and Canada.
hechmat.tabechian.en.infoax.info   (2533 words)

  
 Rapid, Along-Strike Kinematic, Tectonic, and Thermochronologic Variations Within Obliquely Convergent Circum-Pacific ...
Extension in the Hengchun Peninsula correlates with similar patterns of extension along strike and together define a zone of extension east of the crest that extends nearly the entire length of the orogenic belt.
Along the N-S striking Cascadia subduction zone, the slab resistance is in the southerly direction and, together with other boundary forces, gives rise to a torque that tends to rotate the slab clockwise.
Also, a series of roughly arc parallel strike slip faults may form in the fore-arc area, both onshore and offshore, as is observed in the Aleutian arc.
www.agu.org /meetings/fm04/fm04-sessions/fm04_T41C.html   (14307 words)

  
 May 1968 - Enpsychlopedia
It quickly began to reach near-revolutionary proportions before being discouraged by the Stalinist oriented French Communist Party, and finally suppressed by the government, which accused the Communists of plotting against the Republic.
Some philosophers and historians have argued that the rebellion was the single most important revolutionary event of the 20th century because it wasn't participated in by a lone demographic, such as workers or racial minorities, but was rather a purely popular uprising, superseding ethnic, cultural, age and class boundaries.
The events were preceded in the US when President Lyndon Johnson withdrew from the 1968 presidential campaign in March due to months of protests, Martin Luther King Jr.
enpsychlopedia.org /psypsych/French_May   (2372 words)

  
 1229 - Exalead Search   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
This result has no audio, video or RSS and is not listed in the web directory.
1229 sheffield steorbord.easyjournal.com Female, 22 i have a secret to tell from my electrical...
support forums 1229 Years: 1226 1227 1228 - 1229 - 1230 1231 1232 Decades:...
www.exalead.com /search?q=1229   (403 words)

  
 University of Paris strike of 1229 information - Search.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
University of Paris strike of 1229 information - Search.com
Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Find valuable school information for the University of Phoenix here!
c10-ss-1-lb.cnet.com /reference/University_of_Paris_strike_of_1229   (643 words)

  
 Discover the Wisdom of Mankind on riot   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
This is defined similarly to riot (but no common purpose is required), but for three or more persons.
, armed with pipes, riot in a clash with riot police in the Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934.]]
Australia is known for the Sydney Riot of 1879, one of the earliest riots at an international cricket match.
www.blinkbits.com /blinks/riot   (1158 words)

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