The Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages: pt. 1. Italy. Spain. France. Germany. Scotland, etc

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Clarendon Press, 1895
 

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Página 730 - Nulli ergo omnino hominum liceat hanc paginam nostre concessionis infringere, vel ei ausu temerario contraire. Si quis autem hoc attemptare presumpserit, indignationem Omnipotentis Dei et beatorum Petri et Pauli, apostolorum ejus, se noverit incursurum.
Página 4 - Also in three volumes, crown 8vo, price 12s. each. Seventeen Lectures on the Study of Mediaeval and Modern History and kindred subjects, 1867-1884.
Página 786 - court of summary jurisdiction" shall mean any justice or justices of the peace, or other magistrate, by whatever name called, to whom jurisdiction is given by, or who is authorised to act under, the Summary Jurisdiction Acts, whether in England, Wales, or Ireland, and whether acting under the Summary Jurisdiction Acts or any of them, or under any other Act, or by virtue of his commission, or under the common law. (12.) The expression " petty sessional court " shall, as respects England or Wales,...
Página 712 - ... are to make possible the life of study, whether for a few years or during a whole career, and to bring together during that period, face to face in living intercourse, teacher and teacher, teacher and student, student and student.
Página 787 - petty sessional court-house " shall, as respects England or Wales, mean a court-house or other place at which justices are accustomed to assemble for holding special or petty sessions, or which is for the time being appointed as a substitute for such a courthouse or place, and where the justices are accustomed to assemble for either special or petty sessions at more than one court-house or place in a petty sessional division, shall mean any such court-house or place. The expression shall...
Página 657 - But, by my counsel, it shall not be best for us to fall to the lowest fare first: we will not therefore descend to Oxford fare, nor to the fare of New Inn. But we will begin with Lincoln's Inn diet...
Página 403 - Croydon the Vintner brought them some, but they disliking it, as it should seem, and he avouching it to be good, several snappish words passed between them. At length the Vintner giving them stubborn and saucy language, they threw the wine and vessel at his head.
Página 705 - It was not the wont of the practical men of the Middle Ages to disparage academic training. The rapid multiplication of Universities during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries was largely due to a direct demand for highly educated lawyers and administrators.
Página 706 - From a practical point of view their greatest service to mankind was simply this, that they placed the administration of human affairs — in short, the government of the world — in the hands of educated men. The actual rulers — the Kings or the aristocrats — might often be as uneducated or more uneducated than modern democracies, but they had to rule through the instrumentality of a highly educated class.
Página 703 - ... a somewhat melancholy record of misdirected energy, stupid routine, and narrow one-sidedness. It seems to be only at rare moments in the history of the human mind that an enthusiasm for knowledge and a many-sided interest in the things of the intellect stir the dull waters of educational commonplace.

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