By M. Teenuwen, Mariken Teeuwen
ISBN-10: 250351457X
ISBN-13: 9782503514574
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E B I E D and M . J . L . Y O U N G , New light on the origin of the term 'Baccalaureate' (1974), pp. 3-7. ) Cf. O . W E I J E R S , Terminologie des universites (1987), pp. 178-179. 22 The domain is called baccalaria. 23 They too were, in origin, personal servants of the professors, and were a kind of caretakers or janitors, literally in charge of the school furniture (the bancae upon which the students sat). maioreslcommunes and the subbedelli, bedelli speciales or bedelli minores, here too there was a hierarchy within the profession: the bancarius generalis or bancarius maior of Toulouse coordinated the tasks of the bancarii of the individual schools.
120-122. In Prague, the system of bursae or studenthouses was originally different: the houses were often owned by a professor or a group of professors, and were sublet to students. Later student corporations (-^nationes) owned their own houses. 47 O . W E I J E R S , Terminologie des universites (1987), p. 97. See on bursarii at the College of the Sorbonne, O. W E I J E R S , Le vocabulaire du College de Sorbonne, CIVICIMA V I (i993)» PP- ii-ij48 Cf. O. W E I J E R S , Terminologie des universites (1987), pp.
W E I J E R S , Terminologie des universites (1987), pp. 71-72; see also A . M A I E R U , La terminologie de I'universite de Bologne de medecine et des arts, CIVICIMA V (1992), p. 142; and I D . , University Training in Medieval Europe (1994), p. 75 n. 18, on the number of colleges in Italian universities. 115 O. Weijers found attestations of collegia magistrorum in the sources of the Italian universities from the end of the thirteenth or beginning of the fourteenth century onwards, while the earliest attestation of such a college at the University of Paris is dated in 1272.
Vocabulary of Intellectual Life in the Middle Ages by M. Teenuwen, Mariken Teeuwen
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