History of Universities – serie
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3 produkter
1 389 kr
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Since 1988 (Volume VII) there have been two new sections, one devoted to research in progress and the other to an on-going bibliography of recent publications in the history of higher education throughout the world.Michael McVaugh and Luis Garcia Ballester: The Medical Faculty at Early Fourteenth-Century Lérida; Thomas E. Morrissey: The Art of Teaching and Learning Law: a Late Medieval Tract; Mario Rizzo: University, Administration, Taxation, and Society in Italy in the Sixteenth Century: the Case of Fiscal Exemptions for the University of Pavia; G. L. E. Turner: Experimental Science in Early Nineteenth-Century Oxford; Hans-Georg Schneider: The Threat to Authority in the Revolution of Chemistry; Notker Hammerstein: The Modern World, Sciences, Medicine, and Universities.
531 kr
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History of Universities is an annual publication devoted to the study of every aspect of university history from the Middle Ages to 1945. Each volume consists of a number of articles and book reviews written by scholars from many different countries.Volume VI chiefly comprises articles on the intellectual, social, and professional role of the late-medieval universities, especially Oxford and Paris. The volume is prefaced by an obituary notice dedicated to Charles Schmitt of the Warburg Institute, the internationally renowned Renaissance scholar and founding-editor of the journal, who died in April 1986. The new editor is Laurence Brockliss of Magdalen College, Oxford, a specialist in French higher education in the early-modern period. He is assisted by an editorial board drawn from the leading authorities on the history of the university in Great Britain, Europe, and the United States.
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The seventh volume of this annual publication consists primarily of eleven articles devoted to the period 1760-1848. The papers range from the study of particular faculties to the role of government in higher education and the concept of a liberal education. Together, the articles form a unique account of the development of the university in the age of the liberal revolution in countries as distinct as Russia, France, and the United States.As well as containing the usual wide selection of book reviews devoted to recent works on university history, this volume also contains two new sections, one devoted to research in progress, and the other to an on-going bibliography of recent publications (articles and books) in the field of the history of higher education throughout the world. With these additions, Volume VII is much larger than its predecessors, confirming History of Universities as an indispensable tool for every student of the history of education.