Synopses & Reviews
James Bass Mullinger (1834-1917) was a University Lecturer in History and Librarian at St. John's College, Cambridge. His monumental three-volume history of the university was the standard one at the turn of the twentieth century. For most of his career Mullinger worked on the project alongside his academic duties and his writing for periodicals, the first volume appearing in 1873 and the last in 1911. His extraordinary range of knowledge and the sheer scale of the work make this ambitious project a landmark in the history of universities in Britain. Volume 1 covers the beginnings of the university and the foundation of the early colleges, up to the death of Erasmus. Mullinger compares medieval Cambridge with the universities of Bologna and Oxford, and always keeps in view the university's influence on the country as a whole through the education of its political and social elites.
Synopsis
The first volume of this monumental late Victorian history, covering the early development of Cambridge University to 1535.
Synopsis
Mullinger's three-volume masterpiece was the standard history of Cambridge University at the turn of the twentieth century. This volume covers the foundation of the university and its colleges and its flourishing in the early renaissance, ending with the death of Erasmus.
Table of Contents
Preface; Introduction; 1. Commencement of the university era; 2. Rise of the English universities; 3. Cambridge prior to the classical era; 4. Student life in the middle ages; 5. Cambridge at the revival of classical learning; 6. Cambridge at the Reformation; Appendix; Index.