During the Middle Ages, universities were established to educate and train scholars, with the first ones emerging in the 12th century in cities like Bologna and Paris. These institutions provided a structured curriculum that included the liberal arts, theology, medicine, and law. Additionally, monastic schools and cathedral schools played crucial roles in education, preserving knowledge and training clergy. These efforts contributed significantly to the intellectual revival of the period.
Muslim scholars
to educate physicians, astronomers and mathematicians.
It means history concerning the period of the Middle Ages. - Most European scholars consider "Middle Ages" from the Norman conquest of England (1066 ) to about 1485. American scholars see it as from 500 Ad to 1500 Ad.
During the Middle Ages, the word clerk was applied primarily to scholars of any sort. The word is related to the words cleric and clergy, but was extended to include almost anyone who worked at jobs that required reading and writing, such as secretaries and officers of the courts.
Erasmus a monk, St. Thomas Moore and
Muslim scholars
to educate physicians, astronomers and mathematicians.
they did home schooling
middle
In England during the Middle Ages
Dwyer Middle School's motto is 'House of Scholars and Champions'.
A middle class was created
Two advances in education during the Middle Ages were that scholars created a new form of writing that made it easier to read. Students in universities studied Latin grammar and rhetoric, logic, geometry, arithmetic, astronomy, and music. Books at that time were hand copied and very rare, so teachers often read to students.
typewritters
Latin was used as a common language all over Western Europe. Greek was used similarly, to a degree, in the East.
In order to educate himself on the costume, culture, and setting of the Biblical accounts, Tissot made three extensive trips to the Middle East.
It means history concerning the period of the Middle Ages. - Most European scholars consider "Middle Ages" from the Norman conquest of England (1066 ) to about 1485. American scholars see it as from 500 Ad to 1500 Ad.