Trilingual College

Trilingual College
   A humanistic educational institution that taught all three of the ancient languages in which classical literature, the Bible, and patristic writings were written, Hebrew, Greek, and (classical) Latin. The founding of institutes for the teaching of these three languages and for study of the ancient texts written in them was one of the major demands of the "biblical humanists" of the late 15th and early 16th centuries. The first school organized along these lines was the College of San Ildefonso in the new University of Alcalá, founded by Archbishop Francisco Ximénes de Cisneros (formally established in 1499; instruction began in 1509). In 1517 a similar in-stitution, the Collegium Trilingue, was founded at the University of Louvain. The appointment of a group of scholarly specialists as Royal Readers to lecture on similar subjects by King Francis I in 1530 marks a parallel development in France, though these lectures did not have a real institutional foundation until much later in the 16th century; eventually, they developed into the Collège Royal. Al-though not conventionally labelled a trilingual college, the Univer-sity of Wittenberg under the leadership of Martin Luther in 1519 underwent reforms that by classicizing the teaching of Latin and adding permanent chairs of both Greek and Hebrew transformed it also into a trilingual institution.

Historical Dictionary of Renaissance. . 2004.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Collège Royal —    The present day Collège de France has long regarded itself as the descendant of the pre revolutionary Collège Royal and traces its foundation back to a group of lecturers appointed by King Francis I in 1530 to promote humanistic studies in… …   Historical Dictionary of Renaissance

  • Corpus Christi College, Oxford — Colleges and halls of the University of Oxford Corpus Christi College …   Wikipedia

  • List of Clubs and Societies of Royal College, Colombo — At Royal College there is much encouragement for the formation of institutions of extracurricular activities since its early days. This was marked with starting of the college magazine and the library in 1837. Today there are over 60 clubs and… …   Wikipedia

  • D. S. Senanayake College — Coordinates: 6°54′30″N 79°52′30″E / 6.90833°N 79.875°E / 6.90833; 79.875 …   Wikipedia

  • St Mary's College, St Andrews — Infobox University name =St Mary s College native name = latin name =Collegium Sancti Mariam motto =IN PRINCIPIO ERAT VERBUM (Latin: In the Beginning was the Word) established =1538 type =College endowment = staff = faculty = rector = chancellor …   Wikipedia

  • International College, Beirut — Infobox Private School background = #f0f6fa border = #ccd2d9 name = International College established = 1891 type = Independent religion = Non sectarian head name = Head of school head = John K. Johnson city = Beirut country = Lebanon enrollment …   Wikipedia

  • Budé, Guillaume — (1468 1540)    The most famous French humanist of the first half of the 16th century. Born into a recently ennobled family of royal officials, he studied law at Orléans but left without taking a degree. In 1491 he underwent a sort of secular… …   Historical Dictionary of Renaissance

  • Pedro de Torres Rámila — (Latin: Petro de Torres Ramilae ) (Vilarcayo, Burgos, 1583 mdash;Alcalá de Henares, 1658) was a Spanish poet, satirist and Renaissance humanist.He was professor of humanities at the Colegio Trilingüe (Trilingual College), and in the Greater… …   Wikipedia

  • Erasmus, Desiderius — born Oct. 27, 1469, Rotterdam, Holland died July 12, 1536, Basel, Switz. Dutch priest and humanist, considered the greatest European scholar of the 16th century. The illegitimate son of a priest and a physician s daughter, he entered a monastery… …   Universalium

  • Louvain, University of —    The first and (until the late 16th century) only university in the Netherlands. Founded in 1425 with faculties of liberal arts, law, and medicine, it was authorized in 1432 to add a faculty of theology, thus acquiring all four of the faculties …   Historical Dictionary of Renaissance

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”