The universities being under the protection of the Church,
it was natural that those who attended them should possess some of the
privileges of clergymen. Students were not required to pay taxes or to serve in
the army. They also enjoyed the right of trial in their own courts. This was an
especially valuable privilege, for medieval students were constantly getting
into trouble with the city authorities. The sober annals of many a university
are relieved by tales of truly Homeric conflicts between Town and Gown. When
the students were dissatisfied with their treatment in one place, it was always
easy for them to go to another university. Sometimes masters and scholars made
off in a body. Oxford appears to have owed its existence to a large migration
of English students from Paris, Cambridge arose as the result of a migration
from Oxford, and the German university of Leipzig sprang from that of Prague in
Bohemia.
COLLEGES
The members of a university usually lived in a number of
colleges. These seem to have been at first little more than lodging-houses,
where poor students were cared for at the expense of some benefactor. In time,
however, as the colleges increased in wealth, through the gifts made to them,
they became centers of instruction under the direction of masters. At Oxford
and Cambridge, where the collegiate system has been retained to the present
time, each college has its separate buildings and enjoys the privilege of
self-government.
FACULTIES
The studies in a medieval university were grouped under
the four faculties of arts, theology, law, and medicine. The first-named
faculty taught the "seven liberal arts," that is, grammar, rhetoric,
logic, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music. They formed a legacy from
old Roman education. Theology, law, and medicine then, as now, were
professional studies, taken up after the completion of the Arts course. Owing
to the constant movement of students from one university to another, each
institution tended to specialize in one or more subjects. Thus, Paris came to
be noted for theology, Montpellier, Padua, and Salerno for medicine, and
Orléans, Bologna, and Salamanca for law.