medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
On 01/20/12, Pat McIntosh-Spinnler w
rote:
> I've been reading Janet P Foggie's 'Renaissance Religion in Urban Scotland: the Dominican Order, 1450-1560.' Can anyone point me in the direction of further reading on the Studia Solemnia, that is the houses which were big enough to have young men who required teaching but which were not attached to a university?
Perhaps that definition of _studium solemne_ as used by Dominicans is true for the fifteenth century. But in the later thirteenth century at least this term was also used for schools at universities. See
M. Michèle Mulchahey, _"First the Bow is Bent in Study--": Dominican Education before 1350_ (Toronto: PIMS, 1998), p. 355, n.11. So perhaps it would be better to say "on the Studia Solemnia in that term's fifteenth- and sixteenth-century understanding, that is houses which were..."
Although her focus is earlier, you might find helpful references in Mulchahey's work.
Best,
John Dillon
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