This issue of History of Universities, Volume XXXI / 1, contains the customary mix of learned articles and book reviews which makes this publication such an indispensable tool for the historian of higher education. The volume is, as always, a lively combination of original research and invaluable reference material.
This issue of History of Universities, Volume XXXI / 1, contains the customary mix of learned articles and book reviews which makes this publication such an indispensable tool for the historian of higher education.
- Articles
- Supplications to the Pope from the University of Cambridge in the Fourteenth Century
- Demographic Representation and the Fifteenth-Century Crisis of the University of Paris
- Studies on the Iconography of Universities in the Holy Roman Empire-Images on Seals and Maces
- Strenæ Natalitiæ: Ambivalence and Equivocation in Oxford in 1688
- Maintain the old institutions in their old quiet way': Beresford Hope and the Religious and Political Dimensions of University Reform in Victorian Britain
- 'University': The History of the Search for a Definition in England
- Review Essays
- Richard Yeo, Notebooks, English virtuosi, and early modern science; Renée Raphael, Reading Galileo. Scribal technologies and the two new sciences
- James Axtell, Wisdom's Workshop
This issue of History of Universities, Volume XXXI / 1, contains the customary mix of learned articles and book reviews which makes this publication such an indispensable tool for the historian of higher education.