
“When, during and after the Reformation, the universities lost their status as so many autonomous parts of the universal church, they lost their independence correspondingly. In Protestant Europe, they came under the jurisdiction of the national churches and of the rapacious national monarchies; in Catholic Europe --although to a lesser extent--they came under the jurisdiction of the reinvigorated and consolidated Papacy, and of the sovereigns who, as in Spain and France, made royal influence over the church establishment within their realms a condition of their support for the Roman cause. The dissolution of medieval universalism meant that learning, like nearly everything else, was forced to submit to new or more rigid denominations. With the complete or partial secularization of society which followed upon the French Revolutionary era, in nearly every country except Britain, the universities were stripped of what remained of their old rights and became little better than state corporations.”
―
Academic Freedom: An Essay in Definition
Share this quote:
Friends Who Liked This Quote
To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!
2 likes
All Members Who Liked This Quote
This Quote Is From
Browse By Tag
- love (100690)
- life (78894)
- inspirational (75358)
- humor (44115)
- philosophy (30696)
- inspirational-quotes (28603)
- god (26784)
- truth (24573)
- wisdom (24365)
- romance (24197)
- poetry (23079)
- life-lessons (22231)
- quotes (20512)
- death (20452)
- happiness (18880)
- hope (18394)
- faith (18267)
- inspiration (17186)
- spirituality (15581)
- relationships (15365)
- religion (15311)
- motivational (15225)
- life-quotes (15147)
- love-quotes (15020)
- writing (14881)
- success (14127)
- motivation (13064)
- travel (12950)
- time (12783)
- science (12003)