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University of Paris
View on WikipediaThe University of Paris (French: Université de Paris), known metonymically as the Sorbonne (French: [sɔʁbɔn]), was the leading university in Paris, France, from 1150 to 1970, except for 1793–1806 during the French Revolution. Emerging around 1150 as a corporation associated with the cathedral school of Paris, it was considered the second-oldest university in Europe.[2] Officially chartered in 1200 by King Philip II and recognised in 1215 by Pope Innocent III, it was nicknamed after its theological College of Sorbonne, founded by Robert de Sorbon and chartered by King Louis IX around 1257.[2]
Key Information
Highly reputed internationally for its academic performance in the humanities ever since the Middle Ages – particularly in theology and philosophy – it introduced academic standards and traditions that have endured and spread, such as doctoral degrees and student nations. Notable popes, royalty, scientists, and intellectuals were educated at the University of Paris. A few of the colleges of the time are still visible close to the Panthéon and Jardin du Luxembourg: Collège des Bernardins (18 rue de Poissy, 5th arr.), Hôtel de Cluny (6 Place Paul Painlevé, 5th arr.), Collège Sainte-Barbe (4 rue Valette, 5th arr.), Collège d'Harcourt (44 Boulevard Saint-Michel, 6th arr.), and Cordeliers (21 rue École de Médecine, 6th arr.).[3]
In 1793, during the French Revolution, the university was closed and, by Item 27 of the Revolutionary Convention, the college endowments and buildings were sold.[4] A new University of France replaced it in 1806 with four independent faculties: the Faculty of Humanities (French: Faculté des Lettres), the Faculty of Law (later including Economics), the Faculty of Science, the Faculty of Medicine and the Faculty of Theology (closed in 1885).
In 1896, a new University of Paris was re-founded as a grouping of the Paris faculties of science, literature, law, medicine, Protestant theology and the École supérieure de pharmacie de Paris. It was inaugurated on November 19, 1896, by French President Félix Faure.[5] In 1970, after the civil unrest of May 1968, the university was divided into 13 autonomous universities, which today are the Sorbonne University, Panthéon-Sorbonne University, the Assas University, the Sorbonne Nouvelle University, the Paris Cité University, the PSL University, the Saclay University, the Nanterre University, the Sorbonne Paris North University, the Paris-East Créteil University and the Paris 8 University. The Chancellerie des Universités de Paris inherited the heritage assets of the University of Paris, including the Sorbonne building, the "La Sorbonne" brand, control of the inter-university libraries, and management of the staff of the Paris universities (until 2007).[6]
History
[edit]Origins
[edit]In 1150, the future University of Paris was a student–teacher corporation operating as an annex of the cathedral school of Paris. The earliest historical reference to it is found in Matthew Paris's reference to the studies of his own teacher (an abbot of St Albans) and his acceptance into "the fellowship of the elect Masters" there in about 1170,[7] and it is known that Lotario dei Conti di Segni, the future Pope Innocent III, completed his studies there in 1182 at the age of 21. Its first college was the Collège des Dix-Huit, established in 1180 by an Englishman named Josse and endowed for 18 poor scholars.

The corporation was formally recognised as an "Universitas" in an edict by King Philippe-Auguste in 1200: in it, among other accommodations granted to future students, he allowed the corporation to operate under ecclesiastic law which would be governed by the elders of the Notre-Dame Cathedral school, and assured all those completing courses there that they would be granted a diploma.[8]
The university had four faculties: Arts, Medicine, Law, and Theology. The Faculty of Arts was the lowest in rank, but also the largest, as students had to graduate there in order to be admitted to one of the higher faculties. The students were divided into four nationes according to language or regional origin: France, Normandy, Picardy, and England. The last came to be known as the Alemannian (German) nation. Recruitment to each nation was wider than the names might imply: the English–German nation included students from Scandinavia and Eastern Europe.
The faculty and nation system of the University of Paris (along with that of the University of Bologna) became the model for all later medieval universities. Under the governance of the Church, students wore robes and shaved the tops of their heads in tonsure, to signify they were under the protection of the church. Students followed the rules and laws of the Church and were not subject to the king's laws or courts. This presented problems for the city of Paris, as students ran wild, and its official had to appeal to Church courts for justice. Students were often very young, entering the school at 13 or 14 years of age and staying for six to 12 years.
| School | Founded |
| College of the Eighteen | 1180 |
| College of Sorbonne | 1257 |
| College of Navarre | 1305 |
| Law | 1150 |
| Medicine | 1200 |
| Arts | 1213 |
| Divinity | 1221 |
| Education | 1794 |
| Sciences | 1808 |
| Pharmacy | 1864 |
| Government | 1872 |
| Business | 1956 |
12th century: Organisation
[edit]Three schools were especially famous in Paris: the palatine or palace school, the school of Notre-Dame, and that of Sainte-Geneviève Abbey. The latter two, although ancient, were initially eclipsed by the palatine school, until the decline of royalty brought about its decline.
The first renowned professor at the school of Ste-Geneviève was Hubold, who lived in the tenth century. Not content with the courses at Liège, he continued his studies at Paris, entered or allied himself with the chapter of Ste-Geneviève, and attracted many pupils via his teaching. Distinguished professors from the school of Notre-Dame in the eleventh century include Lambert, disciple of Fulbert of Chartres; Drogo of Paris; Manegold of Germany; and Anselm of Laon. These two schools attracted scholars from every country and produced many illustrious men, among whom were: St. Stanislaus of Szczepanów, Bishop of Kraków; Gebbard, Archbishop of Salzburg; St. Stephen, third Abbot of Cîteaux; Robert d'Arbrissel, founder of the Abbey of Fontevrault etc. Three other men who added prestige to the schools of Notre-Dame and Ste-Geneviève were William of Champeaux, Abélard, and Peter Lombard.
Humanistic instruction comprised grammar, rhetoric, dialectics, arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy (trivium and quadrivium). To the higher instruction belonged dogmatic and moral theology, whose source was the Scriptures and the Patristic Fathers. It was completed by the study of Canon law. The School of Saint-Victor arose to rival those of Notre-Dame and Ste-Geneviève. It was founded by William of Champeaux when he withdrew to the Abbey of Saint-Victor. Its most famous professors are Hugh of St. Victor and Richard of St. Victor.
The plan of studies expanded in the schools of Paris, as it did elsewhere. A Bolognese compendium of canon law called the Decretum Gratiani brought about a division of the theology department. Hitherto the discipline of the Church had not been separate from so-called theology; they were studied together under the same professor. But this vast collection necessitated a special course, which was undertaken first at Bologna, where Roman law was taught. In France, first Orléans and then Paris erected chairs of canon law. Before the end of the twelfth century, the Decretals of Gerard La Pucelle, Mathieu d'Angers, and Anselm (or Anselle) of Paris, were added to the Decretum Gratiani. However, civil law was not included at Paris. In the twelfth century, medicine began to be publicly taught at Paris: the first professor of medicine in Paris records is Hugo, physicus excellens qui quadrivium docuit.
Professors were required to have measurable knowledge and be appointed by the university. Applicants had to be assessed by examination; if successful, the examiner, who was the head of the school, and known as scholasticus, capiscol, and chancellor, appointed an individual to teach. This was called the licence or faculty to teach. The licence had to be granted freely. No one could teach without it; on the other hand, the examiner could not refuse to award it when the applicant deserved it.

The school of Saint-Victor, under the abbey, conferred the licence in its own right; the school of Notre-Dame depended on the diocese, that of Ste-Geneviève on the abbey or chapter. The diocese and the abbey or chapter, through their chancellor, gave professorial investiture in their respective territories where they had jurisdiction. Besides Notre-Dame, Ste-Geneviève, and Saint-Victor, there were several schools on the "Island" and on the "Mount". "Whoever", says Crevier "had the right to teach might open a school where he pleased, provided it was not in the vicinity of a principal school." Thus a certain Adam, who was of English origin, kept his "near the Petit Pont"; another Adam, Parisian by birth, "taught at the Grand Pont which is called the Pont-au-Change" (Hist. de l'Univers. de Paris, I, 272).
The number of students in the school of the capital grew constantly, so that lodgings were insufficient. French students included princes of the blood, sons of the nobility, and ranking gentry. The courses at Paris were considered so necessary as a completion of studies that many foreigners flocked to them. Popes Celestine II, Adrian IV and Innocent III studied at Paris, and Alexander III sent his nephews there. Noted German and English students included Otto of Freisingen, Cardinal Conrad, Archbishop of Mainz, St. Thomas of Canterbury, and John of Salisbury; while Ste-Geneviève became practically the seminary for Denmark. The chroniclers of the time called Paris the city of letters par excellence, placing it above Athens, Alexandria, Rome, and other cities: "At that time, there flourished at Paris philosophy and all branches of learning, and there the seven arts were studied and held in such esteem as they never were at Athens, Egypt, Rome, or elsewhere in the world." ("Les gestes de Philippe-Auguste"). Poets extolled the university in their verses, comparing it to all that was greatest, noblest, and most valuable in the world.

To allow poor students to study the first college des dix-Huit was founded by a knight returning from Jerusalem called Josse of London for 18 scholars who received lodgings and 12 pence or denarii a month.[9]
As the university developed, it became more institutionalized. First, the professors formed an association, for according to Matthew Paris, John of Celles, twenty-first Abbot of St Albans, England, was admitted as a member of the teaching corps of Paris after he had followed the courses (Vita Joannis I, XXI, abbat. S. Alban). The masters, as well as the students, were divided according to national origin,. Alban wrote that Henry II, King of England, in his difficulties with St. Thomas of Canterbury, wanted to submit his cause to a tribunal composed of professors of Paris, chosen from various provinces (Hist. major, Henry II, to end of 1169). This was likely the start of the division according to "nations," which was later to play an important part in the university. Celestine III ruled that both professors and students had the privilege of being subject only to the ecclesiastical courts, not to civil courts.
The three schools: Notre-Dame, Sainte-Geneviève, and Saint-Victor, may be regarded as the triple cradle of the Universitas scholarium, which included masters and students; hence the name University. Henry Denifle and some others hold that this honour is exclusive to the school of Notre-Dame (Chartularium Universitatis Parisiensis), but the reasons do not seem convincing. He excludes Saint-Victor because, at the request of the abbot and the religious of Saint-Victor, Gregory IX in 1237 authorized them to resume the interrupted teaching of theology. But the university was largely founded about 1208, as is shown by a Bull of Innocent III. Consequently, the schools of Saint-Victor might well have contributed to its formation. Secondly, Denifle excludes the schools of Ste-Geneviève because there had been no interruption in the teaching of the liberal arts. This is debatable and through the period, theology was taught. The chancellor of Ste-Geneviève continued to give degrees in arts, something he would have ceased if his abbey had no part in the university organization.
13th–14th century: Expansion
[edit]
In 1200, King Philip II issued a diploma "for the security of the scholars of Paris," which affirmed that students were subject only to ecclesiastical jurisdiction. The provost and other officers were forbidden to arrest a student for any offence, unless to transfer him to ecclesiastical authority. The king's officers could not intervene with any member unless having a mandate from an ecclesiastical authority. His action followed a violent incident between students and officers outside the city walls at a pub.
In 1215, the Apostolic legate, Robert de Courçon, issued new rules governing who could become a professor. To teach the arts, a candidate had to be at least twenty-one, to have studied these arts at least six years, and to take an engagement as professor for at least two years. For a chair in theology, the candidate had to be thirty years of age, with eight years of theological studies, of which the last three years were devoted to special courses of lectures in preparation for the mastership. These studies had to be made in the local schools under the direction of a master. In Paris, one was regarded as a scholar only by studies with particular masters. Lastly, purity of morals was as important as reading. The licence was granted, according to custom, gratuitously, without oath or condition. Masters and students were permitted to unite, even by oath, in defence of their rights, when they could not otherwise obtain justice in serious matters. No mention is made either of law or of medicine, probably because these sciences were less prominent.
In 1229, a denial of justice by the queen led to suspension of the courses. The pope intervened with a bull that began with lavish praise of the university: "Paris", said Gregory IX, "mother of the sciences, is another Cariath-Sepher, city of letters". He commissioned the Bishops of Le Mans and Senlis and the Archdeacon of Châlons to negotiate with the French Court for the restoration of the university, but by the end of 1230 they had accomplished nothing. Gregory IX then addressed a Bull of 1231 to the masters and scholars of Paris. Not only did he settle the dispute, he empowered the university to frame statutes concerning the discipline of the schools, the method of instruction, the defence of theses, the costume of the professors, and the obsequies of masters and students (expanding upon Robert de Courçon's statutes). Most importantly, the pope granted the university the right to suspend its courses, if justice were denied it, until it should receive full satisfaction.
The pope authorized Pierre Le Mangeur to collect a moderate fee for the conferring of the license of professorship. Also, for the first time, the scholars had to pay tuition fees for their education: two sous weekly, to be deposited in the common fund.
Rector
[edit]The university was organized as follows: at the head of the teaching body was a rector. The office was elective and of short duration; at first it was limited to four or six weeks. Simon de Brion, legate of the Holy See in France, realizing that such frequent changes caused serious inconvenience, decided that the rectorate should last three months, and this rule was observed for three years. Then the term was lengthened to one, two, and sometimes three years. The right of election belonged to the procurators of the four nations. Henry of Unna was proctor of the University of Paris in the 14th century, beginning his term on January 13, 1340.
Four "nations"
[edit]
The "nations" appeared in the second half of the twelfth century. They were mentioned in the Bull of Honorius III in 1222. Later, they formed a distinct body. By 1249, the four nations existed with their procurators, their rights (more or less well-defined), and their keen rivalries: the nations were the French, English, Normans, and Picards. After the Hundred Years' War, the English nation was replaced by the Germanic. The four nations constituted the faculty of arts or letters.
The territories covered by the four nations were:
- French nation: all the Romance-speaking parts of Europe except those included within the Norman and Picard nations
- English nation (renamed 'German nation' after the Hundred Years' War): the British Isles, the Germanic-speaking parts of continental Europe (except those included within the Picard nation), and the Slavic-speaking parts of Europe. The majority of students within that nation came from Germany and Scotland, and when it was renamed 'German nation' it was also sometimes called natio Germanorum et Scotorum ("nation of the Germans and Scots").[10][11]
- Norman nation: the ecclesiastical province of Rouen, which corresponded approximately to the Duchy of Normandy. This was a Romance-speaking territory, but it was not included within the French nation.
- Picard nation: the Romance-speaking bishoprics of Beauvais, Noyon, Amiens, Laon, and Arras; the bilingual (Romance and Germanic-speaking) bishoprics of Thérouanne, Cambrai, and Tournai; a large part of the bilingual bishopric of Liège; and the southernmost part of the Germanic-speaking bishopric of Utrecht (the part of that bishopric located south of the river Meuse; the rest of the bishopric north of the Meuse belonged to the English nation). It was estimated that about half of the students in the Picard nation were Romance-speakers (Picard and Walloon), and the other half were Germanic-speakers (West Flemish, East Flemish, Brabantian and Limburgish dialects).[12]
Faculties
[edit]To classify professors' knowledge, the schools of Paris gradually divided into faculties. Professors of the same science were brought into closer contact until the community of rights and interests cemented the union and made them distinct groups. The faculty of medicine seems to have been the last to form. But the four faculties were already formally established by 1254, when the university described in a letter "theology, jurisprudence, medicine, and rational, natural, and moral philosophy". The masters of theology often set the example for the other faculties—e.g., they were the first to adopt an official seal.
The faculties of theology, canon law, and medicine, were called "superior faculties". The title of "Dean" as designating the head of a faculty, came into use by 1268 in the faculties of law and medicine, and by 1296 in the faculty of theology. It seems that at first the deans were the oldest masters. The faculty of arts continued to have four procurators of its four nations and its head was the rector. As the faculties became more fully organized, the division into four nations partially disappeared for theology, law and medicine, though it continued in arts. Eventually the superior faculties included only doctors, leaving the bachelors to the faculty of arts. At this period, therefore, the university had two principal degrees, the baccalaureate and the doctorate. It was not until much later that the licentiate and the DEA became intermediate degrees.
Colleges
[edit]
The scattered condition of the scholars in Paris often made lodging difficult. Some students rented rooms from townspeople, who often exacted high rates while the students demanded lower. This tension between scholars and citizens would have developed into a sort of civil war if Robert de Courçon had not found the remedy of taxation. It was upheld in the Bull of Gregory IX of 1231, but with an important modification: its exercise was to be shared with the citizens. The aim was to offer the students a shelter where they would fear neither annoyance from the owners nor the dangers of the world. Thus were founded the colleges (colligere, to assemble); meaning not centers of instruction, but simple student boarding-houses. Each had a special goal, being established for students of the same nationality or the same science. Often, masters lived in each college and oversaw its activities.
Four colleges appeared in the 12th century; they became more numerous in the 13th, including Collège d'Harcourt (1280) and the Collège de Sorbonne (1257). Thus the University of Paris assumed its basic form. It was composed of seven groups, the four nations of the faculty of arts, and the three superior faculties of theology, law, and medicine. Men who had studied at Paris became an increasing presence in the high ranks of the Church hierarchy; eventually, students at the University of Paris saw it as a right that they would be eligible to benefices. Church officials such as St. Louis and Clement IV lavishly praised the university.
Besides the famous Collège de Sorbonne, other collegia provided housing and meals to students, sometimes for those of the same geographical origin in a more restricted sense than that represented by the nations. There were 8 or 9 collegia for foreign students: the oldest one was the Danish college, the Collegium Dacicum, founded in 1257 and named after Dacia, the Latin term then used for Denmark.[13] Swedish students could, during the 13th and 14th centuries, live in one of three Swedish colleges, the Collegium Upsaliense, the Collegium Scarense or the Collegium Lincopense, named after the Swedish dioceses of Uppsala, Skara and Linköping.
The Collège de Navarre was founded in 1305, originally aimed at students from Navarre, but due to its size, wealth, and the links between the crowns of France and Navarre, it quickly accepted students from other nations. The establishment of the College of Navarre was a turning point in the university's history: Navarra was the first college to offer teaching to its students, which at the time set it apart from all previous colleges, founded as charitable institutions that provided lodging, but no tuition. Navarre's model combining lodging and tuition would be reproduced by other colleges, both in Paris and other universities. [14]
The German College, Collegium alemanicum is mentioned as early as 1345, the Scots college or Collegium scoticum was founded in 1325. The Lombard college or Collegium lombardicum was founded in the 1330s. The Collegium constantinopolitanum was, according to a tradition, founded in the 13th century to facilitate a merging of the eastern and western churches. It was later reorganized as a French institution, the Collège de la Marche-Winville. The Collège de Montaigu was founded by the Archbishop of Rouen in the 14th century, and reformed in the 15th century by the humanist Jan Standonck, when it attracted reformers from within the Roman Catholic Church (such as Erasmus and Ignatius of Loyola) and those who subsequently became Protestants (John Calvin and John Knox).
At this time, the university also went the controversy of the condemnations of 1210–1277.
The Irish College in Paris originated in 1578 with students dispersed between Collège Montaigu, Collège de Boncourt, and the Collège de Navarre; in 1677 it was awarded possession of the Collège des Lombards. A new Irish College was built in 1769 in rue du Cheval Vert (now rue des Irlandais), which exists today as the Irish Chaplaincy and Cultural centre.
15th–18th century: Influence in France and Europe
[edit]

In the fifteenth century, Guillaume d'Estouteville, a cardinal and Apostolic legate, reformed the university, correcting its perceived abuses and introducing various modifications. This reform was less an innovation than a recall to observance of the old rules, as was the reform of 1600, undertaken by the royal government with regard to the three higher faculties. Nonetheless, and as to the faculty of arts, the reform of 1600 introduced the study of Greek, of French poets and orators, and of additional classical figures like Hesiod, Plato, Demosthenes, Cicero, Virgil, and Sallust. The prohibition from teaching civil law was never well observed at Paris, but in 1679 Louis XIV officially authorized the teaching of civil law in the faculty of decretals. The "faculty of law" hence replaced the "faculty of decretals". The colleges meantime had multiplied; those of Cardinal Le-Moine and Navarre were founded in the fourteenth century. The Hundred Years' War was fatal to these establishments, but the university set about remedying the injury.
Besides its teaching, the University of Paris played an important part in several disputes: in the Church, during the Great Schism(wrong schism); in the councils, in dealing with heresies and divisions; in the State, during national crises. Under the domination of England it played a role in the trial of Joan of Arc.
Proud of its rights and privileges, the University of Paris fought energetically to maintain them, hence the long struggle against the mendicant orders on academic as well as on religious grounds. Hence also the shorter conflict against the Jesuits, who claimed by word and action a share in its teaching. It made extensive use of its right to decide administratively according to occasion and necessity. In some instances it openly endorsed the censures of the faculty of theology and pronounced condemnation in its own name, as in the case of the Flagellants.
Its patriotism was especially manifested on two occasions. During the captivity of King John, when Paris was given over to factions, the university sought to restore peace; and under Louis XIV, when the Spaniards crossed the Somme and threatened the capital, it placed two hundred men at the king's disposal and offered the Master of Arts degree gratuitously to scholars who should present certificates of service in the army (Jourdain, Hist. de l'Univers. de Paris au XVIIe et XVIIIe siècle, 132–34; Archiv. du ministère de l'instruction publique).
1793: Abolition by the French Revolution
[edit]
The ancient university disappeared with the ancien régime in the French Revolution. On 15 September 1793, petitioned by the Department of Paris and several departmental groups, the National Convention decided that independently of the primary schools,
"there should be established in the Republic three progressive degrees of instruction; the first for the knowledge indispensable to artisans and workmen of all kinds; the second for further knowledge necessary to those intending to embrace the other professions of society; and the third for those branches of instruction the study of which is not within the reach of all men".
Measures were to be taken immediately: "For means of execution the department and the municipality of Paris are authorized to consult with the Committee of Public Instruction of the National Convention, in order that these establishments shall be put in action by 1 November next, and consequently colleges now in operation and the faculties of theology, medicine, arts, and law are suppressed throughout the Republic". This was the death-sentence of the university. It was not to be restored after the Revolution had subsided, no more than those of the provinces.
1806–1968: Re-establishment
[edit]The university was re-established by Napoleon on 1 May 1806. All the faculties were replaced by a single centre, the University of France. The decree of 17 March 1808 created five distinct faculties: Law, Medicine, Letters/Humanities, Sciences, and Theology; traditionally, Letters and Sciences had been grouped together into one faculty, that of "Arts". After a century, people recognized that the new system was less favourable to study. The defeat of 1870 at the hands of Prussia was partially blamed on the growth of the superiority of the German university system of the 19th century, and led to another serious reform of the French university. In the 1880s, the "licence" (bachelor) degree is divided into, for the Faculty of Letters: Letters, Philosophy, History, Modern Languages, with French, Latin and Greek being requirements for all of them; and for the Faculty of Science, into: Mathematics, Physical Sciences and Natural Sciences; the Faculty of Theology is abolished by the Republic. At this time, the building of the Sorbonne was fully renovated.[15]
Admission of women
[edit]From the 1860s onward, women were admitted to the University of Paris. Madeleine Brès was admitted alongside the American Mary Puttnam, the Russian Catherine Gontcharoff and the English Elizabeth Garrett - all holders of diplomas and bachelors in Arts and Sciences.[16]
May 1968–1970: Shutdown
[edit]The student revolts of the late 1960s were caused in part by the French government's failure to plan for a sudden spike in the number of university students as a result of the postwar baby boom. The number of French university students skyrocketed from only 280,000 during the 1962–63 academic year to 500,000 in 1967–68, but at the start of the decade, there were only 16 public universities in the entire country. To accommodate this rapid growth, the government hastily developed bare-bones off-site faculties as annexes of existing universities (roughly equivalent to American satellite campuses). These faculties did not have university status of their own and lacked academic traditions and amenities to support student life or resident professors. One-third of all French university students ended up in these new faculties, and were ripe for radicalization as a result of being forced to pursue their studies in such shabby conditions.[17]
In 1966, after a student revolt in Paris, Christian Fouchet, minister of education, proposed "the reorganisation of university studies into separate two- and four-year degrees, alongside the introduction of selective admission criteria" as a response to overcrowding in lecture halls.[18][19] Dissatisfied with these educational reforms, students began protesting in November 1967, at the campus of the University of Paris in Nanterre;[18] indeed, according to James Marshall, these reforms were seen "as the manifestations of the technocratic-capitalist state by some, and by others as attempts to destroy the liberal university".[19] After student activists protested against the Vietnam War, the campus was closed by authorities on 22 March and again on 2 May 1968.[20][18][21] Agitation spread to the Sorbonne the next day, and many students were arrested in the following week.[22][20] Barricades were erected throughout the Latin Quarter, and a massive demonstration took place on 13 May, gathering students and workers on strike.[21][20] The number of workers on strike reached about nine million by 22 May.[18] As explained by Bill Readings:
De Gaulle responded on May 24 by calling for a referendum, and [...] the revolutionaries, led by informal action committees, attacked and burned the Paris Stock Exchange in response. The Gaullist government then held talks with union leaders, who agreed to a package of wage-rises and increases in union rights. The strikers, however, simply refused the plan. With the French state tottering, de Gaulle fled France on May 29 for a French military base in Germany. He later returned and, with the assurance of military support, announced [general] elections [within] forty days. [...] Over the next two months, the strikes were broken (or broke up) while the election was won by the Gaullists with an increased majority.[18]
1970: Dissolution
[edit]Following the disruption, de Gaulle appointed Edgar Faure as minister of education; Faure was assigned to prepare a legislative proposal for reform of the French university system, with the help of academics.[23] Their proposal was adopted on 12 November 1968;[24] in accordance with the new law, the faculties of the University of Paris were to reorganize themselves.[25] This led to the division of the University of Paris into 13 universities.
In 2017, Paris 4 and Paris 6 universities merged to form the Sorbonne University.[26] In 2019, Paris 5 and Paris 7 universities merged to form the new Paris Cité University, leaving the number of successor universities at 11.[27]
| Number | Previous name | Current name | Faculties/institutes before breakup | Current subjects | Students | Academy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paris I | University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne | Faculty of Law and Economics (35 out of 41 of the economics Professors joined, along with a few professors from law) and the Faculty of Humanities. There were also Paris Institute of Geography, Paris Institute of Business Administration, part of Institute of Art and Archeology of the University of Paris | Humanities, Law, Social sciences, Economics | 45,200 | Paris | |
| Paris II | Paris II Panthéon-Assas | Paris-Panthéon-Assas University | Faculty of Law and Economics of Paris (88 out of 108 of the law professors joined, along with a few professors from Economics), and Graduate Institute of International Studies | Law, Political Science, Economics | 17,705 | Paris |
| Paris III | New Sorbonne University | Faculty of Humanities accompanined by Institute of Linguistics of Paris, Institute for Advanced Latin American Studies of the University of Paris | Humanities | 19,360 | Paris | |
| Paris IV | Paris-Sorbonne University | Sorbonne University | Faculty of Humanities, along with Institute of Slavic Studies of the University of Paris, and Institute of Musicology of the University of Paris | Humanities | 55,600 | Paris |
| Paris VI | Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University | Faculty of Science, Faculty of Medicine, National School of Chemistry, and Paris Institute of Earth Physics (until 1990) | Science, Medicine | |||
| Paris V | Paris Descartes University | Paris Cité University | Faculty of Humanities, Faculty of Medicine, Faculty of Pharmacy, Paris Institute of Psychology, Paris Institute of Pharmacotechnics and Pharmacodynamics, Avenue de Versailles University Institute of Technology, and Paris Institute of Molecular Pathology. | Medicine, Social sciences, Humanities | 64,100 | Paris |
| Paris VII | Paris Diderot University | Faculty of Sciences, Faculty of Letters, and Faculty of Medicine | Science, Medicine, Humanities, Social sciences, Arts | Paris | ||
| Paris VIII | University of Vincennes | Paris 8 University Vincennes-Saint-Denis | Vincennes University Center (Most professors were from Faculty of Humanities) | Social sciences | 14,070 | Créteil |
| Paris IX | Paris-IX University | Paris Dauphine University - PSL (grande école of PSL University) | Dauphine University Center (The professors were from the Department of Economics of the Faculty of Law and Economics) | Mathematics, Computer Science, Management, Economics, Finance, Law, Political Science, Journalism | 10,000 | Créteil |
| Paris X | Université Paris Ouest | Paris Nanterre University | Faculty of Law and Economics and Faculty of Humanities in Nanterre, along with Ville-d'Avray University Institute of Technology | Law, humanities, political science, social and natural sciences and economics. | 32,000 | Versailles |
| Paris XI | Université Paris-Sud | Paris-Saclay University | Faculty of Science in Orsay (Fourth Faculty of Sciences), Institut Gustave Roussy, Institute of Nuclear Physics of the University of Paris, Orsay University Institute of Technology, Cachan University Institute of Technology, and Sceaux University Institute of Technology | Medicine, Science, Law, Economics | 60,000 | Versailles |
| Paris XII | Université Paris-Est | Paris-East Créteil University | University Hospital Center (In French: Centre hospitalier universitaire, CHU) Henri-Mondor, Faculty of Law and Economics in Créteil, Varenne-Saint-Hilaire University Center, and Planning Institute of Paris | Medicine, Science | 32,156 | Créteil |
| Paris XIII | Université Paris Nord | Sorbonne Paris North University | Faculty of Sciences of Paris in Villetaneuse (Third Faculty of Sciences), Faculty of Law and Economics, Saint-Denis University Center - Villetaneuse, and Saint-Denis University Institutes of Technology | Science, Social sciences, Medicine, Law | 23,078 | Créteil |
The successor universities to the University of Paris are now split over of the Île-de-France region.[28]
Most of these successor universities have joined several groups of universities and higher education institutions in the Paris region, created in the 2010s.
Notable people
[edit]Faculty
[edit]Alumni
[edit]The Sorbonne has educated 11 French presidents, almost 50 French heads of government, three Popes (Innocent III, Celestine II, and Adrian IV), and many other political and social figures. The Sorbonne has also educated leaders of Albania, Canada, the Dominican Republic, Gabon, Guinea, Iraq, Jordan, Kosovo, Tunisia, and Niger among others.
- Rodolfo Robles, physician
- Albert Simard, physician, activist during and post WWII.
- Carlos Alvarado-Larroucau, writer
- Paul Biya, President of Cameroon
- Jean-François Delmas, archivist, Director of the Bibliothèque Inguimbertine and the museums of Carpentras
- Aklilu Habte-Wold, Ethiopian politician who served in Haile Selassie's cabinet
- Leonardo López Luján, Mexican archaeologist and director of the Templo Mayor Project
- Darmin Nasution, Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs of Indonesia
- Maria Vasillievna Pavlova (née Gortynskaia) (1854–1939), paleontologist and academician [29]
- Jean Peyrelevade, French civil servant, politician and business leader.[30]
- Issei Sagawa, cannibal and murderer
- Tamara Gräfin von Nayhauß, German television presenter
- Michel Sapin, Deputy Minister of Justice from May 1991 to April 1992, Finance Minister from April 1992 to March 1993, and Minister of Civil Servants and State Reforms from March 2000 to May 2002.[31]
- Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Head of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement
- Ali Abu el-Fotoh, was one of the most influential Egyptian economists from the 19th-century
- Ahmad al-Tayyeb, Grand Imam of Al-Azhar
- Pol Theis, attorney, interior designer, and founder of P&T Interiors in New York City
- Jean-Pierre Thiollet, French writer
- Loïc Vadelorge, French historian
- Yves-Marie Bercé, historian, winner of the Madeleine Laurain-Portemer Prize of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques and member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
- Phulrenu Guha, Indian Bengali politician and educationist, class of 1928
- Antoine Compagnon, professor of French literature at the Collège de France
- Anatole Félix Le Double, anatomist, physician, and academic
- Philippe Contamine, historian, member of the Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres
- Pridi Banomyong, a Thai politician and professor who played an important role in drafting Thailand's first constitutions.
- Denis Crouzet, Renaissance historian, winner of the Madeleine Laurain-Portemer Prize of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
- Marc Fumaroli, member of the Académie française and professor at the Collège de France
- Olivier Forcade, historian of Political and International relations at the University of Paris-Sorbonne and Sciences-Po Paris, member of the French National Council of Universities
- Edith Philips, American writer and educator
- Jean Favier, historian, member of the Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, president of the French Commission for UNESCO
- Nicolas Grimal, egyptologist, winner of the Gaston-Maspero prize of the Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres et member of the Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, winner of the Diane Potier-Boes Prize of the Académie française.
- John Kneller (1916–2009), English-American professor and fifth president of Brooklyn College
- Claude Lecouteux, professor of Medieval German literature, winner of the Strasbourg Prize of the Académie française
- Jean-Luc Marion, Philosopher, member of the Académie française
- Tôn Nữ Thị Ninh, former Ambassador of Vietnam to the European Union
- Danièle Pistone, Musicologist, member of the Académie des beaux-arts
- Jean-Yves Tadié, professor of French literature, Grand Prize of the Académie française
- Jean Tulard, historian, member of the Académie des sciences morales et politiques
- Khieu Samphan, former Khmer Rouge leader and head of state of Democratic Kampuchea
- Haïm Brézis, French mathematician who mainly works in functional analysis and partial differential equations
- Philippe G. Ciarlet, French mathematician, known particularly for his work on mathematical analysis of the finite element method. He has contributed also to elasticity, to the theory of plates and shells and differential geometry
- Gérard Férey, was a French chemist who specialized in the Physical chemistry of solids and materials. He focused on the crystal chemistry of inorganic fluorides and on porous solids
- Jacques-Louis Lions, was a French mathematician who made contributions to the theory of partial differential equations and to stochastic control, among other areas
- Marc Yor, was a French mathematician well known for his work on stochastic processes, especially properties of semimartingales, Brownian motion and other Lévy processes, the Bessel processes, and their applications to mathematical finance
- Bernard Derrida, a French theoretical physicist. He is best known for his work in statistical mechanics, and is the eponym of Derrida plots, an analytical technique for characterising differences between Boolean networks.
- François Loeser, a French mathematician who specialized in algebraic geometry and is best known for his work on motivic integration, part of it in collaboration with Jan Denef
- Achille Mbembe, Cameroonian Intellectual historian, Political philosophy, author of On the Postcolony, introduced the concept of necropolitics
- Claire Voisin, French mathematician known for her work in algebraic geometry
- Jean-Michel Coron, French mathematician who studied the control theory of partial differential equations, and which includes both control and stabilization
- Michel Talagrand, French mathematician specialized in functional analysis and probability theory and their applications
- Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, French physicist who specialized in methods of laser cooling and trapping atoms
- Serge Haroche, French physicist who specialized in quantum physics, whose other works developed laser spectroscopy
- Riad Al Solh, First Prime-minister of Lebanon
- Benal Nevzat İstar Arıman (1903–1990), one of the first woman members of the Turkish parliament (1935)
- Abdelkebir Khatibi, Moroccan literary critic, novelist, philosopher, playwright, poet, and sociologist
- Muhammad Shahidullah, Bengali linguist, educationalist, and social reformer
- Raphael Armattoe, Ghanaian medical doctor, politician, poet and writer
- Wu Songgao (1898–1953), Republic of China politician, jurist and political scientist
- Abdul Hafeez Mirza (1939–2021) Pakistani tourism worker, cultural activist and Professor of French. Recipient of Ordre des Palmes Academiques
- Rostislav Doboujinsky (1903-2000), Russian designer
- Barbara Jo Allen (1906–1974), American actress
- Inam Karimov, Chief Justice of Supreme Court of Azerbaijan
- Gérard de Vaucouleurs, observational astronomer known for his work on galaxies
- Lucien Abenhaim Pharmacoepidemiologist, professor of Public Health, and former General Director of Health for France.
- Nadine Ribault (1964–2021), writer and translator
- Élodie Yung, actress.
Nobel laureates
[edit]Alumni
[edit]Nobel Prize winners who had attended the University of Paris or one of its thirteen successors are:
- [Ph.] Albert Fert (PhD) – 2007
- [Ph.] Alfred Kastler (DSc) – 1966
- [Ph.] Gabriel Lippmann (DSc) – 1908
- [Ph.] Jean Perrin (DSc) – 1926
- [Ph.] Louis Néel (MSc) – 1970
- [Ph.] Louis de Broglie (DSc) – 1929
- [Ph.] [Ch.] Marie Curie[20][32] (DSc) – 1903, 1911
- [Ph.] Pierre Curie (DSc) – 1903
- [Ph.] Pierre-Gilles de Gennes (DSc) – 1991
- [Ph.] Serge Haroche (PhD, DSc) – 2012
- [Ch.] Frédéric Joliot-Curie (DSc) – 1935
- [Ch.] Gerhard Ertl (Attendee) – 2007
- [Ch.] Henri Moissan (DSc) – 1906
- [Ch.] Irène Joliot-Curie (DSc) – 1935
- [Ch.] Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff (Attendee) – 2007
- [PM] André Frédéric Cournand (M.D) – 1956
- [PM] André Lwoff (M.D, DSc) – 1965
- [PM] Bert Sakmann (Attendee) – 1991
- [PM] Charles Nicolle (M.D) – 1928
- [PM] Charles Richet (M.D, DSc) – 1913
- [PM] François Jacob (M.D) – 1965
- [PM] Françoise Barré-Sinoussi (PhD) – 2008
- [PM] Jacques Monod (DSc) – 1965
- [PM] Jean Dausset (MD) – 1980
- [PM] Luc Montagnier (MD) – 2008
- [Ec.] Gérard Debreu (DSc) – 1983
- [Ec.] Maurice Allais (D.Eng.) – 1988
- [Ec.] Jean Tirole (PhD) – 2014
- [Pe.] Albert Schweitzer (PhD) – 1952
- [Pe.] Charles Albert Gobat (Attendee) – 1902
- [Pe.] Ferdinand Buisson (DLitt) – 1927
- [Pe.] Léon Bourgeois (DCL) – 1920
- [Pe.] Louis Renault (DCL) – 1907
- [Pe.] René Cassin (DCL) – 1968
- [Li.] Giorgos Seferis (LLB) – 1963
- [Li.] Henri Bergson (B.A) – 1927
- [Li.] Jean-Paul Sartre (B.A) – 1964
- [Li.] Patrick Modiano (Attendee) – 2014
- [Li.] Romain Rolland (D Litt) – 1915
- [Li.] T.S.Eliot (Attendee) – 1979
Faculty
[edit]List of Nobel Prize winners who were affiliated with the University of Paris or one of its thirteen successors.
- [Ph.] George Smoot (Professor) – 2006
- [Ph.] Gabriel Lippmann (Professor) – 1908*
- [Ph.] Jean Perrin (Professor) – 1926*
- [Ph.] Louis de Broglie (Professor) – 1929*
- [Ph.][Ch.] Marie Curie[20] (Professor) – 1903*, 1911*
- [Ph.] Alfred Kastler (Researcher) – 1966
- [Ch.] Henri Moissan (Professor) – 1906*
- [Ch.] Irène Joliot-Curie (Professor) – 1935*
- [Ch.] Peter Debye[33] (Visiting Lecturer) – 1936
- [PM] Charles Richet (Professor) – 1913*
- [PM] Jules Bordet (Researcher) – 1919
- [PM] Roger Guillemin (Researcher) – 1977
- [PM] Jean Dausset (Professor) – 1980*
- [Pe.] Louis Renault (Professor) – 1907*
- [Li.] T.S. Eliot[34] (Visitor) – 1948
See also
[edit]- Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism – 1784 French scientific bodies' investigations involving systematic controlled trials
- Faculty of Law of Paris – Faculty of the University of Paris
- List of split up universities
- List of medieval universities
Notes
[edit]- ^ Origins at the Parisian cathedral school during the High Middle Ages.
- ^ Suppressed from 1793–1806, while the faculties and university were respectively reestablished in 1806 and 1896.
References
[edit]- ^ Records of The Tercentenary Festival of Dublin University. Dublin, Ireland: Hodges, Figgis & Co. 1894. ISBN 9781355361602.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ a b Charles Homer Haskins: The Rise of Universities, Henry Holt and Company, 1923, p. 292.
- ^ "Sorbonne facts". Paris Digest. 2018. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
- ^ Palmer, R. R. (1975). "27, The National Convention orders the sale of all college endowments". The School of The French Revolution : A Documentary History of the College of Louis-le-Grand and its Director, Jean-François Champagne, 1762–1814. Princeton: Princeton Legacy Library. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-69-161796-1.
- ^ "Histoire de l'université". Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. Retrieved 2024-01-16.
- ^ "La Chancellerie des universités de Paris a 50 ans". Académie de Paris (in French). Apr 2022. Retrieved 2024-10-17.
- ^ "§1. The University of Paris. X. English Scholars of Paris and Franciscans of Oxford. Vol. 1. From the Beginnings to the Cycles of Romance. The Cambridge History of English and American Literature: An Encyclopedia in Eighteen Volumes. 1907–1921". bartleby. Retrieved Mar 23, 2020.
- ^ "The Sorbonne in the Middle Ages". La Chancellerie des Universités de Paris. Retrieved 2016-06-18.
- ^ Beckwith, CI (2012). Warriors of the Cloisters: The Central Asian Origins of Science in the Medieval World. Princeton University Press. doi:10.23943/princeton/9780691155319.001.0001. ISBN 9780691155319.
- ^ "Miscellanea Scotica: Memoirs of the ancient alliance between France and Scotland. Account of the Earl of Glencairn's expedition into the Highlands of Scotland, in the years 1653-4, written by Graham of Deuchrie. Life and death of King James the Fifth of Scotland. Buchanan's inquiry into the genealogy and present state of ancient Scottish surnames; with the history of the family of Buchanan. Monro's (High Dean of the Isles) genealogies of the clans of the isles". sold. 21 January 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Historical Tales of the Wars of Scotland, and of the Border Raids, Forays, and Conflicts". Fullarton. 21 January 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ « Picard » et « Picardie », espace linguistique et structures sociopolitiques Archived 17 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, by Serge Lusignan and Diane Gervais, August 2008
- ^ Gallén, Jarl (1957). "Dacia". Kulturhistorisk leksikon for nordisk middelalder fra vikingtid til reformasjonstid. Vol. 2 : Blik-data. Oslo: Utg. Gyldendal. col. 608-610.
- ^ Feuchter, Jörg; Hoffmann, Friedhelm; Yun, Bee, eds. (2011). Cultural transfers in dispute: representations in Asia, Europe, and the Arab world since the Middle Ages. Eigene und fremde Welten. Frankfurt-on-Main ; New York: Campus. ISBN 978-3-593-39404-6.
- ^ Jean-Robert Pitte (ed), La Sorbonne au service des Humanités: 750 ans de création et de transmission du savoir, Presses Universitaires de Paris-Sorbonne, 2007
- ^ Poirier, Jacques. Poirier, J. L. (Jean Louis) (1982). Médecine et philosophie à la fin du XIXe siècle. Universite ́Paris - Val de Marne. pp. 25–40. OCLC 10895113
- ^ Legois, Jean-Philippe; Monchablon, Alain (2018). "From the Struggle against Repression to the 1968 General Strike in France". In Dhondt, Pierre; Boran, Elizabethanne (eds.). Student Revolt, City, and Society in Europe: From the Middle Ages to the Present. New York: Routledge. pp. 67–78. ISBN 9781351691031. Retrieved 5 February 2021.
- ^ a b c d e Readings, Bill (1996). The university in ruins. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press. pp. 136–137. ISBN 978-0-674-92952-4.
- ^ a b Marshall, James Derek (2004). "Introduction". Postructuralism, philosophy, pedagogy. Philosophy and education. Dordrecht: Kluwer academic. p. xviii. ISBN 978-1-4020-1894-7.
- ^ a b c d e Pudal, Bernard (2008). Mai - juin 68 (in French). Ivry-sur-Seine: Ed. de l'Atelier. pp. 190–191. ISBN 978-2-7082-3976-0.
- ^ a b Rotman, Patrick; Devillairs, Laurence (2008). Mai 68 raconté à ceux qui ne l'ont pas vécu (in French). Paris: Seuil. pp. 10–11. ISBN 978-2-02-096596-5.
- ^ Giles, Robert; Snyder, Robert (2001). 1968: year of media decision. New Brunswick [N.J.]: Transaction Publishers. p. 86. ISBN 9780765806215.
- ^ Berstein, p. 229.
- ^ Berstein, p. 229; loi no 68-978 du 12 novembre 1968.
- ^ Conac, p. 177.
- ^ "" Sorbonne Université " : Pierre-et-Marie-Curie et Paris-Sorbonne en route vers la fusion". Le Monde (in French). 2017-01-20. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
- ^ Pauline, Verge (21 March 2019). "Les universités Descartes et Diderot fusionnent au sein de "l'Université de Paris"". Le Figaro (in French). Retrieved 2020-12-09.
- ^ "ACADÉMIE DE PARIS". Ministère de l'education nationale et de la jeunesse (in French). Retrieved 2024-02-28.
- ^ Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie; Joy Dorothy Harvey (2000). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: L-Z. Taylor & Francis. pp. 992–993. ISBN 978-0-415-92040-7.
- ^ "NOUS BAYROU • Jean Peyrelevade sur son soutien à Hollande :..." Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved Mar 23, 2020.
- ^ "M. Michel Sapin : Assemblée Nationale". Assemblee-nationale.fr. Retrieved 2016-11-13.
- ^ "Marie Curie – Facts". www.nobelprize.org. Retrieved 2016-11-10.
- ^ Courtens, Eric (2003). "Peter Debye – A Life for Science". In Gonzalo, Julio A.; Aragó López, Carmen (eds.). Great solid state physicists of the 20th century. River Edge, N.J.: World Scientific. pp. 144–145. ISBN 9789812795267.
- ^ "T. S. (Thomas Stearns) Eliot: An Inventory of His Collection in the Manuscript Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center". norman.hrc.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2016-11-06.
Sources
[edit]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "University of Paris". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Further reading
[edit]- Franklin, Alfred: La Sorbonne: ses origines, sa bibliothèque, les débuts de l'imprimerie à Paris et la succession de Richelieu d'après des documents inédits, 2. édition, Paris: L. Willem, 1875
- Leutrat, Jean-Louis: De l'Université aux Universités (From the University to the Universities), Paris: Association des Universités de Paris, 1997
- Post, Gaines: The Papacy and the Rise of Universities Ed. with a Preface by William J. Courtenay. Education and Society in the Middle Ages and Renaissance 54 Leiden: Brill, 2017.
- Rivé, Phillipe: La Sorbonne et sa reconstruction (The Sorbonne and its Reconstruction), Lyon: La Manufacture, 1987
- Tuilier, André: Histoire de l'Université de Paris et de la Sorbonne (History of the University of Paris and of the Sorbonne), in 2 volumes (From the Origins to Richelieu, From Louis XIV to the Crisis of 1968), Paris: Nouvelle Librairie de France, 1997
- Verger, Jacques: Histoire des Universités en France (History of French Universities), Toulouse: Editions Privat, 1986
- Traver, Andrew G. 'Rewriting History?: The Parisian Secular Masters' Apologia of 1254,' History of Universities 15 (1997–9): 9–45.
External links
[edit]- Chancellerie des Universités de Paris (official homepage)
- Projet Studium Parisiense Archived 2018-10-02 at the Wayback Machine: database of members of the University of Paris from the 11th to 16th centuries
- Liste des Universités de Paris et d'Ile-de-France : nom, adresse, cours, diplômes...
University of Paris
View on GrokipediaHistory
Origins and Early Foundation
The University of Paris emerged in the mid-12th century from the cathedral schools of the city, particularly the school attached to Notre-Dame Cathedral, where masters such as Peter Abelard lectured on dialectic and theology around 1100–1120. These schools, including those at Sainte-Geneviève and Saint-Victor Abbey, attracted students from across Europe seeking advanced instruction in the liberal arts, law, medicine, and theology amid the 12th-century renaissance in learning. By circa 1150, groups of masters and scholars had organized into a universitas magistrorum et scholarium, a self-governing guild asserting autonomy from local ecclesiastical and civic authorities.[8] Tensions between students and townspeople culminated in a violent clash in 1200, prompting King Philip II Augustus to issue a royal charter that affirmed the scholars' rights, exempted them from certain taxes, and placed them under royal protection rather than solely episcopal oversight. This charter marked the formal recognition of the university as a corporate entity with privileges akin to those of the clergy. In 1215, Pope Innocent III further legitimized its status through a papal bull that acknowledged the university's right to regulate its affairs, including the suspension of lectures in disputes, thereby establishing its dual secular and ecclesiastical foundations.[1][9] The early institution lacked a central campus, with teaching dispersed across the Left Bank; faculties developed organically, with arts and theology predominating initially. A pivotal development came in 1257 when Robert de Sorbon, chaplain to King Louis IX, established the Collège de Sorbonne to house 16 poor theology students, providing residences and resources that fostered intensive study and debate. Papally approved in 1259, the Sorbonne quickly became synonymous with the university's theological preeminence, housing key libraries and attracting luminaries like Thomas Aquinas.[10]12th–14th Centuries: Organizational Development and Expansion
The University of Paris coalesced in the late 12th century from existing schools associated with the Notre-Dame cathedral, evolving into a structured universitas magistrorum et scholarium—a corporate guild of masters and scholars—by the early 13th century.[11] King Philip II Augustus granted a royal diploma in 1200, affirming the university's ecclesiastical jurisdiction under the bishop of Paris and providing protections against secular interference.[11] Papal legate Robert de Courçon promulgated statutes in 1215 to regulate curricula, examinations, and moral conduct, standardizing the arts curriculum around the trivium and quadrivium as prerequisites for advanced studies.[11] These measures formalized the institution's autonomy, enabling masters to license teachers and enforce disciplinary standards. Organizational structure divided the university into four faculties—arts (the largest and entry-level), theology, canon law, and civil law (with medicine emerging distinctly by the mid-13th century)—each overseeing specialized instruction and degrees.[11] Students and masters organized into four nationes based on regional origins: the French (Gallic), Picard, Norman, and English (including Germans, Scandinavians, and Eastern Europeans), with each nation electing procurators to represent interests in assemblies and resolve disputes.[11] [12] Governance centered on the chancellor of the cathedral chapter, who authorized teaching licenses, while faculties elected deans and the arts faculty selected a rector as administrative head by the early 13th century.[11] This federated system balanced local and universal elements, fostering collective decision-making on issues like fees, holidays, and doctrinal conformity. A 1229 riot between students and Parisian vintners prompted a university-wide suspension of lectures and temporary migration of scholars to cities like Angers and Orléans, culminating in Pope Gregory IX's bull Parens scientiarum in 1231, which recognized the university's corporate status, granted rights to regulate studies, appeal directly to the papacy, and exempt scholars from local taxes and trials.[11] These privileges solidified institutional independence, influencing the stabilization of academic careers through defined progression from bachelor to master and doctor.[1] Expansion accelerated with the establishment of colleges providing housing and endowments; the Collège de Sorbonne, founded in 1253 by theologian Robert de Sorbon and royally confirmed in 1257, initially supported 20-30 poor theology students, emphasizing collegial equality and rigorous study.[12] By the 14th century, dozens of colleges supplemented the non-residential faculties, accommodating growth amid increasing enrollment from across Europe, with the university drawing thousands of students and asserting influence in ecclesiastical and royal councils.[12] This period marked the university's maturation into Europe's preeminent center of learning, its guild-like organization enabling resilience against internal conflicts and external pressures like the Black Death and papal Avignon residency.[11]15th–18th Centuries: Peak Influence and Institutional Maturation
The University of Paris, particularly through its Sorbonne theological college, maintained significant influence across Europe during the 15th to 18th centuries, serving as a bastion of Catholic orthodoxy and scholastic learning amid the Renaissance, Reformation, and early Enlightenment. The faculty of theology, often synonymous with the Sorbonne, played a pivotal role in doctrinal debates, including the promotion of Gallican liberties that asserted the autonomy of the French church from papal interference, influencing royal policy and ecclesiastical governance.[13][14] Attendance patterns indicate steady growth in theological studies until the late 17th century, with the arts faculty peaking around the mid-16th century, supporting an estimated several thousand students annually drawn from across the continent.[15] Institutional maturation advanced notably in the 17th century under Cardinal Richelieu, who, as administrator of the Sorbonne college from 1622, oversaw extensive renovations to unify disparate buildings, commissioning architect Jacques Lemercier for a classical redesign completed by 1642, including a new chapel that symbolized renewed prestige.[10] This rebuilding effort, funded partly by royal patronage, enhanced the university's physical infrastructure and administrative cohesion, aligning it more closely with absolutist state interests while preserving its role as a center for theological education. The university's four faculties—arts, theology, canon law, and civil law—solidified their curricula, with theology maintaining dominance in shaping intellectual discourse, though medical and legal studies saw incremental specialization. The Sorbonne's theology faculty wielded considerable authority in 17th-century controversies, such as the Jansenist debates, where initial endorsements of Cornelius Jansen's Augustinus (1640) by ten professors escalated into papal condemnations and internal censures, underscoring the faculty's capacity to challenge and refine Catholic doctrine.[14] By the 18th century, while confronting Enlightenment rationalism and scientific advances, the institution hosted reformers who integrated emerging ideas, yet retained its conservative theological core, issuing critiques against works like Buffon's naturalistic theories in 1749.[16] This period marked a maturation in balancing tradition with external pressures, though enrollment stagnation in theology signaled early strains before the revolutionary suppression.[15]1793: Suppression During the French Revolution
On September 15, 1793, the National Convention issued a decree suppressing all universities in France, including the University of Paris, as part of the revolutionary effort to dismantle institutions associated with the Ancien Régime.[17] This action targeted the universities' corporatist structures, which were perceived as relics of feudal privilege and obstacles to egalitarian reform.[18] The University of Paris, with its faculties of theology, law, medicine, and arts, had long been intertwined with the Catholic Church and monarchy, making it a focal point for radical Jacobin critiques during the Reign of Terror.[19] The suppression was enacted amid broader anti-clerical measures, including the dechristianization campaign that closed churches and alienated ecclesiastical properties.[20] Revolutionary leaders argued that universities perpetuated elitist, guild-like monopolies on knowledge, stifling innovation and serving counter-revolutionary interests; for instance, the Sorbonne's theological faculty had resisted revolutionary ideologies.[21] Following the decree, the university's colleges, such as the Sorbonne, were dissolved, their endowments confiscated, and buildings repurposed or sold under Article 27 of the Convention's resolutions.[10] Faculty members were dispersed, with many losing positions, though some transitioned to new revolutionary schools like the École normale supérieure precursors.[20] The closure resulted in the fragmentation of academic libraries and archives, contributing to the loss or dispersal of medieval manuscripts and scholarly resources across France.[22] Education shifted toward centralized, state-controlled models emphasizing practical and ideological training over traditional scholasticism, reflecting the Convention's commitment to remaking society from first principles of reason and utility.[23] This suppression persisted until Napoleon's reorganization in 1806, when faculties were reestablished under imperial oversight.[10]1806–1967: Napoleonic Revival and Modern Evolution
In 1806, Napoleon Bonaparte decreed the re-establishment of higher education in France through the creation of the Imperial University, a centralized state-controlled corporation that incorporated the former faculties of the University of Paris as its Parisian branch.[24] This system, formalized by the decree of March 17, 1808, established a monopoly on teaching to train administrators, professionals, and elites loyal to the regime, with Paris hosting five faculties: theology (Catholic-oriented following the 1801 Concordat), law, medicine, letters (humanities), and sciences.[25] The revival prioritized practical instruction in codified law and sciences over the medieval university's theological dominance, reflecting Napoleon's emphasis on utility for imperial governance rather than restoring pre-Revolutionary autonomy.[25] Throughout the 19th century, the Parisian faculties evolved under successive regimes, maintaining state oversight while expanding infrastructure and enrollment. Under the July Monarchy, Minister of Public Instruction François Guizot promoted secondary education reforms that indirectly bolstered university preparation, though higher education remained elitist with limited access.[10] The Franco-Prussian War defeat in 1870 prompted scrutiny of France's educational lag behind Germany's research-oriented model, leading to incremental modernizations during the Third Republic, including enhanced scientific laboratories and professorial chairs.[10] By the early 20th century, student numbers at the Sorbonne fluctuated between 3,000 and 4,500, representing about 42% of France's total university enrollment, with faculties emphasizing literature and sciences amid new constructions like expanded lecture halls.[24] In the 20th century, the University of Paris underwent significant growth and specialization, particularly in natural sciences, producing breakthroughs such as Henri Becquerel's discovery of radioactivity in 1896 and Marie Curie's isolation of radium in 1910 at the Faculty of Sciences.[10] Enrollment tripled in the 1930s to a peak of 14,500 students, driven by interwar economic shifts and increased access for women following 1880 legalizations, though two-thirds pursued humanities amid overcrowding in aging facilities.[4] World War II disrupted operations, with faculties closing intermittently and some faculty collaborating under Vichy, but postwar reconstruction under the Fourth Republic spurred rapid expansion, including new institutes for mathematics and physics where Henri Poincaré had advanced relativity precursors earlier in the century.[4] By 1967, the university hosted over 50,000 students across fragmented sites, highlighting administrative strains from demographic pressures and outdated centralization that presaged later reforms.[4]1968 Protests and 1970 Dissolution
The May 1968 protests at the University of Paris originated from escalating tensions at the Nanterre campus, a faculty affiliated with the university, where students occupied the administration building on March 22 in response to grievances including restrictions on dormitory visitations, opposition to the Vietnam War, and demands for greater academic freedom amid rapid enrollment growth from approximately 170,000 students nationwide in 1960 to over 500,000 by 1968.[26] These issues reflected broader systemic strains in French higher education, characterized by overcrowded facilities, rigid hierarchical governance, and minimal student or faculty input into decision-making processes.[27] On May 2, protests spread to the Sorbonne, the historic core of the University of Paris, as students rallied against the disciplinary closure of Nanterre; the university dean responded by shutting the Sorbonne on May 3, prompting police intervention that arrested over 600 demonstrators and sparked street clashes in the Latin Quarter.[28] Violence intensified on May 6 when authorities dispersed a student assembly at the Sorbonne, leading to widespread confrontations that injured hundreds and drew international attention to the university's role as a flashpoint for discontent with President Charles de Gaulle's authoritarian style and the Gaullist regime's social conservatism.[26] By May 10, known as the "Night of the Barricades," protesters erected fortifications across Paris streets near the Sorbonne, clashing with riot police (CRS) in battles that symbolized resistance to perceived state repression; this escalated into a national crisis, with a general strike on May 13 involving up to 10 million workers and paralyzing the economy for weeks.[5] The university occupations, particularly at the Sorbonne, served as organizational hubs for radical groups influenced by Marxist, anarchist, and Situationist ideologies, demanding not only pedagogical reforms but also societal overhaul, though underlying causal factors included demographic pressures from the baby boom and the failure of post-World War II educational expansion to adapt to modern needs.[27] In the aftermath, de Gaulle's government, facing political instability that nearly toppled his administration, appointed Edgar Faure as Minister of Education on May 16, 1968, tasking him with reforming higher education to avert future upheavals; Faure's subsequent Loi d'orientation de l'enseignement supérieur, enacted on November 12, 1968, introduced principles of university autonomy, interdisciplinary teaching units (unités de formation et de recherche, or UFRs), and tripartite governance involving students, faculty, and administrative staff.[5] This legislation directly addressed the protests' critiques of centralized, faculty-dominated structures by dismantling the traditional model of the University of Paris as a unified federation of independent faculties, culminating in its formal dissolution on July 27, 1970, via decree that fragmented it into 13 autonomous successor institutions (Université Paris I through XIII) between 1970 and 1971.[29] The reform aimed to decentralize power and foster specialized identities—such as Paris I for law and economics, Paris IV for humanities at the Sorbonne—to mitigate the risk of coordinated unrest across a single monolithic entity, though implementation faced resistance from traditionalists who viewed it as a politicized capitulation to radical demands rather than a purely meritocratic evolution.[30] Empirical outcomes included sustained enrollment growth without immediate recurrence of mass protests, but persistent debates over diluted academic standards and politicized university governance.[31]Governance and Academic Structure
Administrative Framework: Rectors, Nations, and Faculties
The University of Paris operated as an autonomous corporation of masters and students, with governance centered on elected rectors, student nations, and academic faculties that structured teaching and administration from its early formation in the late 12th century.[32] This framework emphasized collective decision-making among scholars, independent of direct royal or ecclesiastical control beyond papal privileges granted in 1200 and 1215.[3] The rector held executive authority, overseeing disputes, privileges, and university-wide policies, while nations facilitated student representation primarily within the arts faculty, and faculties delineated disciplinary domains with varying degrees of autonomy.[12] The office of rector emerged by the 1240s as an elected position initially held by a master of arts, chosen by peers to lead the university's nascent organization.[12] Elected for short terms—often two to six months—the rector represented the collective body in external affairs, enforced statutes, and mediated internal conflicts, with authority deriving from the consent of the masters rather than appointment.[32] By the 13th century, the rector was selected through proctors from the arts nations, reflecting the faculty's dominance in university numbers, though later rectors could hail from higher faculties as the role expanded to encompass all disciplines.[1] This elective system ensured accountability but frequently led to jurisdictional tensions with the chancellor of Notre-Dame Cathedral, who retained nominal oversight until papal bulls in 1200 and 1231 affirmed the university's autonomy.[32] Student nations provided organizational units for scholars based on geographic origin, primarily within the faculty of arts, which comprised the bulk of the university's approximately 5,000 to 7,000 students by the 14th century.[33] Four principal nations formed: the French (encompassing central and southern France, plus regions like Spain and Italy), Picard (northern France excluding Normandy), Norman, and German (including England, the Low Countries, and Germanic areas).[34] [35] Each nation elected proctors to represent student interests, manage housing and welfare, and participate in electing the rector, fostering solidarity amid diverse origins while occasionally sparking rivalries that influenced university politics.[1] Higher faculties lacked formal nations, relying instead on master-led syndics for administration.[32] The faculties constituted the core academic divisions, with the inferior faculty of arts serving as the foundational stage for all students before advancing to the three superior faculties of theology, law, and medicine.[3] The arts faculty, organized via the nations, focused on the trivium and quadrivium, requiring a bachelor's degree after three to four years and a master's after additional study and regency.[33] Theology demanded arts mastery plus seven to ten years of specialized lectures on scripture and sentences, emphasizing doctrinal orthodoxy under papal scrutiny.[32] The law faculty covered both canon and civil law, with curricula spanning Roman texts and glosses over five to seven years, while medicine integrated Galenic theory with practical dissection, often limited by church prohibitions until the Renaissance.[3] Each faculty maintained internal statutes, examinations, and degrees, with the superior ones granting licentiates and doctorates that conferred teaching privileges across Christendom.[32]Colleges, Student Life, and Disciplinary Organization
The University of Paris featured a network of colleges that provided residential support primarily for impoverished theology students, with the College of Sorbonne established in 1253 by theologian Robert de Sorbon to house sixteen scholars initially, expanding to accommodate more by the late Middle Ages.[12] These institutions, funded by endowments and donations, offered meals, lodging, and stipends, contrasting with the majority of students who rented private rooms in the Latin Quarter under often squalid conditions.[12] By the 14th century, dozens of such colleges dotted Paris, fostering intense scholarly communities while supplementing the university's faculty-based instruction in arts, theology, canon law, civil law, and medicine.[33] Student life revolved around the four principal nations—French, Picard, Norman, and Anglo-Germanic—geographic and linguistic groupings that elected proctors to represent scholars in university governance and handle internal affairs, with the nations collectively electing the rector annually from rotating faculties.[32] Predominantly male and starting as young as 14 or 15, students endured rigorous arts curricula before advancing, often balancing formal lectures with informal disputations amid a culture of heavy drinking, gambling, and nocturnal disturbances that frequently sparked clashes with local citizens, as documented in 13th-century royal interventions granting clerical privileges like tax exemptions and jurisdictional autonomy to mitigate such tensions.[36] [37] Daily existence included hazing rituals for newcomers, such as public humiliations or mock trials, reflecting a hierarchical pecking order among bachelors and masters, though endowed positions in colleges provided relative stability for a minority.[38] Disciplinary organization rested on papal privileges and internal statutes, with the rector wielding authority to suspend lectures collectively as a bargaining tool against royal interference, exemplified by the 1200 charter from King Philip II Augustus affirming scholars' clerical status and exemption from secular courts.[37] Faculties enforced academic standards through examinations and oaths, requiring incepting arts bachelors to pledge adherence to curricula and decorum before the rector, while nations mediated disputes and imposed fines or expulsions for infractions like absenteeism or doctrinal deviations.[9] Theological faculties, in particular, policed orthodoxy via censures, as seen in 13th-14th century proceedings against suspect teachings, balancing intellectual freedom with institutional safeguards against heresy under episcopal and papal oversight.[39] This self-regulatory framework, rooted in guild-like autonomy, sustained order amid growing enrollments peaking at around 20,000 by the 15th century, though it occasionally faltered in riots, such as the 1380s urban conflicts prompting stricter royal edicts.[12]Intellectual Contributions and Legacy
Scholasticism, Theology, and Philosophical Advancements
The University of Paris emerged as the foremost center of scholasticism in the 12th and 13th centuries, where scholars systematically reconciled Christian theology with rediscovered Aristotelian philosophy through dialectical reasoning. Scholasticism, characterized by the quaestio method of posing disputed questions, analyzing authorities, and synthesizing resolutions, flourished in the university's theology and arts faculties, prioritizing theology as the capstone discipline. This approach privileged empirical observation subordinated to revelation, advancing causal explanations of natural phenomena within a theistic framework.[40] Peter Abelard (1079–1142), teaching in Paris around 1110–1130, pioneered early scholastic techniques by compiling patristic texts in Sic et Non (c. 1121–1122), which presented apparent contradictions to stimulate rational inquiry into doctrinal coherence, thereby laying groundwork for later systematic theology despite ecclesiastical censure for perceived rationalism.[41] The influx of Aristotle's works, translated via Arabic intermediaries by the mid-12th century, prompted intense debates on metaphysics and ethics at the university, with the arts faculty initially restricting unexpurgated texts until 1255, when faculties of arts and theology formally adopted the full corpus.[42] In the 13th century, mendicant orders elevated Parisian scholarship: Albertus Magnus (c. 1200–1280), as Dominican regent master from 1245 to 1248, introduced comprehensive Aristotelian natural philosophy, commenting on Physics and Metaphysics to demonstrate compatibility with faith, influencing empirical approaches to causation.[43] His pupil Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274), regent master of theology at Paris from 1256 to 1259 and 1268 to 1272, synthesized these elements in Summa Theologica (1265–1274), articulating five rational proofs for God's existence from motion, causation, contingency, degrees of perfection, and teleology, while distinguishing essence from existence to affirm divine simplicity and creation ex nihilo.[44] [42] Concurrently, Franciscan John Bonaventure (1221–1274), regent master from 1253 to 1257, emphasized affective mysticism and illumination theory in Itinerarium Mentis in Deum (1259), critiquing excessive Aristotelianism in favor of Augustinian Platonism, thus balancing rationalism with volitional theology.[45] Philosophical advancements included refined nominalist-realist debates on universals, with Parisian masters like Henry of Ghent (c. 1217–1293) positing intentional distinction to resolve essence-existence tensions, fostering causal realism in ontology. The university's 1270 condemnation of theses implying eternal world and unicity of intellect curbed Averroist monopsychism, while Bishop Étienne Tempier's 1277 decree against 219 propositions targeted deterministic excesses, inadvertently broadening metaphysical speculation by prohibiting over-reliance on pagan philosophers and spurring voluntarist theologies.[42] These interventions, rooted in defending orthodoxy against philosophical encroachment, preserved theology's primacy and enabled subsequent developments like John Duns Scotus's (1266–1308) subtle doctor distinctions during his Paris tenure (1304), which univocally predicated being across God and creatures, advancing precise metaphysical analysis.[45] By the 14th century, Parisian scholasticism had codified rigorous disputation practices, influencing European intellectual traditions through quodlibetal questions addressing emergent issues in ethics, epistemology, and divine foreknowledge.Developments in Medicine, Law, and Natural Sciences
The Faculty of Medicine at the University of Paris, established as one of the four original faculties by the early 13th century, emphasized theoretical instruction in humoral pathology and Galenic principles during the medieval period, with limited practical anatomy until papal allowances for dissections in the 14th century.[12] By the 17th and early 18th centuries, teaching shifted toward integrating mechanical philosophy and iatrochemistry, though resistance from traditionalists preserved much of the ancient curriculum until reforms.[46] Revolutionary upheavals in 1794 abolished the old faculty structure, replacing it with a centralized École de Médecine that mandated hospital-based clinical training and autopsy correlations between symptoms and pathology, fostering the Paris Clinical School's emphasis on empirical observation over speculation.[47] [48] In the 19th century, this evolved into systematic tissue-level pathology pioneered by figures like Xavier Bichat, who classified organs by texture in 1801, and René Laennec's invention of the stethoscope in 1816 for auscultation, marking Paris as a hub for bedside diagnosis and influencing global medical practice through American and European observers.[49] [48] The Faculty of Law, initially focused on canon law as a superior faculty from the university's inception around 1200, systematized Gratian's Decretum through glossatorial methods and decretalist commentaries, contributing to the resolution of ecclesiastical disputes via rational exegesis of papal decretals.[1] [50] This tradition integrated Roman civil law elements post-12th century, producing jurists who influenced conciliar theory during the Great Schism (1378–1417), where Parisian scholars advocated for papal deposition based on legal precedents.[51] Napoleonic reorganization in 1806 refounded the faculty to teach codified civil law, emphasizing the Code Napoléon (1804) in curricula that trained administrators for the empire's legal bureaucracy, with subsequent 19th-century expansions incorporating administrative and commercial law to support industrial regulation.[52] In natural sciences, medieval advancements occurred within the arts faculty's natural philosophy curriculum, where scholars like Jean Buridan (rector c. 1320–1340) developed the impetus theory to explain projectile motion without perpetual angelic intervention, challenging Aristotelian teleology through empirical reasoning on inertia precursors.[53] Nicole Oresme (c. 1320–1382), a chancellor and bishop trained at Paris, introduced graphical representations of variable quantities in 1350s treatises and critiqued geocentric models with latitude-dependent day-length arguments, laying groundwork for quantitative kinematics.[54] These Parisian innovations spread via figures like Albert of Saxony (rector 1353), who disseminated Buridan's mechanics across Europe.[55] The 19th-century Faculty of Sciences elevated experimental physics and mathematics; Henri Poincaré, professor of mathematical physics from 1886, advanced three-body problem solutions in celestial mechanics (1887–1890), pioneered topology with fundamental group concepts (1895), and formulated Lorentz transformations independently of Einstein, influencing relativity's mathematical framework.[56] [57] Marie Skłodowska Curie, awarded her doctorate by the University of Paris in 1903 and appointed Sorbonne professor in 1906—the first woman to hold such a position—isolated radium in 1910, establishing radioactivity as atomic decay and enabling medical applications like brachytherapy.[58]Broader Cultural and Institutional Impact
The University of Paris profoundly shaped the institutional framework of higher education in Europe during the Middle Ages, establishing a model of organization based on faculties dedicated to theology, arts, canon law, and medicine, alongside a system of student nations grouped by geographic origin that promoted governance through representative assemblies.[59] This structure influenced the formation of subsequent universities, such as those in Oxford and Bologna, by standardizing academic administration, degree conferral, and scholarly autonomy under papal and royal privileges.[60] By the late Middle Ages, it had grown into Europe's premier intellectual hub, enrolling around 20,000 students and fostering cross-cultural exchanges that disseminated scholastic methods and Aristotelian philosophy across the continent.[12] Culturally, the university elevated Paris to the status of a leading center for knowledge production and debate, with the Sorbonne college amplifying its prestige and contributing to the city's enduring reputation as an intellectual capital.[10] In the 15th century, it incubated the "second French humanism," emphasizing classical texts and rhetoric, and installed France's inaugural printing press in 1469, which expedited the circulation of manuscripts and ideas pivotal to the Renaissance transition.[12] This technological adoption not only amplified the university's output but also supported broader European advancements in literacy and textual criticism, laying groundwork for the Reformation and scientific inquiry. Institutionally, the University of Paris intertwined with French state formation, advising monarchs on policy through its theological faculty while training elites in law and administration that bolstered centralized governance and legal codification.[16] Its emphasis on professional education in medicine, law, and commerce generated human capital that spurred economic specialization and urban development, contributing causally to the commercial revival in northern Europe by producing skilled practitioners who applied revived Roman law to trade and contracts.[61] Even after its 1793 suppression amid revolutionary anti-clericalism and subsequent Napoleonic reconfiguration in 1806, its legacy endured in France's centralized university system, where 19th-century expansions under the Third Republic positioned the Sorbonne as the core of national higher education, influencing modern reforms in academic freedom and research orientation.[24]Controversies and Criticisms
Theological Condemnations and Doctrinal Disputes
The University of Paris, particularly its Faculty of Theology, served as a central arbiter in medieval doctrinal matters, issuing and responding to condemnations that sought to align philosophical teachings with Christian orthodoxy. Early restrictions emerged in 1210 when the provincial council at Paris banned the teaching of Aristotle's Metaphysics and Physics, along with Averroes' commentaries, due to their perceived incompatibility with revealed truth. This was reinforced in 1215 by a papal legate's decree prohibiting the lecturing of Aristotle's natural books, reflecting ecclesiastical concerns over pagan philosophy undermining faith. By 1270, Bishop Étienne Tempier condemned 13 propositions, targeting ideas such as the world's eternity and the unity of intellect, which echoed Averroist doctrines prevalent among arts faculty masters.[62][62][63] The most extensive intervention occurred on March 7, 1277, when Tempier issued a condemnation of 219 propositions, drawn from Aristotelian and Averroist sources, prohibiting their defense or teaching at the university. These included denials of divine omnipotence, such as claims that God could not move the world in a straight line or create multiple worlds, as well as assertions limiting free will and personal immortality. Tempier acted unilaterally, bypassing the university's chancellor, amid reports of radical "double truth" theories—holding philosophical truths separate from theological ones—associated with figures like Siger of Brabant. The decree imposed excommunication on adherents and aimed to curb the arts faculty's overreach into theology, though it inadvertently encouraged speculation on God's absolute power, influencing later voluntarism. A parallel condemnation by Archbishop Robert Kilwardby at Oxford targeted 16 propositions, underscoring broader Latin Christian efforts to safeguard doctrine.[62][62][62] Doctrinal disputes also manifested in conflicts between secular masters and mendicant orders, particularly Dominicans and Franciscans, who gained teaching privileges by the mid-13th century. Secular theologians, resenting mendicants' exemptions from diocesan oversight and tithes, accused them of usurping pastoral roles and promoting lax doctrines. William of St. Amour's 1256 treatise De periculis novissimorum temporum condemned mendicant friars as apocalyptic precursors, prompting papal bulls from Alexander IV that affirmed mendicant rights and excommunicated opponents, leading to a university strike and temporary exodus of masters. These tensions, blending theological critiques of poverty vows with jurisdictional battles, persisted into the 14th century, highlighting fractures within the faculty over authority and orthodoxy.[64][64][64]Political Entanglements and Suppression of Dissent
The University of Paris, through its Faculty of Theology (the Sorbonne), exerted significant political influence by aligning with French monarchs against papal encroachments, notably during the early 14th-century clash between King Philip IV and Pope Boniface VIII. In 1303, amid Philip's refusal to remit clerical taxes and Boniface's excommunication threats, the university's masters rallied to the king's defense, with the theology faculty formally denouncing the pope as a heretic and invalidating his bulls, thereby framing the conflict as a defense of royal sovereignty over ecclesiastical overreach.[65][66] This intervention not only bolstered Philip's campaign, including the subsequent arrest and humiliation of Boniface at Anagni, but also entrenched the university as a corporate actor in state-church power dynamics, prioritizing national interests over ultramontane papal authority.[67] Such entanglements fostered Gallican doctrines limiting Rome's temporal influence in France, with Paris theologians sketching early formulations of ecclesiastical liberties under royal protection as early as the late 14th century, later refined during disputes like Louis XII's 1510-1511 conflict with Pope Julius II.[68][14] The university's charters, privileges from Philip II in 1200 and Innocent III in 1215, enabled this role, allowing it to petition kings for autonomy while advising on policy, as seen in its medieval appeals to Capetian rulers for protection against local bishops and during the Hundred Years' War, where it endorsed French claims against English papal allies.[69] By the 17th century, this Gallican stance persisted, with the Sorbonne resisting papal infallibility teachings, reflecting a consistent pattern of subordinating universal church claims to French state imperatives.[70] In suppressing dissent with political ramifications, the university's faculties issued condemnations that facilitated state repression, particularly against emerging Protestant ideas. In 1521, the Sorbonne formally censured Martin Luther's 95 Theses and other works, labeling them heretical and urging their prohibition, which aligned with royal edicts under Francis I to curb Lutheran infiltration and justified arrests of suspected reformers.[71][72] This theological veto power extended to individuals; for instance, in 1523 and 1526, the faculty extracted and condemned propositions from Louis de Berquin's writings, deeming him a relapsed heretic and delivering him to secular authorities for execution by burning in 1529, thereby enforcing doctrinal uniformity amid fears of social unrest from religious schism.[73] Similarly, during the 1550s-1560s Wars of Religion, Sorbonne doctors collaborated with the Parlement of Paris to prosecute Huguenot sympathizers, arming their own students for masses and contributing to edicts like the 1540s crackdowns that seized Protestant texts and possessions, framing dissent as a threat to monarchical stability.[74][75] These actions underscore the university's dual role as intellectual arbiter and instrument of control, where condemnations often blurred theological and political lines to preserve the Catholic monarchy's order, though internal disputes—such as faculty divisions over Jansenism in the 17th century—occasionally highlighted limits to enforced consensus.[76] By prioritizing alignment with state power, the institution suppressed heterodox views that challenged the intertwined religious-political establishment, a pattern evident from medieval royalist petitions to Reformation-era inquisitorial support.[77]Critiques of the 1968 Upheaval and Its Consequences
The May 1968 protests at the Sorbonne, a constituent college of the University of Paris, elicited sharp critiques from contemporary observers who viewed the student-led occupations and strikes as disruptive outbursts lacking substantive intellectual or structural merit. Philosopher Raymond Aron, in his 1968 analysis La Révolution introuvable, characterized the events as a "psychodrama" and "carnival," arguing that they represented an irrational revolt of privileged youth against authority rather than a genuine push for reform, exacerbated by the French government's prior failure to modernize overcrowded universities.[78][79] Aron contended that the protesters' demands—for greater student input in governance and curriculum—ignored practical governance realities and fostered anarchy, with the Sorbonne's occupation from May 3 onward devolving into violent clashes that injured hundreds and prompted mass arrests.[80] Critics further highlighted the upheaval's immediate academic toll: universities nationwide, including the University of Paris, halted operations for weeks, with the Sorbonne under student control until mid-June, leading to deferred or collectively passed examinations that undermined merit-based assessment.[81] This disruption, coupled with the ensuing Edgar Faure Law of November 1968, which mandated university autonomy and expanded student representation in decision-making bodies, was faulted for injecting politicization into academia, prioritizing egalitarian access over rigorous standards and contributing to bureaucratic expansion.[82] Post-1968 enrollment surged—French higher education student numbers rose from approximately 500,000 in 1968 to over 1 million by the mid-1970s—but detractors, including later analysts, attributed a subsequent decline in selectivity and intellectual discipline to these reforms, manifesting in lowered entry barriers and a shift toward vocationalism at the expense of traditional scholarly depth.[83][84] Longer-term consequences included the 1970-1971 administrative fragmentation of the centralized University of Paris into 13 autonomous institutions, a direct outgrowth of the Faure reforms aimed at decentralization but criticized for eroding the unified prestige and cohesive academic authority that had defined the medieval-origin entity.[85] This splintering, accelerated by the 1968 unrest's exposure of systemic rigidities, was seen by skeptics as yielding fragmented governance and diminished global standing, with French universities lagging in international rankings by the 1980s due to entrenched politicization and resistance to meritocratic competition.[82][86] Such outcomes reinforced Aron's warning of a "revolt without revolution," where ideological fervor supplanted empirical institutional improvement, fostering a legacy of administrative inefficiency and ideological conformity in French academia.[87]Successor Institutions
Fragmentation into Autonomous Universities Post-1970
The Faure Law, formally the Orientation Act on Higher Education enacted on November 12, 1968, initiated the structural reform of French universities in the aftermath of the May 1968 student and worker protests, which had exposed overcrowding, rigid faculty structures, and centralized governance at institutions like the University of Paris.[3][5] These events, beginning with demonstrations at the Sorbonne on May 3, 1968, escalated into nationwide strikes involving over 10 million participants and nearly paralyzed the government under President Charles de Gaulle, prompting concessions including educational decentralization to restore order and modernize the system.[3] The law granted universities autonomy from state ministries, introduced participatory governance involving faculty, staff, and students, and mandated the dissolution of multi-faculty conglomerates like the University of Paris into specialized, independent entities to foster innovation and reduce bureaucratic inertia.[5][31] Implementation of the division occurred in 1970, effective January 1, 1971, subdividing the University of Paris—encompassing approximately 50,000 students and 5,000 faculty across its faculties—into 13 autonomous universities numbered Paris I through XIII, each aligned with disciplinary clusters to enable focused administration and resource allocation.[3][31] This fragmentation addressed post-1968 ideological cleavages among faculty, where Marxist-influenced groups clashed with traditionalists, allowing divergent academic orientations to form separate institutions rather than coexist under one roof, though critics argued it diluted the historic prestige and interdisciplinary cohesion of the Sorbonne model.[30] The new universities initially coordinated through a shared rectorate, the Chancellerie des Universités de Paris, but operated with independent budgets, curricula, and admissions, marking a shift from Napoleonic-era centralization to federal-like autonomy.[3]| University | Primary Focus Areas |
|---|---|
| Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne | Humanities, social sciences, arts |
| Paris II Panthéon-Assas | Law, political science, economics |
| Paris III Sorbonne Nouvelle | Literature, languages, media studies |
| Paris IV Paris-Sorbonne (later merged) | Humanities, classics, history |
| Paris V René Descartes (later merged) | Medicine, health sciences |
| Paris VI Pierre et Marie Curie (later merged) | Science, engineering |
| Paris VII Denis Diderot (later merged) | Science, humanities |
| Paris VIII Vincennes-Saint-Denis | Social sciences, experimental programs |
| Paris IX Dauphine | Economics, management |
| Paris X Nanterre | Social sciences, psychology |
| Paris XI Sceaux (later merged) | Law, economics, sciences |
| Paris XII Val-de-Marne (later merged) | Medicine, administration |
| Paris XIII Bobigny-Villetaneuse | Multidisciplinary, northern suburbs |
