PAGE TWELVE Education In Italy Dur Thousand Years' De The Country of National Control in Universi est Educational Institution of ,H It is not possible to understand the history of the universities of Italy without knowing something of the history of modern Italy-of this new nation only a little over half a century old, born from the chaos of the Middl3 Ages, and freed from the dismemberment and oppression of many foreign usurpers after a long struggle amid almost insuperable dif- ficulties. The fall of the Roman Empire left Italy exposed for centuries to the in- vasion and depredation of the bar- barians. Goths, Ostrogoths Vandals, Runs, and Saracens, attracted by the beauty and wealth of the country, pil- laged everything, leaving her in ruin. Later, German or French rulers dis-a puted for centuries her fertile land, i giving origin for self-defence, to the f Lombard Communes, to the repub- lics of Venice, of Genoa, of Pisa, and ( of Florence, and to the duchies of S Milan, of Savoy, and Tuscany. In f addition, were formed the little king- doms of Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia. All these strove for local and national h spremacy. To Dante Alighieri, the great na- t tional poet of Italy, belongs the glorys of being the first exponent of a na- tional unity, and his ideas for cen-c turies were the dream of most of thes intellectual people of the country.a The American war of independence, : and the French revolution lighted a E sacred fire for liberty which inflamedI the minds of the best intellects of the country, and the Italians, led byp the writings of eminent patriots like i Guiseppe Mazzini, bya great diplo-p mat like Camillo Cavuur, and by the n sword of men like Guiseppe Gari-t baldi and King Victor Emanuel1 fought hard for their freedom fromf foreign tyranny and domination. A liberal constitution, framed and given to the people of Piedmont by its king, Carlo Alberto in theyear 1848, bound together all liberal lead- ers of the. rest of Italy. They rushed to the colors under one flag of three symbolic colors-green, white and red, which ever since has been the flag of New Italy. From that year started the gigantic fight between the little kingdom of Piedmont and the mighty, powerful double empire of Austria-Hungary. It would be too long to recount here the several wars fought by Italy from the middle of the last century to the present day, for the successive liberation of Lombardy, Venice, Ro- magna, Tuscany, Naples, and Sicily, and at last of Trento and Triest, that ended with the great victory of the Battle of Vittorio Vento on Novem- ber 3, 19184 practically terminating the great war by the complete col- lapse of the dual monarchy of Aus- tria-Hungary. This last war has cost Italy 500000 soldiers killed, 300,000 deal of diseas- es contracted in war, 800,000 wpunded and 400,000 crippled for life, and an enormous war debt which she will pay by peaceful and hard labor. However, she has gained independ- ence and the liberty 9f her people, who will from now on work for their progress and advancement. The university, in its earliest con- ception was a scholastic guild-a gathering of men anxious to learn. These groups of independent teach- ers and pupils, in the course of time were obliged to organize for mutual protection and for a public legal recognition of their rights and of their duties. From that time univer- siies becamedwell-established orga- nirations placed under the protection of the laws and under special rules set by the government of their own countries. The privilege of granting rights to a university and to establish certain rules under which the institution should be administered, was assured by emperors, kings, popes, princes, ji Y - 7 > j , - - , ~ - Earliest E Italy, forerunner in the Renais in.g nation in the possession of art take steps toward higher education At Salerno in the nineth centur men anxious for the furtherance o ledge set about establishing a schoo Anatomy was the chief study, and as were frequently compelled to aband work in order to preserve their ox At present there are 17 univers the Italian government. The aut tells of the early struggles and later and the exclusive rulers of the var- ous countries in medieval times. The! irst institution of this kind in Italy and perhaps in the world) datesj rom the nineth century, when the l School of Salerno is mentioned as the f'rst center of medical studies. 1 When Salernum had already begun o decline, and Padua was in its in- fancy, the School of Bologna was at ts apogee. Begun in the middle of he eleventh century with a school of sacred letter, and civil and canonical law, by the close of the thirteenth century there had been added a' school of medicine and philosophy. It attracted in a sinble year, not fromE Italy alone, but from every part of( Europe as far north as the British Isle, ten thousand students. To Bologna was assigned the rare privilege of connecting the old learn-1 ing and the new, and of occupying a place of equal prominence in each. Its medical school, however, belongs to the new, for it begins with the date 1260, when Taddeo di Alderotto came from Florence and began the teach- ing and practice of medicine in Bo- THE MICHIGAN DAILY so as to ascertain if he is fitted to to one of the different faculties ac- modern laboratories for scientific and continue the courses which follow. cording to his application. practical experiments and works. After passing successfully the The life of the students . before In the plains of Emilia, not far ' thin university is al- Bologna, are also flourishing exainaionm ecn t tierteuniversities of Parma and v e o padite t fna pbicdeae el;mostalysafmiyiebittj Modens. These ancient cities, full of before the faculty, which, after a home or in boarding houses, and their monuments and traditions of that favorable vote confers upon him the associations begin only at the lyceum, glorious period of the renaissance, degree inthe faculty which he had kept Europe intellectually alive ities Boasts the Earli- selected. He is presented with a and become more important at the kept Enrpeintellectall al diploma called "Laurea", the final university. amidst invasions, wars and continual dilm"heo nvrstef soi-struggles, istory.legal document of admission into the In regard to the student associa- Still in the of practice of the profession. tions of the universities of Italy, one nti intherly, iestPemidsto fsthe Since the unification of Italy under should not forget that the country cient city ith iesadunvls -a I egoermen i te lstfityis a united nation only since the mid- ancetiy with its ancient univer- one government in the last fifty C me ainonysnetemd sity, trival of Bologna, where Galileo years, the standard of university edu dle of the last century, and that the tyg r of yoa, here Gheo ,d cat rs Itaught for ten years. Here the most I cation has rapidly improved in every lapse of two generations is not suffic- precious monuments of learning are sone of the universities not only on ac- ient to blot out ancient superstitions,, sance, and recognized as the lead- count of the better selection of the habits and customs of life. r preserved religiously as a document treasures, was the first nation to staff of teachers, but also through There is a national spirit of as- o a glorious pas. in definite institutions. regional emulation. sqciation among the students of the The tragic history of Pavia, the Th little city near Milano where Boeth- y of the Christian era, a group of As no student is admitted to the various universities in Italy. The iote uthr o There on ton f their own and common know= university in Italy, unless he has ,last war helped to cement still more of (ohy itenin T rion)oas l to be called after the town. been promoted from the last year o that patriotic spirit, which warmss the times were unsettledl, the men the high school system, it is well to under the flag of the Goliardi, univer- put to death by Theodoric the Great, Ion temporarily their, educational know the working of that system of sity association. But every univer-' is connected with that of her univer- vn lives. public schools. The whole education sity has some regional character, sity, once a great place of learning. It isytteonro ag n ities in Italy under the control of of the country is under the superin- which is more evident among the yet the owner of a large and I thesupein Iprecious library and original mono-, hor of the accompanyink article tendence of the Minister of Public north and south of the country. Stu- triumphs of the Latin institutions. Instruction, who presides of a Super- dents gather usually in the coffee ments of her past grandeur and im- ion Board of Public Education com- houses, to discuss their business and portance. posad of 20 members partly chosen politics with that lively character Pavia today is the center of stud- logna, where he finally settled, ac-Iby the head of the government and j which is inborn in Latin races. On jies of the province of Lombardy, and quiring in a short time extraordinary partly by the faculties of the var-; many occasions they have contribu- !notwithstanding the nearness of Mi- celebrity and immense riches, ious universities. There is also a ted seriously to important political , e grea capi rich College of Inspectors attached to the events, which were very influential part of the north of Italy, holds an During the early years of the and each n in the national destiny of the coun- important placa as a scientific field Rnisneth glrofteIn-governmnent, ad ac urovince has yo h on Renaissance, the glory of the Uni- a special inspector (Provveditore try. I for original studies in modern inves- versity of Bologna was its school of.tigations This is especially so inI medicine, and the glory of the school degli 't4idii who exercises supervis- It would be out of place to give gmedicine. medicine a the glory ng of eschl ion over the higher and lower grade here a history of each one of the 17 eicines of nmedicine was the teaching of anat- of schools. I Ws fPva vr10mlsd omy. In fact, for many centuriesanilg n dc universities of Italy, but it is not im- Wt of Paie 10 apital of Attendanceat (schoo istcntpusisytheoplargemeanin toldecapis aldof Italy had the distinction of being the Attendance at school is compulsory proper to mention the efforts made Piedmont, with half a million of in- country of the most eminent anato- in Italy. The popular school is free, by the young nation in reorganizing dustrious mists, who flourished in that period h xpns being borne by the cor- 0( institutions in trying to revive an ancient university, famous for of the Renaissance which was also munes with the aid of' the state. the glory of a great past. some great anatomists, amon fwhom glorious in art and literature. There Children are admitted to school at Rome, the capital of the kingdom, is Rolando, who gave the name to are at present seventeen universities the age of six, and they have to fol- is at present the moral center of the the Rolandic area or fissure of the in Italy, all under the control of the low the regular elementary course of intellectual life of the nation, and brain. SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1925 In beautiful Tuscany there are two universities, one in Pisa and the other in Sienak both full of ancient traditions, and rocently modernized for the presenitrequirements. Theie is also an institute for the advance- ment of every branch of science in Florence, the famous city of arts. In the southern part of Italy, Naples, the largest in population, has also the largest university, being the center of a country inhabited by 14 millions of people. The University of Naples was at first a dependence of the School of Salerno, a city only 30 miles from Naples, where the first school of medicine was established in Italy in the year 1150. The Island of Sicily had three uni- versities. :However, one has been destroyed when the city of Messina, in December, 1908, was wiped out of existence by an earthquake and tidal wavet leaving the old one of Catania and the other smaller university of Palermo. The government, is rebuild- ing the city of Messina and with it the university, but it will take a long 'time to renew a center of learining from the ashes of a rich library, and' the equipments of many expensive laboratories. Less important are the two univer- sities of Cagliari and Sassari, the largest and most conscipuous cities of the island of Sardinia. Although (Continued on Page Sixteen) .j i . > . rj 'f .f 10-0 VIP I government each the same standards administered by and regulations. They are provided with a staff of pro-' fessors and instructors elected by a special board, after a public examina- tion, or by the exhibition of some scientific studies, publications or con- tributions which would entitle the candidate to the responsible position of teacher. At the end of each year the pupil is submitted to an examination on every subject taught during the year four years before they are admitted the "Sapienza", as the university of Genoal the richest commercial port to the gymnasium, after successful the beautiful city is called, is the of the Mediterranean, has also a uni- examinations. temple from which it irradiates the versity, and at present can boast the The gymnasium curriculum is of' scientific work of New Italy. greatest and most modern clinical 1 five years, after which the pupil with! Then comes Bologna, the capital of hospital of the world. It has just another successfful examination is ad- one of the richest regions of the been finished at the large expense of mitted to the lyceum. This lyceum, north of Italy, with her traditions thirty millions of lire, with sixty pa- which corresponds in some ways to; of eight hundred years of existence,' vilions, each one equipped with the the high schools of America, pre- her ancient monuments of a great best modern appliances for the com- pares the student for the university; past, rebuilt to suit the most modern fort of the patients, and for the ad- where he is admitted, after three requirements, with the old library, vance in the studies of the various years and a successful examination, full of precious documents, and many disease. A "I' 112 East Liberty St. 'Wrought Iron Bridge Well made, decorative, with paper parchment shade. Has six foot cord. Adustable light! 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