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Ecole de Chartres

LC control no.n 81083242
Descriptive conventionsrda
Corporate name headingEcole de Chartres
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Variant(s)Cathédrale de Chartres. Ecole de Chartres
School of Chartres
Scuola di Chartres
Cathedral School of Chartres
Beginning date11
Ending date12
Found inZanoletti, G. Il bello come vero alla scuola di Chartres, 1979 (subj.) t.p. (scuola di Chartres) p. 10 (scuola cattedrale di Chartres, scuola di Chartres) p. 102 etc. (Ecole de Chartres)
New Cath. encycl. (Chartres: an episcopal school dating from the 10th cent.; became famous under Bps. Fulbert (d. 1028) and Ivo (d. 1116)) v. 9, p. 603 (cathedral school of Chartres; school of Chartres) v. 12, p. 1155 (caption: School of Chartres; also, cathedral school in Chartres)
Dict. des lettres franç., le Moyen âge, 1964 (Chartres, Ecole de)
Encyc. Brit., 1977 (Chartres, School of; 12th cent.)
Jeauneau, E. Lectio philosophorum, 1973: t.p. (Ecole de Chartres)
English Wikipedia website, viewed Apr. 30, 2015 (under School of Chartres: In the early 11th century, (c. 1020), Bishop Fulbert established Chartres as one of the leading schools in Europe. Although the role of Fulbert himself as a scholar and teacher has been questioned, perhaps his greatest talent was as an administrator, who established the conditions in which the school could flourish ... The school of Chartres' greatest period was the first half of the twelfth century. At Chartres, however, masters lacked the relative autonomy that was developing around the schools of Paris and the small city did not support the large number of students that were found at Paris. By the later 12th century the status of the school was on the wane. It was gradually eclipsed by the newly emerging University of Paris, particularly at the School of the Abbey of St Victor (the 'Victorines'))
Not found inGrande encyc.; Grand Larousse