A History of the University of OxfordLongmans, Green, 1894 - 235 pages |
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Page 17
... principle of self - government . In the meantime Merton College had been founded on a far larger scale , and had received statutes which , C. H. of Merton viewed across the interval of six centuries , THE EARLY COLLEGES 17.
... principle of self - government . In the meantime Merton College had been founded on a far larger scale , and had received statutes which , C. H. of Merton viewed across the interval of six centuries , THE EARLY COLLEGES 17.
Page 20
... received the whole or the greater part of their instruction within the walls of their convents , they probably were rarely seen in the streets , cultivated a certain degree of refinement , and took comparatively little part in the riots ...
... received the whole or the greater part of their instruction within the walls of their convents , they probably were rarely seen in the streets , cultivated a certain degree of refinement , and took comparatively little part in the riots ...
Page 47
... received a new charter of privileges and immunities as a reward for the indignities to which it had been subjected on St. Scholastica's Day . Under this charter , the Chan- cellor of the University obtained the sole control over the ...
... received a new charter of privileges and immunities as a reward for the indignities to which it had been subjected on St. Scholastica's Day . Under this charter , the Chan- cellor of the University obtained the sole control over the ...
Page 49
... received munificent aid from Henry III . In 1221 the Dominicans , or Black Friars , first appeared in Oxford , and located themselves in the heart of the Jewry , from which they migrated forty years afterwards into a new monastery by ...
... received munificent aid from Henry III . In 1221 the Dominicans , or Black Friars , first appeared in Oxford , and located themselves in the heart of the Jewry , from which they migrated forty years afterwards into a new monastery by ...
Page 54
... received elsewhere into a religious Order , no graduate of the cloister or society to which the offender belongs shall be allowed to deliver or attend lectures in Oxford during the year next ensuing . Another statute of the same date is ...
... received elsewhere into a religious Order , no graduate of the cloister or society to which the offender belongs shall be allowed to deliver or attend lectures in Oxford during the year next ensuing . Another statute of the same date is ...
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