Atjaunināt sīkdatņu piekrišanu

Universities of Ancient Greece [Mīkstie vāki]

The Universities of Ancient Greece (1912) examines Greek education in the Classical world, from the pre-Alexandrian times to the last three centuries B.C. ‘Universities’ are defined as congregations of professors and students, as well as the organized bodies at places such as Alexandria (at the Museum), the Capitolium at Constantinople, at Athens and Antioch.



The Universities of Ancient Greece (1912) examines Greek education in the Classical world, from the pre-Alexandrian times to the last three centuries B.C. ‘Universities’ are defined as congregations of professors and students, as well as the organized bodies at places such as Alexandria, Constantinople, at Athens and Antioch.

1. Introduction
2. Education at Athens in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries
B.C.
3. The Macedonian Period
4. Education and the State
5. Establishment of
University Education in Grecian Lands
6. History of University Education from
Marcus Aurelius to Constantine
7. The Decline of University Education: the
Conflict with Christianity
8. The Professors: Their Appointment and Number
9.
The Professors: Their Pay and Position in Society
10. What the Sophists
Taught and How They Taught It
11. Public Displays
12. Schoolhouses, Holidays,
Etc; the School of Antioch
13. The Boyhood of a Sophist
14. Student Days
15.
After College
16. Conclusion