Nation (university) explained

Student nations or simply nations (Latin: natio meaning "being born"[1] [2]) are regional corporations of students at a university. Once widespread across Europe in medieval times, they are now largely restricted to the oldest universities of Sweden and Finland, in part because of the violent conflicts between the nations in university towns in other countries. Medieval universities were cosmopolitan, with students from many different domestic and foreign regions. Students who were born within the same region usually spoke the same language, expected to be ruled by their own familiar laws, and therefore joined together to form the nations. In the Anglo world the institutions most closely comparable to the medieval nation system are perhaps the collegiate system of older British universities or fraternities at North American universities, though the comparisons are imperfect. In Portugal and Brazil, there are fraternities called repúblicas, but this has nothing to do with the natio original concept of nations (they are created for the purpose of lodging).

Examples in medieval universities

University of Paris

In the University of Paris there were the French, Normans, Picards, and the English, and later the Alemannian nation. Jean Gerson was twice elected procurator for the French natio (i.e. the French-born students at the university) in 1383 and 1384, while studying theology at Paris. Also at Paris, Germanic speakers were grouped into a single nation.[3] [4]

The various nations in Paris often quarreled with one another; Jacques de Vitry wrote of the students:

University of Oxford

The students who attended the medieval university in Oxford formed themselves into two constantly quarreling nations who were called the australes and the boreales. The australes originated from south of the River Trent and was the more powerful of the two nations. The Welsh were also considered part of the australes, along with scholars from the Romance lands. The boreales came mainly from the north of England and Scotland.[5]

The nations at Oxford were eventually disbanded in 1274 in an effort to maintain peace in the town.[6] Despite this measure, conflicts between the nations continued. One such came on 29 April 1388, when Welsh students, who were according to the chronicler Henry Knighton semper inquieti, fought with their northern counterparts. The following year a chronicler says that the boreales ran amok in the town chanting 'war, war, war, slay, slay, slay the Welsh dogs' killing and looting as they went, before rounding up the remaining Welsh students and forcing them to kiss the town's gateposts 'goodbye'.[7]

See also: Colleges of the University of Oxford.

University of Prague

A similar division of students had been adopted at the Charles University in Prague, where from its opening in 1348 the studium generale was divided among Bohemian (for local students), Bavarian, Saxon, and Polish nations. When there was not a "natio" of a student's birth territory, students were assigned to one of those existing.

Due to the Decree of Kutná Hora in 1409, the three foreign nations were merged into one and three other votes were for the Bohemian students. The exodus of students who had belonged to the German nations led to a decline in the university's prestige and the creation of the University of Leipzig.

University of Leipzig

When the University of Leipzig was established in 1409 by scholars from the University of Prague, the new university's nationes were modeled on those of Prague, replacing the Bohemian "natio" with one for local students from the Margravate of Meissen, becoming the Natio Misnensium[8] with the other nationes remaining those of the Saxonum (Saxony), Bavarorum (Bavaria), and Polonorum (Poland).[9]

University of Bologna

In medieval Bologna, there existed three separate universities. There were two for the study of law, one for students from Italy (but not Bologna) the universitas citramontanorum and another for students from outside the peninsula the universitas ultramontanorum. The third school was for the study of the arts and medicine universitas artisarum et medicorum.[10] The ultramontane university was divided into fourteen different nations as early as 1265- the Gauls, Picards, Burgundians, Turonenses (those from Tours), Pictavienses (those from Poitiers), Normans, Catalans, Hungarians, Poles, Germans, Provençals, English, and Gascons, whereas the citramontane university was split into three nations: Romans, Tuscans and Lombards.[11]

The most important and powerful nation of the ultramontane University of Bologna was the German nation. One of its most famous members was Nicolaus Copernicus who, in 1496, enrolled into the Natio Germanorum (Natio of the Germans),[12] [13] [14] a privileged university organization that included German-speaking students from many regions of Europe.[15] [16]

University of Padua

Students in the University of Padua were divided into 22 nations, which referred to the different territories ruled by the Republic of Venice, to the biggest states of Italy, and to the main states of Europe. Nations were: German (also called Alemannian), Bohemian, Hungarian, Provençal, Burgundian, Spanish, Polish, English, Scottish, Venetian, Overseas (Venetian Greek Islands), Lombard (East Lombardy and West Veneto), Trevisan (North and East Veneto), Friulian, Dalmatian, Milanese, Roman, Sicilian, Anconitan, Tuscan, Piedmontese and Genoan.[17]

Finland

See main article: article and Nations in Finnish universities.

In Finland, student nations (Finnish: osakunnat, Swedish: nationer) exist at the University of Helsinki and Aalto University, where they are legally sanctioned and were established in the mid-1600s (in the Royal Academy of Turku) and 1800s (in the to-be Polytechnical School), respectively. Named after regions in Finland, students had to join according to their own geographical roots before membership became voluntary in 1937. Today, students can usually choose to join any nation. Both Finnish and Swedish speaking nations exist. Organizations termed nations exist also at other universities, although these are legally considered normal registered or unregistered associations. In Finland, student nations co-exist with a wide range of other student organizations, such as student unions.

Scotland

See main article: article and Nations in Scottish universities. Nations exist in some of the ancient universities in Scotland, although their significance has largely been forgotten. Nations never existed at the University of Edinburgh, and were abolished at the University of St Andrews following discussions at the Royal Commission on the Universities of Scotland, which later led to the Universities (Scotland) Acts.[18] [19] Student nations continued into modern times at the University of Aberdeen and the University of Glasgow for the specific purpose of electing a Rector of the university.

Sweden

See main article: article and Nations in Swedish universities. When Uppsala University was founded in 1477, the system of 'nationes' was copied from Sorbonne in Paris. At the Swedish universities of Uppsala and Lund, a system of student nations (nationer) remains and, until June 30, 2010, students were required to enrol in a nation. Now membership is voluntary, though most of the students choose to be members. The Nations in Finland were founded according to the Swedish tradition. Historically, Tartu University, founded in 1632 in then-Swedish Estonia, also had a nation system.

The nations are named on regional lines: the nations in Lund take their names from provinces and areas in southern Sweden; those in Uppsala take theirs from the ecclesiastical dioceses all over Sweden except for the Scanian lands, the traditional catchment area for Lund (which was founded in 1666 to provide higher education for the youth in the newly conquered areas). (Until 2010, there was a "Skånelandens nation" in Uppsala, but it had no activity and only existed as a legal fiction for those students who did not wish to take part in a student nation.)

Students were traditionally required to be a member of the nation from whose area they came, but this is no longer the case; however, Södermanlands-Nerikes nation at Uppsala exceptionally retains an area restriction, though (as before) the restriction does not apply to international students. Nowadays, nations organize social activities that at other universities are normally handled by student unions, such as bars, clubs, orchestras, sports societies, theater companies, and also some housing.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary, nātĭo . Perseus.tufts.edu . 2015-02-22.
  2. Web site: Harper. Douglas. Nation. Online Etymology Dictionary. November 2001. 2007-11-08.
  3. Web site: Miscellanea Scotica: Memoirs of the ancient alliance between France and ... - Google Books . 1820 . Google Books. 2015-02-22.
  4. Web site: Historical Tales of the Wars of Scotland, and of the Border Raids, Forays ... - Google Books . 1849 . Google Books. 2015-02-22.
  5. Book: Mobs: An Interdisciplinary Inquiry . 25 November 2011. 9789004216822 . 2015-03-09.
  6. Book: Rasdhall's Universities of Europe, Vol 2 . 2 November 2010. 9781108018128 . 2015-03-09. Rashdall . Hastings .
  7. Web site: The medieval student . 6 May 2012 . 2015-03-09.
  8. Web site: Abhandlungen der Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig ... - Google Books . 1857 . Google Books. 2015-02-22.
  9. Web site: Abhandlungen der Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig ... - Google Books . 1857 . Google Books. 2013-10-14.
  10. Book: A history of the universities in Europe, Volume 1 - Google Books . Google Books. 16 October 2003. 9780521541138 . 2015-03-09. Ridder-Symoens . Hilde de . Rüegg . Walter .
  11. Book: Rashdall's Universities of Europe, Volume 1 - Google Books . Google Books. 2 November 2010. 9781108018104 . 2015-03-09. Rashdall . Hastings .
  12. Book: Documenta Copernicana: Urkunden, Akten und Nachrichten : Texte und Übersetzungen - Nicolaus Copernicus - Google Books . Google Books. 9783050030098 . 2015-02-22. Copernicus . Nicolaus . 1996 .
  13. Web site: The Sleepwalkers - Arthur Koestler - Google Books . Google Books. 2006-07-07 . 2015-02-22. Koestler . Arthur .
  14. Book: The Life of Copernicus (1473-1543) - Pierre Gassendi, Oliver Thill - Google Books . Google Books. 9781591601937 . 2015-02-22. Gassendi . Pierre . Thill . Oliver . 2002 .
  15. Book: "Although great importance has frequently been ascribed to this fact, it does not by any means imply that Copernicus ever considered himself to be a German. The 'nationes' of a medieval university had nothing in common with nations in the modern sense of the word. Students who were natives of Prussia and Silesia were automatically described as belonging to the Natio Germanorum. Furthmore, at Bologna, this was the 'privileged' nation". Alexandre Koyre. Cornell University Press. 1973. 0-486-27095-5. The Astronomical Revolution. 21. 22 February 2015.
  16. Book: "It is important to recognize, however, that the medieval Latin concept of natio, or "nation," referred to the community of feudal lords both in Germany and elsewhere, not to "the people" in the nineteenth-century democratic or nationalistic sense of the word.". Lonnie Johnson. Central Europe: Enemies, Neighbors, Friends. Oxford University Press. 1996. 0-19-510071-9. 23. registration. 22 February 2015.
  17. Web site: Archivio antico - Archivio Generale di Ateneo - Università degli Studi di Padova . Unipd.it . 2015-02-22.
  18. Web site: December 9, 2005. The History of the University - The Mediaeval University . . https://web.archive.org/web/20110605183405/http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/media/medieval_university.pdf. June 5, 2011 . dead .
  19. Web site: Full text of "Officers of the Marischal College and University of Aberdeen, 1593-1860" . 1897 . [Aberdeen] Univ. Press . 2013-10-14.