Page:Cassell's Illustrated History of England vol 1.djvu/473

TO A.D. 1399.] before this period. "William, Archdeacon of Durham, who died in 1219, bequeathed 31 marks to the university, and may be considered the founder of this college: his money was expended for this purpose. was founded by John Baliol, the father of John the King of Scotland, about 1268, and completed by the Lady Devorgilla, his widow.  was founded by Walter Morton, Bishop of Rochester, in 1268.  was founded by Walter Stapleton, Bishop of Exeter, and Peter de Skelton, a clergrymn, in 1315. It was first called Stapleton College.  was founded by Edward II., and his almoner, Adam de Brun, about 1342, and was called the Hall of the Blessed Virgin of Oxford, but derived its permanent name from a fresh endowment by Edward III.  was founded by Robert Englefield, chaplain to Philippa, queen of Edward III., and named in her honour because she greatly aided him in establishing it.  was named St. Mary's College by its builder and founder, William of Wykeham, who also built one at Winchester. It was finished in 1336.



In Cambridge, during this period, were founded nine colleges, namely:— was founded by Hugh Balsham, afterwards Bishop of Ely, about 1282. , dedicated to St. Michael, was founded and endowed about 1324, by Harvey de Stanton, Chancellor of the Exchequer to Edward II. was founded by Richard Badew, Chancellor of the University, in 1326, but was soon after destroyed by fire. was built by Edward III., but afterwards united to Trinity College. was a restoration of University Hall, by Elizabeth de Clare, Countess of Ulster, and named in honour of her family. was built by Mary de St. Paul, 1347, widow of Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, in memory of her husband, who was killed in a tournament soon after their marriage. She named it the Hall of Valence and Mary. was founded near the same time by the united guilds of Corpus Christi and St. Mary, assisted by Henry Duke of Lancaster. was founded about 1350, by William Bateman, Bishop of Norwich. was founded by Edward Gonvil, parson of Terrington and Rushworth in Norfolk, about the same time as Trinity was built.

These were for the most part small and simple establishments at first, but have arrived at their present wealth and magnificence by additional benefactions.

The numbers of scholars who rushed into those schools at first was something extraordinary; nor were their character and appearance less so. They are described by Anthony à Wood as a regular rabble, who wore guilty of theft and all kinds of crimes and disorders. He declares that they lived under no discipline nor any masters, but only thrust themselves into the schools at lectures, that they might pass for scholars when they were called to account by the townsmen for any mischief, so as to free them from the jurisdiction of the burghers. At one time, according to Fitz-Ralph, the Archbishop of Armagh, there were no loss than 30,000 students—or so-called students—in Oxford alone; but he says that they were again reduced to less than 6,000, so many of them had joined the mendicant friars.

Such was the disorder of the two universities at this time, the violent quarrels, not only betwixt the students and the townspeople, but also betwixt each other, that many of the members of both universities retired to Northampton, and, with the permission of Henry II., commenced a new university there; but the people of Oxford and Cambridge found means to obtain its dissolution from the king. About thirty years afterwards they tried the same experiment at Stamford, but were stopped in the same manner.

London at this time so abounded with schools, that it was called the third university. Edward III. built the college of St. Stephen at Westminster for a college of divinity, which was dissolved by Henry VIII.