Andrzej Kompa
University of Łódź, Łódź, Poland;
andrzejkompa@o2.pl
Higher Education in Constantinople – A University or Not?
Constantinopolitan imperial school (5
th
-6
th
centuries) has acknowledgedly a significant place in
history of education. Paradoxically perhaps, it seems to be our ‘internal knowledge’, almost completely
unrecognized or forgotten outside the Byzantine studies. Partially, it is because of the reservations
of the Byzantinists regarding the use term ‘university’ in relation to that 5
th
-century Theodosian
establishment. The term is often put in the inverted commas or treated only semiseriously. And yet, as
the role of late ancient education is still being stressed and the understanding of the problem fostered,
it seems to be the right time to reconsider the basic question: was it a university or not?
Reasons for hesitations are known: we do not see at the Capitol an institutional organization
formed with the system of superiors and subordinates, there were no faculties, nor academic titles
and diplomas. Highly individualised character of schooling shaped rather the mentor-pupil relations,
and not the student-institution ones. And it is true, we cannot assume that the higher education in
Constantinople ran incessantly through the centuries and that the constitutions of Theodosius the
Younger, albeit never abrogated, remained perpetually in the legal system for more than antiquarian
reasons. We may only suppose that the imperial school functioned untroubled until the end of
the 6
th
century, as witnessed e.g. by John the Lydian, and to a minor degree also in the 7
th
century
up to Justinian II (as the costly building investments were still undertaken, also the instruction of
the future officials seem probable, in reduced scope, and maybe within the complex of the Great
Palace). An attempt to re-establish the school was ventured by cesar Bardas in the 9
th
century, but it
was only a century later when the fortunate imperial decisions reinvented the Byzantine university
anew. Thus, although the continuity of education was preserved, an institutional one is something
we cannot expect.
204
With this being taken into account, the arguments that support the positive answer, recollected
together, seem more convincing, both in number and in weight. Firstly, a failure of the initiative in
the long run should not reduce to nothing the initiative itself, even more so the first dozen decades
of its functioning did not encounter any major obstacles. Secondly, lack of the boards, principals
and subordination of one professor to another, should not lead to the assumption that there was no
academic community on spot, as there were many factors that bound the people involved together:
the ways of employment and dismissal of the teachers, the auditoria, the customs, habits and feasts
of the students (cf. the canons of Trullanum), the curricula for students (at least those who studied
law). Imperial supervision and concern, careful differentiation between the public and the private
teachers, and first and foremost the constitutions of 425, that so clearly delimitated the conditions
of schooling are further major arguments. The specialists of different arts were united in one
educational institution, they were classified and inscribed into general state programme. Despite
the differences with the later medieval universities of the West, the Constantinopolitan school was a
university, and after the decades of reluctant usage of this classification the term should be positively
reconsidered at last.
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