Duration
30h Th
Number of credits
Lecturer
Language(s) of instruction
French language
Organisation and examination
Teaching in the first semester, review in January
Schedule
Units courses prerequisite and corequisite
Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program
Learning unit contents
The aim of this course is to sketch out an answer to the following questions: "From what and with what did the men and women of the Middle Ages develop their models of thought in the Latin West"? Insofar as the intellectual production of this period was largely the work of monks and clerics meditating in the silence of the cloister, these questions invite a twofold reflection: 1° on the place of the written word in a society based on orality and gesture, and 2° on the intellectual revolution that followed the recognition of Christianity and its spread throughout the hegemony of the Roman Empire in the West.
This course is not a history of medieval philosophy or theology. More humbly, it examines the conditions under which ancient thought and knowledge were transmitted throughout the medieval millennium, highlighting the main currents of thought that animated the men and women of the Christian West between the 6th and 14th centuries. It is part of the chronological continuum proposed by the programme of the minor Héritages modernes des cultures antiques et médiévales between Histoire de la philosophie hellénistique et romaine (PHIL0004-1 M.A. Gavray) and Histoire de l'Humanisme (HIST0036-1 A. Delfosse-L. Fagnart).
Learning outcomes of the learning unit
This lecture course will focus on the transmission of knowledge and teaching methods inherited from Antiquity and/or developed in an original way during the medieval millennium, leading us to question the concept of the Renaissance (Carolingian, Ottonian/twelfth century) and the place of theology at the heart of all the sciences. We will also address the question of cultural dynamics, the exchange of knowledge and the transmission of Greek, Jewish and Arab-Muslim traditions, from the time of the closure of Roman public schools to the birth of universities in the Christian West.
Occasionally, we will compare the historical reality of the context in which an idea or current of thought was produced with the reception (or betrayal?) of these ideas in later centuries, in art and literature, for example.
Prerequisite knowledge and skills
No course is prerequisite to this one. However, students who take it are advised to also include in their programme Histoire de la philosophie hellénistique et romaine (PHIL0004-1 M.A. Gavray) et d'Histoire de l'Humanisme (HIST0036-1 A. Delfosse-L. Fagnart)
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
Lecture, illustrated by text extracts or commented iconographic documents
Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)
Face-to-face course
Course materials and recommended or required readings
Course materials will be uploaded to eCampus
Exam(s) in session
Any session
- In-person
oral exam
Work placement(s)
Organisational remarks and main changes to the course
1st course on Friday 4 october 1pm
Although the general structure of the course is stable from one year to the next, the content may be modified according to current research or the university calendar. In addition, the learning materials (documents worked on, readings and exercises for monitors) are likely to vary.
The teacher communicates with students via their Uliege e-mail and/or the eCampus virtual course mailing programme.
Contacts
Pr. Dr. Florence Close
Histoire du moyen âge occidental
Département des Sciences historiques - Bat A4/1/07
Quai Roosevelt, 1B
4000 Liège
fclose@uliege.be
Secretariat d'Histoire : Corinne Bolsée corinne.bolsee@uliege.be - 04/366.58.75