High Middle Ages · Europe · Culture
1167
Scholars leave Paris for Oxford
1167
A dispute between Henry II and Louis VII prompted the English king to recall English masters and students from the Paris schools. Many settled at Oxford, where teaching had existed for decades but now took off. The move is usually counted as the practical birth of Oxford University. Within a generation Oxford had its own chancellor, its own rented halls, and its own fierce arguments with the town, the famous town-and-gown riots.