High Middle Ages · Europe · Culture

1224

Frederick II founds the University of Naples

1224

The emperor chartered a state university to train Sicilian bureaucrats and counter the papal monopoly on higher learning at Bologna. Students were forbidden to study elsewhere. Thomas Aquinas would later enroll as a boy and catch fire for Aristotle in its lecture halls. It was the first European university founded by a secular ruler rather than the church, a precedent that signaled the state's growing ambitions.