The University of Vilnius and its „Golden age”: Introduction into the 1803–1832 epochs
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12775/AE.2018-2019.008Słowa kluczowe
KEY WORDS, European universities, Vilnius University, Jesuits, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Polish historiography, Lithuanian historiography, historical memory, 19th century.Abstrakt
THE UNIVERSITY OF VILNIUS AND ITS „GOLDEN AGE”: INTRODUCTION INTO
THE 1803–1832 EPOCHS
The article discusses the question what the University of Vilnius is? Though seemingly a paradoxically simple question it leads to another question — what is Vilnius? These conceptual considerations are preparing the ground to the main discussion what was Vilnius University during the period between 1803 and 1832? The authors try to reveal the continuity of Vilnius university’s history in the general European context from its foundation up to its closer, i.e. during the epoch which might be called “the Old University”. A great attention is given to the still emerging historiographical discussion about whether the University of Vilnius is Polish or Lithuanian? The authors analysis traditional look of the Poles at the legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Vilnius University. They presented overview of the Polish historiography of the end of the 19th and the first half of the 20th century which regarded the Grand Duchy of Lithuania as a space of the Polish civilisational mission, and at the same time regarded it as a part of Polish civilisation. This notion was further disseminated by Lubor Jilek in his exhaustive Historical Compendium of European Universities seeing two universities in Vilnius: Stephen Bathory University that functioned from 1578 to 1939 and soviet Kapsukas University which was derived from the Lithuanian University of 1939. The detailed anatomy of the Lithuanian attitude allows authors to conclude that Lithuanians themselves, opposing the attitude of Polish historiography to Lithuania and seeking to form the ideology of “divorce”, as though themselves relinquished the rights to the late legacy of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and at the same time to Vilnius University. This anti-Polish attitude prevailed during the period of the first Republic of Lithuania (1918–1940) and was acceptable in the soviet epoch, as was acceptable any anti-Catholicism and anti-Westernisation. These two historiographical positions are summed up with the changes in historiography and historical memories both in Poland and in Lithuania which enable new attitudes in the policy of historical memory of Vilnius University towards the period of the Jesuit University and that of Polish University of Vilnius (Uniwersytet Stefana Batorego). This historiographical analysis is backed by the solid look at the scientific life of the University, also by the examination of images that were created in the 19th century and determined patterns of the historical memory of both the Poles and the Russians and is followed up by the interesting comparison of the Old University of Vilnius in the league of European Universities using three criteria: chronology, geography and the space of the intellectual impact. Here comes the closer look at the Imperial Vilnius University which for more than three decades right until 1832, despite pressure exerted by the tsarist authorities, was the herald of a scientific thought and political freedom, the epicentre of the Lithuanian and also Polish Enlightenment. The authors use the data of the WorldCat Identities for the comparison. The article ends with the examination and evaluation of an unappreciated tragedy of 1832. The significance of this event has not been evaluated in Lithuania yet. The authors finalise their article by concluding that the 19th century was the golden age of the University of Vilnius.
Bibliografia
Alexandrowicz S., The Heritage of Old Vilnius University, in: Tarptautinė konferencija „Vilniaus univeristetas Europoje: praeitis, dabartis, ateitis“ 2004 m. rugsėjo 17 d. Skiriama Vilniaus univeristeto įkūrimo 425-osioms metinėms = International Conference „Vilnius University in Europe: past, present and future“ September 17, 2004. On the occasion of the 425th Anniversary of Vilnius University, Vilnius 2005.
Bardach J., O dawnej i niedawnej Litwie, Poznań 1988.
Bardach J., Studia z ustroju i prawa Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego XIV–XVII w., Warszawa 1970.
Bednarski S., Geneza Akademii wileńskiej, [w]: Księga pamiątkowa ku uczczeniu CCCL rocznicy założenia i X wskrzeszenia Uniwersytetu wileńskiego, t. I, Wilno 1929.
Bolecki W., Kultura (1946–2000), in: The Exile and Return of Writers from East-Central Europe: A
Compendium, hrsg. John Neubauer, Borbála Zsuzsanna Török, Berlin 2009.
Davis N., Europos istorija, Vaga 2002.
Glanzer P. L., Alleman N. F., Ream T. C., Restoring the Soul of the University: Unifying Christian Higher Education in a Fragmented Age, Inter Varsity 2017.
Gürüz K., Higher Education and International Student Mobility in the Global Knowledge Economy, New York 2011.
Gudavičius E., Lietuvos europėjimo keliais: Istorinės studijos, compiled by. A. Bumblauskas, R. Petrauskas, Vilnius 2002.
Halecki O., Dzieje unii Jagielońskiej, t. 2. Kraków 1920.
The Heritage of European Universities, ed. N. Sanz, S. Bergan, Strasbourg 2002.
Hyde M., Hyde A., Going to University Abroad — A Guide to Studying Outside the UK, London, New York 2013.
History of Universities. Vol. 1–3, Avebury-London 1981–1985.
A History of the University in Europe, general ed. by W. Rüegg, vol. 1: Universities in the Middle Ages, ed. by H. de Ridder-Symoens, Cambridge 1992 (II leid. 2003); vol. 2: Universities in Early Modern Europe (1500–1800), ed. by H. de Ridder-Symoens, Cambridge 1996 (II leid. 2003); vol. 3: Universities in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries (1800–1945), ed. by W. Rüegg, Cambridge 2004.
A History of the University in Europe, general ed. by W. Rüegg, Bd. 1: Mittelalter, München 1993; Bd. 2: Von der Reformation zur Französischen Revolution (1500–1800), München 1996, ed. 2 [2011]; Bd. 3: Universities in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries (1800–1945), München 2004.
Ilustrowany atlas Polski: nasza ojczyzna, mapy,
informacje, krajobrazy, Warszawa 2002.
Informatio de novo Collegio Vilnensi facta mense Septembri 1570, “Archivum Romanum Societatis Jesu: Poloniae”, tom 75, folio 316.
Jilek L., Historical Compendium of European Universities, Genève 1984.
Kalembka S., Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu kontynuatorem Uniwersytetu Stefana Batorego w Wilnie, [w:] Z dziejów Almae Matris Vilnensis. Księga pamiątkowa ku czci 400-lecia założenia i 75-lecia wskrzeszenia Uniwersytetu Wileńskiego, red. L. Piechnik SJ, K. Puchowski, Kraków 1996.
Koneczny F., Dzieje Rosji od najdawnniejszych do najnowszych czasów, Poznań 1921.
„Kultura“ paryska: twórcy, dzieło, recepcja, red. I. Hofman, Lublin 2007.
Kušner (Knyšev) P. I., Etničeskoe prošloe jugo-vostočnoj Pribaltiki: Opyt istoričeskogo izučenija etničeskoi teritorii. Moskva 1951 (2 edition — Vilnius 1991).
Lietuva medaliuose: XVI a.–XX a. pradžia, Vilnius 1998
Lietuvių Katalikų Mokslo Akademijos metraštis [Yearbook of the Lihtuanian Catholic Academy of Science], vol. 3, 1967, p. 246–266.
Lietuvos istorija, edited by A. Šapoka, Kaunas 1936.
Jilek L., Historical Compendium of European Universities, Geneva 1984.
Massonius M. P., Dzieje Uniwersytetu Wileńskiego, 1781–1832: notatki z wykładów w roku akademickim 1924/25, Toruń 2005.
Moczulski L., Geopolityka: potęga w czasie i przestrzeni, Warszawa 1999.
Müller R. A., Geschichte der Universität von der mittelalterlichen Universität zur deutschen Hochschule, München 1990.
The Oxford Handbook of Nineteenth-Century Christian Thought, ed. J. Rasmussen, J. Wolfe, J. Zachhuber, Oxford 2017.
Le Patrimoine des Universités Européennes, ed. N. Sanz, S. Bergan, Strasbourg 2006.
Purvis Z., Theology and the University in Nineteenth-Century Germany, Oxford 2017.
Rabikauskas P., Vilniaus akademija ir Lietuvos jėzuitai, compiled by Liudas Jovaiša, Vilnius 2002.
Snyder T., The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569–1999, Yale 2003.
Stätten des Geistes. Große Universitäten Europas von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, hrsg. von A. Demandt, Köln–Weimar–Wien 1999.
Supruniuk A., Supruniuk M. A., Tajemnicze początki Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika: (Wilno i Lwów w Toruniu), Toruń 2017.
Supruniuk M. A., Losy profesorów Uniwersytetu Stefana Batorego po 1945 r.: społeczność akademicka USB na obczyźnie (1947–1987), [w:] 60-lecie Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu, red. Cz. Łapicz, W. Wróblewski, Toruń 2006.
Swianiewicz S., USB w perspektywie historycznej, „Zeszyty Historyczne“ (Paryż), 1981, z. 55.
Universitas Vilnensis 1579–2004, Vilnius 2004.
Verger J., Charle Ch., Histoire des universités: XIIIe–XXIe siècle, Paris 2012.
Vilniaus universiteto istorija, 1803–1940, Vilnius 1977.
Weber W. E. J., Geschichte der europäischen Universität, Stuttgart 2002.
Wissema J. G., Towards the Third Generation University — Managing the University in Transition, Cheltenham 2009.
Wrzosek A., Jędrzej Śniadecki: życiorys i rozbiór pism, t. 1, Kraków 1910.
Zonta C. A., The history of European universities: overview and background, in: The heritage of European universities, ed. by N. Sanz, S. Bergan, Strasbourg 2002.
Устрялов Н. Г., Исследование вопроса, какое место в русской истории должно занимать Великое княжество Литовское, СПб 1839.
Pobrania
Opublikowane
Jak cytować
Numer
Dział
Statystyki
Liczba wyświetleń i pobrań: 531
Liczba cytowań: 0