MARDI GRAS UNIVERSITY
Monday 8
February 2016 is New Years’ Day in China, Vietnam, Korea, and many other Asian
countries. It is also Rosen Montag in
Germany, Tomorrow is the day before Lent
begins, and in many Christian nations, it is Shrove Tuesday, Carnival, Mardi
Gras, Fasching, Pancake Tuesday, etc.
With Lent, many Christians gave up something they liked for 40 days,
until Easter, when they might again enjoy all the pleasures they were
accustomed to. Some gave up meat (carne
mean meat in Latin), so there would be meatless 40 days. But the day before, all could stuff
themselves with meat, drink, and whatever.
Mardi Gras is simply Fat Tuesday.
In New Orleans, south Louisiana, and Mobile, it is the biggest holiday
of the year. In Rio in Brazil, not even
the new mosquito virus can halt the samba competitions and parades. In parts of Spain, Italy, France, and
Germany, parades and festivities, with national variations. In the more puritanical Scotland, women race
while flipping pancakes in a pan.
Most others
work as usual – in most of the US people are generally unaware that in part of
the nation there is a huge holiday. If
they think of it, they think it frivolous, for booze and boobs and excess. I was reading a controversial, but
fascinating book by Rodney Stark, in which he shows how Mardi Gras may have
greatly influenced our universities. I
quote from his How the West Won, paperback ed. 2015, pp. 167-68.
“In March
1229 at the start of the pre-Lenten Carnival – which was much like a modern
Mardi Gras, complete with masks and uninhibited behavior – a group of
University of Paris students became embroiled with a tavern owner over their
bill. A fight broke out, other patrons supported the owner, and the students
were beaten and thrown into the street.
The next day the students returned with reinforcements and clubs, broke
into the tavern, beat the owner and patrons, smashed everything, and then
rioted in the streets.
“City
officials demanded punishment.
University officials took shelter in the exemption of the Church from
local courts, since the university was a religious institution. But Blanche of Castile, the mother of Louis
IX, was then serving as regent of France, demanded retribution. The university then allowed the city to take
action against the students.
Unfortunately, the city guardsmen picked out a group of students who had
not taken part in the riot and even killed several of them.
“The
university went on strike…The strike caused a severe economic pinch in Paris.
“After two
years Pope Gregory IX, himself a graduate of the university, issued a bull that
guaranteed the institution total freedom from local authorities -…by placing it
directly under papal patronage and control.
The university thus had the right to establish its own rules and
statutes, as well as the exclusive right to punish violations….The pope’s bull
became the university’s charter, which,…,served as the model for new
universities.”
So many of
our notions of academic freedom may be traced back to a brawl during Mardi Gras
in Paris in the year 1229.
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