Like other institutions of the past and of other nations,
the University of Zaragoza did not suddenly arise, but
rather had its beginnings in what were known as the
Ecclesiastical Schools. In the city these were later
known as the School of Zaragoza, whose guiding spirit
in the 7th century was the Bishop Braulio (which is
the reason why in modern times he was made the patron
saint of our University). Later, references from 1335
indicate there was a School of Arts (known as liberal
arts, since the classics included in the "trivium
and "quadrivium" were taught there. Between
1474 and 1476 this institution earned the category of
General School of Arts, to become a university in the
16th century.
The cultural activities and endeavours of the leaders
of Zaragoza during the last third of the 15th century
had obtained authorization from Pope Sixtus IV in 1474
and, at the petition of Fernando, the future King of
Aragon, it was made a General School of Arts. Coinciding
with the introduction of the printing press, evidence
of an interest in knowledge, ratification of the General
School of Arts was obtained from King Juan in 1476.
Thus the capital of the Kingdom of Aragon could now
grant the degree of “Bachiller” in Arts.
In 1477, the Rector Pedro de la Cabra and a representative
of the town council prepared its first bylaws. Petitions
to enable it to grant the full degrees of “Licenciado”
and “Doctor en Facultad” continued until
1542, the date on which one can speak of the University
of Zaragoza as existing "de jure", since it
did not exist as such “de facto” until 1583,
its official founding date.
As was to be expected in the 16th century, this University
arose in a very simple society if we judge it using
only material criteria, but in reality in a very complex
and diverse one, if we take into account both the material
and the spiritual. It is said that two worlds existed
then, the rural and the urban. In Aragon this classification
is valid, but it must be understood that with regard
to legal relations in the feudal production system in
the rural world, a distinction must certainly be made
between the estates of the Church, widows and the Crown
–without "absolute power", the right
that allowed them starve the serfs without a fair trial–
and the secular estates –which had "absolute
power"-, a distinctive criterion that may serve
the occasion. As for the urban world, all belonging
to the Crown, we must make a distinction between the
capital, Zaragoza, seat of the government of the monarchy
and the king himself, with a singular council and several
high-level courts of justice, which gave its people
(although they did not enjoy privileges) considerable
freedom of action in comparison to other towns, and
the other urban areas of the Crown distributed throughout
Aragon, whose freedom was more limited by their lower
concentration of population and limited contact with
the outside world. It was certainly a society in which,
given its complexity, we can observe the presence of
the poor and alienated, as well as a noteworthy number
of immigrants, especially French, who in 1577 constituted
a fifth of the population and lived throughout Aragon,
becoming a part of the web of Aragonese society or living
temporarily or seasonally in the area. From a qualitative
perspective, neither should the important contribution
of Catalonian and Genovese merchants to the area’s
economy be overlooked.
On the other hand, in that 16th century Aragon was
also immersed in the general movement known as the Renaissance,
with its great religious conflicts and well-known political
figures, to which outstanding Aragonese made contributions,
among them, Miguel Servet. The nobles and urban patricians
of Zaragoza offered their resources for its development:
palaces, churches, paintings, print shops and literary
and scientific works represented a great endeavour that
attracted and developed the most diverse techniques
and the most refined exercise of the intellect.
It was the effort of a few –basically urban patricians
and the educated clergy– who obtained from the
King of Aragon and "Emperor of the Romans"
the privilege of founding the General School of all
Faculties in the city of Zaragoza. To do so they took
advantage of the meeting of the Cortes Generales assembly
in Monzón and precisely on September 10th, 1542
the Emperor, King of the Aragonese, with his mother
Juana, signed with his “I, the King” the
document –privilege- that created "de jure”
the Schools of Theology, Canon and Civil Law, Medicine,
Philosophy, Art and any that were acceptable in the
university community.
The members of the city council of Zaragoza, Martin
de Alberuela, Juan de Paternoy and Miguel Frances, led
by the town elder Jeronimo Oriola, had achieved their
objective. And certainly, of no little importance was
the fact that there were professors at the university
of the stature of Gaspar Lax de Sariñena, who
having studied in Zaragoza, had devoted his talents
to teaching in Paris, to return in 1525 to dedicate
himself to the study and teaching of mathematics, logics
and philosophy, disciplines in which he was a prominent
European figure. But greater determination and resources
were still needed.
As on so many occasions (some quite recent), the Papal
Bulls of confirmation in 1554 and 1555 did not provide
economic resources, and the privilege was not accompanied
by any income or benefit with which to undertake the
tasks of a university. It would have to wait to obtain
funds from the city government, which were so decisive
and had been a long-standing tradition. The city government
had already shown its interest in the School in 1492,
having requested money from the Kings with which to
pay the professors’ honoraria, a clear antecedent
of what happens today, but from the Alma Mater itself.
It provided financing for the chairs of Theology in
1500 and Poetry and Rhetoric in 1503, and also to the
School itself, which with money from students hired
a part-time professor in 1509. And there were contributions
from people such as Pedro Cerbuna (the first and exemplary
case of an individual patron) with whose material support,
no less enthusiasm, and despite opposition from the
Viceroy as the maximum representative of the “central
government”, classes began no fewer than forty
years later in 1583. As a site, the University didn’t
have its own buildings until 1586 with the construction
of the Casa de Anatomia, by the cemetery of the Hospital
of Nuestra Señora de Gracia, developing in the
area of La Magdalena between 1589 and 1594.
Thus, in the year 1542 the University of Zaragoza was
granted the authority to take the giant step to become
what we today call University. That was four hundred
and fifty years ago and is what we remember, but it
was necessary to continue the endeavour, and many illusions
were lost by the wayside, until others who kept or received
their enthusiasm and avoided obstacles, as did Pedro
Cerbuna, gave their best efforts and were able to create
the General School of All Faculties in 1583, whose fourth
centenary was celebrated in 1983.