86/125 xviii; also Sprengel, vol.ii, p. 345, and elsewhere; also Baas and others. For proofs that the School of Salerno was not founded by the monks, Benedictine or other, but by laymen, who left out a faculty of theology from their organization, see Haeser, Lehrbuch der Geschichte der Medicin, vol.i, p. For a very strong statement that married professors, women, and Jews were admitted to professional chairs, see Baas, pp. |