In today's present age and for a long time society is leaning and seems to still exist. And we retain the general notion that the university is related to the building and its location. Society is not aware of the fact that it is a place where research locations are irrelevant. In the early days of modernization, the medieval term of this university is "generic stadium", which meant "universal learning school".
The first medieval university was established from the 11th century to the 13th century, the literacy rate and learning ability improved. By 1500, this institution spread to most of Europe and played an important role in the scientific revolution. Today, the concepts and institutions of education are adopted globally. Silk production began in Eastern Europe in the 6th century and Western Europe in the 11th or 12th century. Silk has been imported from the ancient times by the Silk Road. In the 13th century, the technique of "silk throwing" was acquired in Tuscany. The silk project is using hydropower, and some people think this is the first mechanized textile factory.
One of the first universities in medieval Europe was Salerno University. It began in the 9th century monastery and then Arab-Latin translation movement, from the 11th century it has evolved to Schola Medica Salernitana based on the Islamic medicine school and then to the University of Salerno. The British common law has been inherited to medieval Islamic law since the publication of "Islamic common law origins" by John Maxis, a legal reviewer in North Carolina State law. Some scholars suggested that some basic common law systems were adapted from similar legal systems of Islamic law and law and Norman conquered England and introduced to the UK after conquering and inheriting the Islamic law of Afghanistan I believe it may have been done. Sicily (see Arab-Norman culture)
Restoration of intellectuals in Western Europe began with the birth of a medieval university in the 12th century. By contacting the Byzantine Empire and the Islamic world between Reconquista and the Crusaders, Latin Europe could learn scientific Greek and Arabic, including Aristotle, Ptolemy, Isidor of Miletus, John Fellow It was. Works by Bonas, Jabir Ibn Hayyan and others. Khwarizmi, Alhazen, Avicenna, Averroes. European scholars can use the translation course of Toledo Raymond, a sponsor of the 12th century Toledo Translation Institute, from Arabic to Latin. Later, translators such as Michael Scotus learned to learn text directly in Arabic. European universities have made a great contribution to the translation and dissemination of these texts and launched a new infrastructure that the scientific community needs.