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John III of Portugal - Culture |  | John III of Portugal - Culture: Encyclopedia II - John III of Portugal - Culture |  | John III's support for the humanist cause was significant. In literature, his support of Gil Vicente, Garcia de Resende, Sá de Miranda, Bernardim Ribeiro, Fernão Mendes Pinto, João de Barros and, of course, Luís de Camões stood out. In the sciences, John III supported Pedro Nunes and Garcia de Orta.
The monarch attributed many scholarships in Universities abroad (mainly in Paris) and definitively transferred the University from Lisbon to Coimbra in 1537. He quickly recalled prominent figures of European education (many were Portu ...
See also:John III of Portugal, John III of Portugal - Early Life, John III of Portugal - Early Reign, John III of Portugal - Decline, John III of Portugal - Economic pressure, John III of Portugal - Rise of the Jesuits brings social and economic conflict, John III of Portugal - Military pressures, John III of Portugal - Dynastic crisis, John III of Portugal - International relations, John III of Portugal - Culture, John III of Portugal - Inquisition, John III of Portugal - The Portuguese Empire under John III, John III of Portugal - Africa, John III of Portugal - Asia, John III of Portugal - Brazil, John III of Portugal - Death and succession, John III of Portugal - Issue, John III of Portugal - Style |  | | John III of Portugal, John III of Portugal - Africa, John III of Portugal - Asia, John III of Portugal - Brazil, John III of Portugal - Culture, John III of Portugal - Death and succession, John III of Portugal - Decline, John III of Portugal - Dynastic crisis, John III of Portugal - Early Life, John III of Portugal - Early Reign, John III of Portugal - Economic pressure, John III of Portugal - Inquisition, John III of Portugal - International relations, John III of Portugal - Issue, John III of Portugal - Military pressures, John III of Portugal - Rise of the Jesuits brings social and economic conflict, John III of Portugal - Style, John III of Portugal - The Portuguese Empire under John III, History of Portugal, Kings of Portugal, Timeline of Portuguese history, Portugal in the period of discoveries, Portuguese Empire, Kings of Portugal family tree, History of Europe |  | |
|  |  | John III of Portugal: Encyclopedia II - John III of Portugal - Culture
John III of Portugal - Culture
John III's support for the humanist cause was significant. In literature, his support of Gil Vicente, Garcia de Resende, Sá de Miranda, Bernardim Ribeiro, Fernão Mendes Pinto, João de Barros and, of course, Luís de Camões stood out. In the sciences, John III supported Pedro Nunes and Garcia de Orta.
The monarch attributed many scholarships in Universities abroad (mainly in Paris) and definitively transferred the University from Lisbon to Coimbra in 1537. He quickly recalled prominent figures of European education (many were Portuguese teaching abroad) and provided the University with excellent conditions. However, the importance of the University of Coimbra was minimized with the installment of the Society of Jesus. This society founded colleges and widened education in the country but on the other hand created great instability in Portuguese education, assuming itself as a rival of the University of Coimbra with a conservative position, often against innovation. The Inquisition also arrested and killed many prominent teachers and censured new ideals like the Erasmism.
Noteworthy is also the support John gave to missionaries in the New World, Asia and Africa.
Other related archives1502, 1521, 1549, 1557, 7 August, Afonso, Africa, Alcacer Ceguer, Alcácer Ceguer, Algarves, Almeirim, Arabia, Aragonese, Archbishop, Arguim, Arzila, Asia, Atlantic, Austria, Azamor, Bahia, Baltic, Baltic region, Bernardim Ribeiro, Braga, Brazil, Canary Islands, Cannanore, Canton, Captain, Cardinal Henry, Cardinals, Castilian, Castilians, Catherine of Austria, Ceuta, Charles V, China, Christian, Cochin, Coimbra, Commerce, Conquest, Cortes, Counter-Reformation, Cranganore, Crato, D., December 19, Diogo de Ortiz, Bishop of Viseu, Eleanor of Austria, England, Erasmism, Estêvão da Gama, Ethiopia, Europe, Far East, Ferdinand Magellan, Fernão Mendes Pinto, Flanders, France, French, Garcia de Orta, Garcia de Resende, Gil Vicente, Goa, Goa Inquisition, God, Grand Inquisitor, Guinea, Henry, Henry I, History of Europe, History of Portugal, Holy Roman Empire, IPA, Iberian Peninsula, Iberian kingdoms, India, Indian Ocean, Inquisition, Italy, Japan, Jesuit, Jewish, Joanna of Castile, John III, João de Barros, João de Castro, June 11, June 6, King Ferdinand, King Manuel I, King of the Congo, Kings of Portugal, Lampacau, Lisbon, Luís Teixeira, Luís de Camões, Luís de Sousa, Macao, Macau, Manuel I, Marco Polo, Maria of Aragon, Martim Afonso de Sousa, Mazagan, Mina, Ming Dynasty, Moluccas, Mombasa, Monastery of Jerónimos, Moçambique, Muromachi period, Muslim, Nanban, Navigation, New World, North Africa, North America, Nuno da Cunha, Nuremberg, Ottoman Empire, Paris, Pedro Nunes, Pernambuco, Persia, Philip II of Spain, Philip the Handsome, Pope, Pope Paul III, Portugal, Portugal in the period of discoveries, Portuguese, Portuguese Empire, Portuguese Inquisition, Portuguese colonization, Prince Sebastian, Princess Isabella, Queen Isabella, Rhineland, Rio de la Plata, Rome, Safim, Sebastian, Sebastian I, Siam, Society of Jesus, Sofala, Spain, Spanish, Suleiman the Magnificent, Tangiers, Timeline of Portuguese history, Timor, Tomás de Torres, Tomé de Sousa, Torres Novas, Treaty of Tordesillas, Treaty of Zaragoza, Universities, Vasco da Gama, Viceroy, absolutist, adventurers, apoplexy, astrologer, bananas, bigamy, blades, brazilwood, captaincies, carpets, cartographers, censure, christianize, chronicler, clothing, colonization, copper, corsair, corsairs, cosmographers, cultural evolution, culture, divination, dominion, evangelization, evangelizing, external debt, fabric, fleets, gold, horses, humanist, ivory, king of Portugal, leagues, literature, littoral, mandarins, maritime piracy, mercantile, merchants, meridian, missionaries, missions, monopoly, native population, navigators, nobility, nobleman, pron., queen consort, religious fanaticism, religious orders, royal family, salt, scholarships, shells, silver, slaves, sovereign, spice trade, sugarcane, sultans, theater, tin, trade, trade deficits, tuberculosis, wheat, witchcraft, zamorins, Évora
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Culture", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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