Hilde De Ridder-Symoens

Prof. Dr
Hilde De Ridder-Symoens
Born Hildegarde Symoens
(1943-04-19) 19 April 1943
Sint-Jans-Molenbeek, Brussels, Belgium
Nationality Belgian
Board member of Belgian Historical Institute in Rome[1]
Academic background
Education Athénée Royal de Léopoldville
Alma mater University of Ghent
Thesis De Brabantse leden van de Germaanse natie van de rechtsuniversiteit van Orleans, 1444-1555 (1969)
Academic work
Discipline Historian
Sub-discipline prosopography of the medieval university
Institutions Free University of Amsterdam, University of Ghent
Notable works A History of the University in Europe

Hilde De Ridder-Symoens (born 1943) was Professor of Medieval History at the Free University of Amsterdam (1986-2001) and Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Ghent (2001-2008). Her research focused on educational history and the history of universities. She edited the first two volumes of Cambridge University Press's A History of the University in Europe (1992, 1996) and published together with C.M. Ridderikhoff, Les livres des procurateurs de la nation germanique de l'ancienne Université d'Orléans, 1444-1602 (4 vol., Brill, Leiden, 1971-2015).

Life

Born in Sint-Jans-Molenbeek, Brussels, on 19 April 1943, Hilde Symoens grew up in the Belgian Congo.[2] After graduating secondary school from the Athénée Royal de Léopoldville she registered as a student at the University of Ghent, obtaining the licentiate in History in 1964 and then a doctorate in February 1969, with a dissertation on students from the Duchy of Brabant at the law faculty of the University of Orléans between 1444 and 1555 under the supervision of prof. dr. R.C. van Caenegem.[2] Her further research related to the education of office holders in the late medieval and early modern Low Countries, and more broadly to international student mobility in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Times.

She has been a visiting scholar at the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History in Frankfurt, the University of California at Berkeley, Merton College, Oxford, and UCLA.[3]

In 2003 Symoens became a member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts.[3] In 2004 a Festschrift in her honour, with contributions drawn from a colloquium held to mark her departure from Amsterdam in 2001, was published by Brill.[4]

References

  1. "Hilde DeRidder-Symoens". Académie royale de Belgique. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  2. 1 2 K. De Clerck (1991). "Laudatio Prof. Dr. H. De Ridder-Symoens". Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  3. 1 2 Hilde Symoens, KVAB.
  4. Education and Learning in the Netherlands, 1400-1600: Essays in Honour of Hilde De Ridder-Symoens, edited by Koen Goudriaan, J. J. Van Moolenbroek and Ad Tervoort (Leiden and Boston, 2004).
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