Trivium

This article is about the University syllabus.

In medieval universities, the trivium was comprised of the three subjects taught first, before the quadrivium. The word is Latin, meaning "the three ways" or "the three roads", the beginning of the liberal arts. It also serves as a root for the concept of triviality. At many ancient universities, such as Oxford, this would have been the principal undergraduate course.

In medieval educational theory, the trivium consisted of grammar, rhetoric, and logic (or dialectic - logic and dialectic were synonymous at the time). These were considered preparatory fields for the quadrivium, which was made up of arithmetic, geometry, music, and astronomy. In turn, the quadrivium was considered preparatory work for the serious study of philosophy and theology.

This schema is sometimes referred to as classical education, but it is more accurately a development of the 12th and 13th centuries rather than a direct descendant of the educational systems of antiquity.

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See also

he:טריוויום nl:Trivium pl:Trivium